LE CIEL BLEU – purple-pink-hued nostalgia rose – Kimura
With its lilac‑pink, silvery‑sheened blooms and gentle damask‑tea fragrance, LE CIEL BLEU brings a sense of seaside refreshment to compact front gardens and veranda pots, even where strong breezes demand careful anchoring and drainage. This bushy Romantic Rose shrub offers season‑long flowering with reliable remontant flushes, yet keeps maintenance effort pleasantly low thanks to its naturally healthy foliage and proven trial performance. As an own‑root plant it develops quietly in the first years, building a durable framework from roots in year one, stronger shoots in year two and a full, nostalgic display by year three, giving you a long‑lived, structurally stable feature for family gardens close to the sea.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda container (40–50 litre) |
In a generous 40–50 litre pot, this bushy shrub maintains shape and colour from late spring to autumn, ideal for a sheltered Cornish or Devon balcony where you want impact with limited plant numbers and dependable ease for the occasional container‑gardening beginner. |
| Feature shrub near seating area |
Its medium height and nostalgic lilac‑pink blooms create a soft focal point beside a bench or tea corner, while own‑root stamina ensures it recovers well after pruning, giving you a long‑term, low‑fuss companion for relaxed outdoor moments for the time‑pressed garden owner. |
| Nostalgic mixed border in small family garden |
Used as a single specimen among grasses and perennials, the bushy growth fills gaps without overwhelming nearby plants, offering structured height and steady flowering that integrates neatly into average UK gardens for the creatively inclined home gardener. |
| Low‑maintenance rose bed by the front door |
Good resistance to common rose diseases means less spraying and fewer interventions, so a small group can frame your entrance with colour and scent while remaining tidy through typical British summers for households seeking reassuringly simple garden care. |
| Season‑long colour accent by garden path |
Remontant flowering with plentiful second flushes gives repeated displays along a path or driveway, keeping the approach to your home lively without constant deadheading or replacement planting for families who appreciate continuous visual interest. |
| Coastal, wind‑exposed family plot |
A moderately dense, bushy framework and strong root system help it stand firm where breezes are frequent, providing a reliable ornamental anchor in lighter coastal soils that need thoughtful watering and drainage management for coastal‑style garden enthusiasts. |
| Romantic patio grouping with perennials |
The cupped, double blooms and silvery lavender tones pair beautifully with sea kale, blue Festuca or soft lavenders, creating a unified coastal‑romantic look that feels considered yet not fussy for design‑aware but practically minded garden stylists. |
| Long‑term planting for smaller plots |
Own‑root vigour and the ability to regenerate from the base give this rose a long lifespan compared with grafted plants, making it a sound investment where space is limited and every shrub must earn its place for planners of compact urban gardens. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside Veranda Trio – Combine LE CIEL BLEU in a 50‑litre pot with sea kale and a compact blue Festuca for a breezy, salt‑tolerant container group – ideal for balcony and veranda dwellers wanting low‑effort romance.
- Romantic Entrance – Plant two shrubs flanking the front door with underplanting of lavender and soft grasses to frame your threshold with long‑season colour – suited to homeowners seeking a welcoming yet undemanding doorway scheme.
- Driftwood Border – Set among washed pebbles, driftwood pieces and silvery foliage plants to echo coastal shingle styling – perfect for coastal‑inspired gardeners who favour atmosphere over intensive maintenance.
- Tea Corner Focus – Position a single shrub beside a bistro set, partnered with fragrant herbs in terracotta, to enjoy lilac blooms and damask‑tea scent during evening pauses – great for busy people craving a simple daily retreat.
- Family-Friendly Ribbon – Use a loose row along a path, interwoven with foxgloves and feather reed grass, for a soft, moving border that copes with regular use – ideal for families wanting charm without complex upkeep.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Collection Romantic Rose; shrub rose, nostalgia type. Current trade name LE CIEL BLEU Romantic Rose Kimura; plant variety protected in Japan under registration number 26128 from 2017. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Takunori Kimura in Japan in 2012, with parentage not disclosed; introduced after 2017 by Kimura Planning Co Ltd via Rosa Orientis, reflecting modern selection under humid, maritime conditions. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated in Japanese rose trials 2016, including Japan Rose Society President’s Prize, several Gifu medals and certificates, plus RNRS Certificate of Commendation, indicating strong ornamental and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 100–160 cm high and 80–130 cm wide, with moderately dense, mid‑green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles; forms a rounded framework suitable for beds, low hedging and feature planting. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, cupped flowers with 26–39 petals, typically carried in clusters; remontant with a generous second flush, providing extended seasonal display on mature plants under normal garden care and feeding. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Smoky lavender‑lilac with silvery pink tones; RHS 76C–76D; colour deepens in cool weather and lightens in heat, with a delicate silvery sheen at full bloom that adds dimension in both sun and bright overcast light. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Clearly perceptible, medium‑strength damask‑tea fragrance suited to seating areas and paths; double flowers reduce pollinator value, so it is primarily chosen for scent and visual effect rather than wildlife support. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical orange‑red hips, around 8–13 mm in diameter; numbers are usually low due to the double flowers, so hips are a minor visual detail rather than a dominant autumn feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated resistant to powdery mildew, black spot and rust; hardy approximately to −21 to −18 °C (around USDA zone 6b), with good performance in typical UK winters given normal soil preparation and drainage. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions; plant 70 cm apart in beds, 60 cm for hedges, 110 cm as specimens. Low maintenance with irrigation during prolonged dry spells; suitable for borders, specimens and large containers from 40 litres. |
LE CIEL BLEU offers long‑season lilac blooms, reliable disease resistance and a bushy, compact habit in a durable own‑root form, making it a thoughtful choice for quietly romantic coastal or urban gardens you wish to enjoy for years.