ROSE DES PEINTRES – pink historic Centifolia rose
ROSE DES PEINTRES brings the atmosphere of old Dutch still lifes to modern coastal gardens, combining historic character with practical ease for today’s busy households. This once-flowering Centifolia excels as a relaxed summer screen in breezy, seaside conditions, offering a sheltered nook where you can enjoy tea after a walk on the beach, even where strong winds and salt-laden air call for plants with reliable anchoring and good drainage management. Its tall, arching habit and moderately dense foliage create a soft backdrop for shingle beds, verandas and cottage-style borders, while the large rosette blooms carry a powerful old-rose fragrance that drifts on warm days. Own-root, 2‑litre plants settle in steadily for a long life in your garden: in the first year they focus on roots, the second year on building strong shoots, and by the third year they deliver their full historic character and summer performance with minimal intervention.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal family garden windbreak |
Tall, bushy growth and arching branches form a soft, leafy filter against onshore breezes, supporting comfortable seating areas without harsh fencing, particularly valuable in exposed yet well-drained seaside plots – well suited to the coastal-veranda homeowner. |
| Fragrant summer focal point near seating |
Strong, classic rose scent and large, double rosette blooms give a concentrated season of romance just when outdoor living peaks, ideal beside a terrace or veranda where you pass close enough to appreciate it – perfect for the scent-loving beginner. |
| Low-maintenance historic feature plant |
Once-flowering habit, moderate maintenance needs and own-root longevity make it a dependable, characterful shrub that asks relatively little beyond seasonal pruning and occasional pest checks, suiting busy lifestyles – reassuring for the time-pressed gardener. |
| Loose flowering hedge along boundaries |
Recommended hedge spacing around 110 cm and moderate vigour allow you to build an informal, romantic boundary that flowers in early summer and then frames the garden with matt green foliage for the rest of the year – ideal for the family-plot owner. |
| Mixed border with historic character |
Its mid-pink, rosette flowers and gently arching habit combine gracefully with airy perennials such as blue fescue and baby’s breath, creating a textured, painterly effect that reads well in small to medium borders – attractive to the cottage-style enthusiast. |
| Large container or half-barrel on veranda |
In a 40–50 litre container with good drainage it offers vertical interest and fragrance without overwhelming smaller paved spaces, especially on coastal verandas where permanent planting space is limited – convenient for the balcony-and-patio gardener. |
| Partially shaded courtyard or side garden |
Suitable for partial shade, it can flower well where sun is limited to a few good hours a day, making use of narrower, overlooked plots between houses that might not suit sun-hungry roses – helpful for the urban-terrace resident. |
| Collector’s historical rose bed |
Documented since 1811 and rooted in Centifolia and Gallica heritage, it lends authenticity and continuity to themed beds, while own-root growth supports long-term structural stability in changeable weather and soil – rewarding for the heritage-rose collector. |
Styling ideas
- Seaside-Heritage Nook – Plant ROSE DES PEINTRES as a tall backdrop behind a small bistro set on a sheltered coastal veranda, underplant with blue fescue and pale shingle for a relaxed, wind-filtering retreat – for coastal-style romantics.
- Painterly-Mix Border – Combine its mid-pink rosettes with Baby’s breath and pink verbena in a mixed border, echoing 17th‑century still lifes while remaining easy to care for – for art-loving gardeners.
- Vintage-Hedge Walk – Space plants about 110 cm apart to form an informal hedge along a garden path, letting arching stems lean slightly inward to create a scented summer corridor – for families who enjoy evening strolls.
- Courtyard-Accent Rose – Use a single specimen in a 50‑litre half-barrel with free-draining compost in a part-shaded courtyard, adding clipped lavender at the base for year-round structure – for small-space homeowners.
- Collector’s-Feature Island – Place one plant centrally in a circular bed, surrounded by low grasses and gravel, to highlight its historic form and once-a-year drama – for dedicated heritage-rose collectors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
ROSE DES PEINTRES, also known as Des Peintres, is a historic Centifolia/Gallica type; commercial type historical centifolia rose, exhibition category bush rose, scented, old garden rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Rosa × centifolia seedling of unknown parentage; breeding date unclear, first authenticated catalogue mention in 1811, with earlier references from 1597 indicating long-standing garden history. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Vigorous, bushy shrub 160–240 cm tall and 100–160 cm wide, with arching, slightly drooping branches, moderately dense, matt mid-green foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a relaxed, structural presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, very double, rosette flowers, typically 40 or more petals, clustered on the stems; once-flowering, providing a concentrated early-summer display rather than repeat blooms through the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Warm mid-pink blooms with subtle purple undertone; deep pink buds open to medium pink, then soften to pastel and pearly pink tones, with colour holding better in cooler weather than in strong heat. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, classic rose fragrance typical of historic Centifolias, lingering well in still air; particularly noticeable when planted near paths, seating or doors where the scented air can be appreciated. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low due to very double flowers; occasional small, spherical, bright red hips about 12–18 mm across can appear, adding discreet late-season interest without heavy fruiting. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around −15 to −12 °C (RHS H6, Swedish zone 2, USDA 7b); disease resistance moderate overall, with good tolerance to powdery mildew and moderate susceptibility to black spot and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, hedges, parks and specimen use; plant 110–180 cm apart depending on role, allow good airflow, provide regular watering in prolonged dry spells and carry out occasional pest management as needed. |
ROSE DES PEINTRES offers tall, romantic structure, powerful summer fragrance and long-lived own-root reliability; an inspired choice if you would like a quietly characterful historic rose.