CARMINIA – purple-pink bedding floribunda rose – Vissers
Step through your front gate and be met by Carminia’s lilac-pink, cup-shaped blooms, held on a compact, bushy shrub that slips easily into small London-style beds and rain‑aware planting schemes where drainage matters on heavier soils. This floribunda rewards you with reliably fragrant, strong, citrus-floral scent, carried on the air after summer showers, giving a sense of calm balance even on the busiest days. Its bushy, medium-height habit keeps colour neatly at eye level, perfect for edging paths or framing a townhouse bay window. As an own-root rose it quietly invests first in roots, then framework, before revealing full ornamental longevity over the first three years, so you can enjoy a stable, maturing display rather than short-lived bursts. In beds or 40–50 litre containers it is surprisingly adaptable, tolerating partial shade and coping with sunnier, warmer corners without fuss. Its flowering is generously recurrent from early summer into autumn, so even low‑maintenance gardeners see continuous colour. With medium maintenance needs and only occasional plant protection, it suits those who value simplicity, while the sturdy growth and premium selection underpin the reassuring quality you expect from a long-term feature plant.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden edging in a terraced street |
Compact, bushy growth and medium height create a tidy low hedge that frames a path without overwhelming narrow plots, while repeat flowering keeps entrances welcoming for months – ideal for the busy urban gardener |
| Statement container on steps or balcony |
Performs well in large 40–50 litre pots, where its upright, space-efficient habit and good heat tolerance provide colour and scent even in exposed spots, provided drainage and watering are sensibly managed – reassuring for the space-conscious homeowner |
| Small mixed flower bed with perennials |
Remontant flowering and medium-sized blooms slot easily among perennials, giving reliable structure and colour rhythm through the season without complex pruning or staking – attractive to the relaxed hobby gardener |
| Family seating area or courtyard |
The strong, far-scented citrus-floral fragrance carries on warm evenings, so a single plant near seats, doors or patios can perfume the whole corner, enhancing everyday use of outdoor rooms – perfect for the scent-loving family |
| Rain-aware urban planting strip |
Suited to beds where surface water drains slowly, provided the soil is prepared with organic matter; sturdy roots and own-root resilience support long-term structure in small sustainable front gardens – helpful for the eco-conscious city dweller |
| Low-maintenance repeated planting scheme |
Medium maintenance needs and a naturally neat, dense habit allow simple, repeated planting along drives or paths to look designed with minimal ongoing work, beyond basic feeding and light pruning – appealing to the time-pressed beginner |
| Seasonal cut flowers for the home |
Fully double, cup-shaped blooms on sufficiently firm stems provide characterful indoor arrangements, giving home-grown scent and colour without the formality of dedicated cutting beds – rewarding for the creative home decorator |
| Long-term feature in a small garden |
Own-root growth builds a durable, stable shrub that can regenerate from the base and maintain its ornamental role over many years, supporting a sense of permanence in compact spaces – reassuring for the long-range planner |
Styling ideas
- Terrace-Edge Harmony – repeat Carminia along a narrow front border with lavender and nepeta for a soft lilac ribbon beside paving – for design-aware urban homeowners
- Courtyard Focus – plant one Carminia in a 50 litre clay pot with trailing thyme to anchor a bistro table corner – for balcony and small-patio users
- Soft Sunset Bed – mix Carminia with daylilies and airy grasses to blend its lilac-pink flowers into relaxed, low-care planting – for families wanting informal colour
- Calm Entrance Duo – mirror two containers of Carminia by the front door, underplanted with evergreen dwarf honeysuckle for year-round structure – for those seeking simple symmetry
- Elegant Ribbon Hedge – line a path at 25–30 cm spacing to create a low, fragrant flowering hedge that defines routes without blocking views – for practical garden planners
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda shrub rose, registered as Carminia, marketed as Carminia Bedding rose Carminia; part of the Bedding rose collection and classified commercially as a bedding floribunda bed rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Martin Vissers in Belgium from Sweet Blondie × Outta The Blue; breeding completed 2008, introduced and registered in 2020 through Viva International and Jan Spek Rozen. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy shrub to about 80–105 cm high and 30–50 cm wide, moderately thorny, with dense, slightly glossy, medium green foliage giving good coverage and a neat bedding outline. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium, fully double, cup-shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, borne in clusters; remontant habit with a notably abundant second flush extending display well through the main season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Closed buds deep lavender; opening to lilac-pink with silvery edges, later fading to pale silvery lilac; RHS 75C outer and 75B inner petals, with medium colour retention over the life of each flower. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, far-reaching perfume with a fresh citrus-floral character; scent intensity is high enough to notice several metres away in still air, making it especially effective near seating or entrances. |
| Hip characteristics |
Only sporadically forms small spherical hips, around 5–8 mm across, in an orange-red shade (RHS 40A); hips are occasional and mainly of incidental ornamental interest in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (RHS H6; roughly USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); heat tolerance good with moderate drought resilience, and moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in beds, edging and larger containers; plant 25–45 cm apart, density 12,8–14,7 plants/m²; prefers well-prepared soil, moderate feeding, and occasional preventive care for leaf diseases. |
CARMINIA offers compact, repeat flowering, strong fragrance and long own-root resilience, making it a graceful long-term choice for smaller gardens and generous containers you may wish to consider.