LA GARÇONNE – cream-pink hybrid tea rose - Evers
Step out to your front garden after rain and meet balance in the quietly glamorous blooms of LA GARÇONNE, a compact hybrid tea that fits effortlessly into smaller, rainwater-wise city plots coping well with cool, damp, clay-based soils. Its bushy habit and medium height make it easy to place along a terrace front or in a generous container, while the elegant, cream-and-red flowers bring a touch of 1920s charm without demanding expert care. As an own-root rose, it establishes steadily and ages gracefully, rewarding you with reliable structure and colour for many seasons. With medium maintenance needs and good heat tolerance, it suits busy householders who prefer simple routines to constant tinkering in the borders. Plant it once, water with saved rain where possible, and enjoy how year by year its roots strengthen, its shoots gain presence, and by the third summer it reaches its full ornamental character. Use it as a neat feature in an urban front path or as a cut-flower producer, adding scented, nostalgic blooms indoors while keeping the garden look quietly orderly.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| London terraced-house front garden |
The compact, upright habit and moderate height fit the narrow strips in front of terraces, offering refined structure without overshadowing windows. Own-root growth gives a long-lived framework with minimal shaping, ideal for the time-pressed homeowner. |
| Rainwater-conscious urban bed |
Good heat tolerance and steady, medium water needs work well with stored rain, particularly where you are improving heavier soils that stay moist after showers. This resilience under typical British wet-and-dry swings supports the sustainable-minded gardener. |
| Statement rose in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre pot, the bushy form and very full blooms create a tailored focal point by a doorway or along a front step. Own-root vigour helps the plant recover from any winter stress, keeping the display stable for the balcony-focused resident. |
| Small family flower bed |
Reliable remontant flowering offers repeated waves of scented, nostalgic blooms through the season, giving consistent colour around play areas without constant replanting. The long-term framework suits the space-conscious family gardener. |
| Cut-flower corner for the home |
Medium-sized, very full, exhibition-type flowers on strong stems lend themselves to cutting, so a few bushes in a sunny corner can provide regular indoor vases. This dual indoor-outdoor value appeals to the creative, décor-aware owner. |
| Edging along a front path |
The dense dark-green foliage and upright habit make an elegant, low rose edging that guides visitors while remaining easy to maintain at a modest height. Its lasting structure over many years is reassuring for the low-fuss beginner. |
| Mixed planting with perennials |
The bicolour cream-and-red flowers hold their colour well, contrasting attractively with airy perennials such as verbena or catmint. This stable colour performance supports thoughtful combinations planned by the design-conscious enthusiast. |
| Clay and chalk-tolerant urban border |
Once soil is improved for drainage, the rose copes reliably with typical British clay or chalk, handling showery spells and breezier sites without losing its tidy form, which is especially helpful for the weather-exposed city-front-garden owner. |
Styling ideas
- Front-row elegance – Line a short London terrace front with LA GARÇONNE and low thyme between paving joints for a calm, scented welcome – ideal for busy professionals wanting order with romance.
- Container theatre – Plant a single rose in a 50-litre pot with trailing ivy and white lobelia to frame a doorway – perfect for flat dwellers seeking maximum impact from one statement container.
- Nostalgic cutting strip – Combine LA GARÇONNE with soft grasses and Verbena hastata ‘Pink Spires’ in a slim side bed – suited to home decorators who like bringing home-grown flowers indoors.
- Clay-tolerant border – In improved clay, mix this rose with lavender and nepeta to echo its red-edged cream blooms – for gardeners dealing with heavy soils who still want a refined look.
- Formal path frame – Alternate LA GARÇONNE with small evergreen euonymus for a structured, year-round path edging – appealing to owners who favour low-maintenance, classically styled entrances.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as TANeiglat, marketed as La Garçonne Nostalgic Roses® TANeiglat, with approved exhibition name La Garçonne® for show and cut-flower categories. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Hans Jürgen Evers for Rosen Tantau in Germany, 1995; registered 1995 and introduced 1996, with parentage unrecorded but selected for nostalgic flower form and garden performance. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly regarded in European trials: Rumbeke 1st Prize 1998, The Hague Top Rose 2000, Glasgow Gold Medal 2002, Warsaw Diplomas 2006 and 2009, Lottum Audience Prize 2011. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright plant reaching about 80–110 cm in height and 55–85 cm spread, with dense, glossy dark-green foliage and moderate prickles forming a tidy, clump-forming shrub for beds or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, very full, ball-shaped to pompon hybrid tea blooms, usually borne singly on stems, with over 40 petals and remontant repeat flushes including a notably abundant second flowering period. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Bicolour cream-white centre with vivid cherry-red edges; colour holds well for several days, gently softening to pale yellowish white with lighter red margins toward the end of bloom without abrupt fading. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength scent clearly noticeable in the garden and on cut stems; fragrance description not fully characterised, but sufficient to contribute to a traditional, romantic rose atmosphere outdoors or in vases. |
| Hip characteristics |
Due to very double flowers, hips are infrequent; where formed they are small, ovoid, red (RHS 43A), about 10–15 mm in diameter, adding occasional seasonal interest without prolific seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around -21 to -18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish Zone 3); shows moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, plus good heat tolerance when watered during extended dry periods. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to beds, edging, hedging and containers; plant 50–90 cm apart depending on use, at roughly 2.8–3.2 plants/m²; prefers sun to light shade and benefits from routine deadheading and health checks. |
LA GARÇONNE offers compact structure, reliable repeat flowering and enduring own-root vigour for containers and small front gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you value long-term beauty with measured maintenance.