CORINNA SCHUMACHER – white hybrid tea rose – Guillot
Step out to your front garden after rain and meet the balance of CORINNA SCHUMACHER: long-stemmed, high-centred blooms in luminous white, gently brushed with powder pink at the heart. This refined hybrid tea combines elegance with reliable repeat flowering from early summer well into autumn, offering an easy rhythm of cutting and garden display. Bred by Guillot and supplied in our own-root form, it is designed for longevity, quietly rebuilding a strong underground framework that supports steady top growth. From the first season you can expect neat structure and a few precious blooms, with year two bringing fuller flowering and year three delivering the complete ornamental effect you imagined. Compact and upright, it suits narrow terraced-house front gardens where good drainage helps it handle wet, windy British spells and heavy soils. Its intense, lingering fragrance drifts along the path, while moderate disease resistance and a manageable maintenance routine make it a reassuring choice for time-pressed gardeners. Settling into containers of at least 40–50 litres, the rose holds its poised form beside steps or balconies, offering long-lasting impact without demanding expert skills.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point |
The upright habit and 70–90 cm height create a clear vertical accent that reads beautifully from the pavement, even in smaller London terraces. Recurrent, high-centred blooms provide a smart, “kept” look for households wanting elegance with limited gardening time, ideal for the busy urban gardener. |
| Cutting rose by the path |
Large, exhibition-style flowers on long, straight stems are easy to cut for vases without spoiling the overall shape of the shrub. Strong, lasting perfume means just a few stems can scent a room, rewarding regular picking and simple deadheading for the home flower arranger. |
| Compact bed in small family gardens |
The modest 35–50 cm spread allows several bushes to be planted in a short border without overcrowding. Regular repeat flowering keeps family gardens colourful for months, with only occasional feeding and pruning needed, suiting the low-maintenance homeowner. |
| Rain-aware urban planting strip |
Planted into improved heavy clay with good drainage, this rose copes well with typical British wet spells and wind, giving a stable structure that stays tidy by the front door. Own-root growth helps it recover if tops are weather-damaged, reassuring the climate-conscious city dweller. |
| Statement container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container, its upright framework and limited spread remain in proportion as it matures, while own-root vigour supports long life in a pot. With consistent watering using collected rainwater, it becomes a reliable feature for the space-savvy balcony owner. |
| Single-specimen “girly” feature |
The creamy-white blooms flushed with soft pink give a romantic, feminine mood that pairs well with light-toned gravel, painted railings and simple box edging. One well-placed plant can transform a small entrance, appealing to the style-led front-garden designer. |
| Structured mixed border with perennials |
Its clear, upright shape and medium height slot neatly among perennials such as lavender, sage, nepeta or coneflowers, providing a vertical “anchor” that flowers between their peaks. Own-root resilience keeps the outline dependable for the long-term planner. |
| Perfumed seating corner |
The intense, long-lasting scent is ideal near a bench or small terrace, where repeated flushes carry fragrance on still evenings. With moderate disease resistance and simple pruning, it offers a manageable, fragrant backdrop for the relaxation-focused beginner. |
Styling ideas
- Romantic Entrance – Plant two roses flanking a front gate, underplanted with soft lavender and low nepeta to echo the white-and-pastel palette – perfect for the urban homeowner wanting a welcoming, feminine doorway.
- Classic Showcase – Use a single bush in a small gravel bed with clipped box balls, letting the high-centred blooms provide a traditional hybrid tea look – ideal for those who appreciate formal structure without complex upkeep.
- Balcony Feature – Grow in a 50 litre container with airy grasses and trailing thyme, using stored rainwater for irrigation – suited to city dwellers seeking a sustainable, fragrant potted statement.
- Summer Cutting Corner – Combine three plants with echinacea and rudbeckia to create a mini cut-flower patch that supplies vases for the house – great for beginners wanting reliable blooms to pick all season.
- Evening Perfume Nook – Position near a small seating area with soft lighting, backed by tall sages or daylilies for contrast – ideal for those who value scent and calm at the end of the day.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose marketed as CORINNA SCHUMACHER – white hybrid tea rose – Guillot; ARS exhibition name Corinna Schumacher; part of the hybrid tea collection for garden and cutting use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Guillot at Roseraies Pierre Guillot, France, with parentage not published; introduced by Roseraies Guillot in 2011 as a premium-cut and garden hybrid tea for temperate climates. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, compact hybrid tea reaching around 70–90 cm high and 35–50 cm wide, moderately thorny, bearing mid-green, slightly glossy foliage of moderate density that forms a tidy, vertical bush. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred blooms with 26–39 petals, classic pointed buds and solitary presentation on stems; remontant, with an abundant second flush and further repeat cycles in suitable seasons. |
| Colour data and phenology |
White flowers with a soft pale-pink wash at petal bases; buds ivory with a pinkish tip, opening to bright white, then gently fading to creamy white as pink tones recede; ARS PB, RHS 155D and 62D references. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, intense, long-lasting scent typical of perfumed hybrid tea roses; fragrance character not formally described but designed to be prominent and noticeable both in the garden and indoors as a cut bloom. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small numbers of spherical hips, around 10–14 mm in diameter, ripening to orange-red; decorative in close view but not a heavy fruiting variety, and generally incidental to its primary ornamental role. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease profile shows resistance to black spot with moderate susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust, benefiting from occasional protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with fertile, well-drained soil; ideal for beds, low hedging and cutting. Space 35–60 cm depending on use, maintain medium-level care with pruning, feeding and timely plant protection as needed. |
CORINNA SCHUMACHER offers intensely fragrant, long-stemmed white blooms on a compact, repeat-flowering, own-root shrub that is bred for long garden life, making it a thoughtful choice if you would like a refined yet practical hybrid tea.