LOUISE DE MARILLAC™ – pink flowerbed shrub rose
Step through your front gate and imagine soft, post‑rain petals glowing against fresh mid‑green foliage, an easy shrub rose that copes steadily with everyday British weather, including blustery showers and persistent humidity. LOUISE DE MARILLAC™ builds a balanced, upright structure that sits neatly in small London front gardens and shared urban beds, keeping its compact footprint while filling out into a dense, bushy presence over time. Its remontant flowering habit brings wave after wave of medium pink, cup‑shaped blooms through the season, with discreet, elegant fragrance that never overwhelms narrow paths or neighbouring windows. Planted as an own‑root rose, it settles in reliably and can regenerate from the base, supporting a genuinely long‑lived lifespan in a family garden. Think in terms of a gentle development arc – roots in the first year, stronger shoots in the second, and full ornamental value by the third – giving you a calm sense of progress rather than extra work. With a medium maintenance level and occasional plant‑health checks, it offers dependable colour without demanding expert skills, fitting naturally into rainwater‑aware, sustainable planting schemes.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Small London front garden bed |
The compact, upright, bushy habit (around 80–105 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide) makes it ideal where pavement, path and planting need to coexist tidily, giving clear structure without overpowering a narrow frontage, perfect for the time‑pressed urban beginner |
| Rainwater‑friendly mixed border |
Dense mid‑green foliage and medium height let it slot into planting that slows and absorbs rainfall, working well with free‑draining amendments on heavier soils in areas where rain and wind regularly test less robust plants, ideal for the sustainability‑minded front‑garden owner |
| Low, informal hedge along a path |
Recommended spacings of 50–60 cm allow you to create a soft, flowering edge that gently defines boundaries while still letting air move through, reducing fungal pressure and keeping maintenance to an occasional tidy, suited to the relaxed family gardener |
| Feature rose in a medium border |
As a solitary specimen at about 90 cm spacing, its cup‑shaped, double blooms and steady repeat flower draw the eye without dominating, giving a reliable focal point that looks composed from the house or patio, attractive for the style‑conscious homeowner |
| Own‑root long‑term planting |
Being supplied on its own roots allows gradual thickening from the base, good recovery from pruning or weather damage and a stable look over many seasons, supporting intergenerational planting plans for the long‑view garden planner |
| Peat‑free family flower bed |
Performs well in a sunny, reasonably prepared bed using modern peat‑free composts blended into existing soil, responding best to consistent moisture and mulching rather than complex feeding regimes, reassuring for the eco‑aware beginner |
| Large container on balcony or terrace |
The moderate root system and bushy outline adapt well to a substantial pot of at least 40–50 litres, where regular watering and drainage holes prevent stress while you enjoy flowers at eye level, especially appealing to the space‑limited balcony gardener |
| Mixed perennial scheme with soft colours |
Medium pink flowers that fade gently to pale and almost whitish tones pair effortlessly with cool blues and mauves, offering a long season of harmonious colour shifts among perennials and herbs, rewarding for the colour‑sensitive hobby gardener |
Styling ideas
- Terrace‑Welcome – Underplant with low Nepeta and soft grasses to frame a small front step, echoing the rose’s pink with cool blues and movement – for design‑aware city homeowners
- Herb‑Ribbon – Run a loose hedge of LOUISE DE MARILLAC™ with edging thyme or Calamintha, letting foliage knit together for a scented, wildlife‑friendly strip – for busy families wanting simple structure
- Pastel‑Drift – Mix with lavender, pale salvia and soft daylilies to create a long, pastel flowering season that reads as one gentle mass from the pavement – for beginners seeking easy harmony
- Court‑Yard – In a pair of 50‑litre containers flanking a doorway, combine with trailing ivy and white annuals to keep entrances elegant yet low‑maintenance – for flat dwellers and renters
- Park‑Edge – Use in repeating groups through a community bed with Knautia and airy perennials, giving rhythm and structure that stays attractive even between flushes – for shared urban garden projects
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Registered as MASloumar, marketed as Louise De Marillac™ Les Provençelles®. Shrub rose, flowerbed shrub type in the Bed rose group, suitable for exhibition as a shrub rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad (Pétales de Roses, France) from ‘Paul Bocuse’ × ‘Michelle Bedrossian’; breeding completed around 2010, introduced commercially in 2011 as part of Les Provençelles®. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub to about 80–105 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, slightly glossy mid‑green foliage and moderate prickliness; flower stems carry clustered heads. |
| Flower morphology |
Double, cup‑shaped blooms with 26–39 petals, large size class, produced in clusters; remontant habit with a good second flush and ongoing repeat flowering in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Medium pink with baby‑pink tones (RHS 62C–62D), opening uniform and gradually fading to pale, sometimes almost whitish petals; colour holds better in cooler weather than in heat. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very faint fragrance with a discreet, elegant character; scent is barely detectable in many conditions, so planting is recommended chiefly for visual rather than olfactory impact. |
| Hip characteristics |
Low hip set due to double flowers; where produced, hips are 8–12 mm, small, red, spherical and decorative at close range, but not typically a dominant garden feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease resistance is medium for black spot, mildew and rust, responding well to basic preventive care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with well‑drained soil; space 60 cm in beds, 50 cm for hedges or 90 cm as a specimen. Maintenance is medium, with periodic deadheading and treatments as needed. |
LOUISE DE MARILLAC™ offers compact structure, repeat pink flowering and dependable own‑root longevity, making it a thoughtful choice if you are planning a durable, low‑effort rose planting.