WHITE DIAMOND® – white bedding floribunda rose – Interplant
WHITE DIAMOND® brings a sense of seaside freshness to compact UK gardens, its snow‑white clusters glowing even beside shingle and salt‑tolerant planting. This bushy floribunda builds its own-root stability quietly below the surface, then responds with increasingly generous flowering as it settles. In an average family plot, it offers reassuring reliability with moderate disease tolerance and strong winter hardiness, suiting breezier, more exposed sites along the coast. Kept in a large 40–50 litre container or a free‑draining bed, it copes well where heavier soils need careful drainage and thoughtful water management. Over its first seasons, it follows a calm development rhythm – roots establishing in year one, shoots filling out in year two, then full ornamental impact from year three, giving you low‑fuss, long‑term endurance in a bright, “girly” coastal‑style setting.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Coastal veranda containers (40–50 litres) |
Its bushy, upright habit and medium height fit neatly into large containers, giving a cool, white focus against sea views without dominating small decks. With own‑root resilience and long-term endurance, it rewards beginners and time-poor owners. |
| Front-of-border in small family gardens |
Snow-white clusters read clearly from patio or kitchen windows, yet the plant remains compact enough for narrow borders in typical suburban plots. Gradual build-up to full ornamental impact means each year feels like a visible step forward for busy householders. |
| Coastal, salt-tolerant shingle-style beds |
The luminous white flowers echo shells and sea-foam tones, pairing naturally with silvers and greys in shingle or gravel beds where winds are frequent. Its structural stability is reassuring where stronger anchoring and careful water management are often expected by coastal gardeners. |
| Low, informal hedging along paths |
Regular, upright shoots and moderately dense foliage allow loose edging lines that guide the eye without feeling rigid. With own-root durability, gaps from occasional winter losses are less likely, easing future replanting decisions for practical planners. |
| Bed and mass planting for clean white blocks |
Planted at recommended spacings, the bushy habit closes up into an even, white-flowering surface, ideal where you want simple repetition instead of mixed borders. Remontant flowering keeps these blocks visually relevant across the season, pleasing colour-focused stylists. |
| Mixed coastal schemes with grasses and perennials |
Its pure white flowers sit calmly among Festuca, sea kale or low lavender, softening structural grasses with a light, feminine note. The steady, moderate maintenance profile suits designs planned for relaxation rather than constant work, appealing to contemplative users. |
| Family seating corners and “tea spots” |
A mild, fresh scent and cool white tones create a quiet backdrop near benches or bistro sets where you pause after a walk. The gradual year-on-year improvement means the space matures with family routines, a benefit appreciated by patient outdoor enthusiasts. |
| Occasional cutting for small indoor vases |
Medium-sized, semi-double blooms on branching stems lend themselves to informal posies without stripping the plant. Own-root vigour helps it recover from light cutting over many years, giving reliable stems for those who like easy home arrangements, particularly keen decorators. |
Styling ideas
- Shellwalk Border – Combine with sea kale, Festuca and pale gravel for a shell-like palette along a coastal path – ideal for seaside-loving homeowners wanting gentle structure without heavy maintenance.
- Veranda Tea Nook – Place one plant in a 50-litre tub beside a bistro set, underplanting with trailing thyme for a relaxed, wind-sheltered corner – suited to balcony and veranda users seeking calm, bright seating.
- White Hedge Ribbon – Run a loose line of plants along a front path, interspersed with low lavender for fragrance and form – perfect for families wanting a tidy, welcoming entrance that stays manageable.
- Shingle Drift – Dot groups through a shingle or gravel bed with Sedum and dwarf ornamental grasses, letting the white blooms “float” above – for coastal-style enthusiasts keen on contemporary, low-fuss planting.
- Compact Cutting Patch – Arrange a short row near the back door for easy access to stems for small jugs indoors – best for hobby gardeners who like occasional cut flowers without dedicating a whole border.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
White Diamond® Bedding rose INTeramon, floribunda bed rose; ARS exhibition name White Diamond, registered cultivar name INTeramon, meaning “white diamond” for its radiant pure white bloom colour. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Interplant Roses B.V. in the Netherlands, breeding year 1996, with parentage not recorded; introduced commercially in 1997 by Interplant Roses B.V. as a white floribunda bedding shrub rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 100–140 cm high, 85–115 cm spread, moderately thorny, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage; forms a full, even outline well suited to beds, hedging and structural container use. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cup-shaped blooms in clusters, medium size (approximately 4–7 cm), with 13–25 petals; remontant habit provides a strong second flush, making it useful for season-long display in beds and edging. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure snow-white flowers with silken sheen; buds creamy pastel white, opening with a faint buttery-yellow centre glow, later shifting to creamy white with fine beige-edged petals; very good colour retention in garden conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, fresh and lively aroma rather than a heavy perfume; scent is noticeable at close range around seating areas but remains discreet, suiting users who prefer a gentle background fragrance in family gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip formation is expected to be minimal; where present, hips are small (about 6–10 mm), spherical and red, so autumn fruit effect is limited and does not strongly influence the overall ornamental performance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, Swedish zone 4, USDA 5b); moderate resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, generally satisfactory in well-sited UK gardens with standard monitoring. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions; suitable for beds, edging, hedging, containers and light cutting. Maintain moderate care, including occasional plant protection; follow spacing guidelines from 90 to 170 cm, depending on intended use. |
WHITE DIAMOND® offers pure white, repeat-flowering charm with bushy structure and reassuring hardiness, and in own-root form it matures into a durable, low-fuss feature you may confidently choose for long-term planting.