MAGIA NERA™ – dark red hybrid tea rose – COMsor
Step outside after rain and meet Magia Nera as its velvety dark-red blooms gleam against glossy foliage, creating a quietly dramatic focus for a compact, sustainable front garden that copes well with typical British rain and wind. This hybrid tea rose offers a strong, classic fragrance, ideal if you like to cut a few long-stemmed flowers for the house while still keeping a neat, bushy shape outdoors. Planted in peat-free compost with good drainage, it settles quickly into heavy clay or chalky soil, working steadily through its own-root development arc so that roots establish first, then top growth builds, and by the third year it shows its full ornamental value. Because the plant is naturally disease-resistant and sparsely thorned, it is easy to maintain beside a front path or in a large 40–50 litre container, even if your gardening time is limited and you prefer reliable, low-input care. The semi-double, high-centred flowers are moderately pollinator-friendly, adding movement and life to a small London terrace without demanding complex pruning or spraying routines.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Urban front garden focal point |
The deep, almost black-red blooms draw the eye immediately, giving a refined focal point beside a path or between bay windows. A bushy yet compact habit fits narrow beds, while own-root vigour supports a long-lived, reliable structure for beginners. |
| Cut-flower and exhibition use |
High-centred, pointed buds on well-proportioned stems are ideal for cutting, giving strongly scented, long-lasting vase displays. Because the plant is robust and repeat-flowering, you can cut regularly without weakening it, suiting homeowners. |
| Low-maintenance family border |
Good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means far less spraying or fuss, even in humid summers. Once established, light seasonal pruning and deadheading are usually enough to maintain shape and flowering, which appeals to busy gardeners. |
| Rainwater-aware clay or chalk garden |
When set in well-prepared, free-draining soil, this rose copes well with cool, wet spells and breezy conditions typical of many UK gardens, offering stable colour and structure with minimal inputs for sustainability-minded urbanites. |
| Own-root longevity planting |
Supplied as a young own-root plant, it builds a sturdy framework over time and can regenerate from the base if damaged, avoiding graft-suckers and helping the shrub remain attractive for years, which reassures cautious newcomers. |
| Pollinator-conscious flower bed |
The semi-double blooms allow moderate access to nectar and pollen, adding value alongside more open, wildlife-focused perennials. Combined with herbs and meadow-style companions, it contributes to a balanced, insect-friendly scheme for eco gardeners. |
| Large container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre pot with peat-free compost and steady moisture, the compact spread and upright habit make it a strong choice for paved front gardens or balconies, offering fragrance and structure without overgrowing limited space for flat-dwellers. |
| Three-year development project bed |
Ideal if you enjoy watching a garden mature: in the first year roots establish, the second year brings stronger shoots, and the third delivers full colour and form, rewarding patient, forward-planning gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Noir-Entrance – flank a narrow front path with Magia Nera and low Nepeta x faassenii, using the dark blooms against cool lavender to create a quietly dramatic, rain-tolerant welcome – ideal for style-focused terrace owners.
- Cutting-Corner – plant a small trio in a sunny bed with airy Bupleurum and Knautia ‘Red Knight’ so you can cut stems all season while keeping the border full – perfect for home florists.
- Balcony-Statement – grow a single specimen in a 50 litre container with trailing thyme and compact sage, letting fragrance spill into seating space without crowding – suited to compact balcony gardeners.
- Evening-Scent – combine with pale grasses and white perennials so the dark, velvety blooms and strong perfume stand out at dusk after summer rain – for after-work relaxers.
- Family-Friendly – place near seating with its sparse thorns, glossy foliage and low maintenance, underplanting with catmint to attract some pollinators without making care demanding – good for time-poor families.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as COMsor, marketed as Magia Nera™ hybrid tea rose COMsor; ARS exhibition name ‘Norita’. Belongs to the hybrid tea group, suitable for garden and cutting use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Maurice Combe in France from ‘Charles Mallerin’ × unknown seedling. Introduced in 1966 by Vilmorin-Andrieux, later distributed by Kern, Treloar and Barni for international markets. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy shrub 80–110 cm tall, 50–70 cm wide, with dense, dark green, glossy foliage and sparse prickles. Spent blooms often remain and benefit from deadheading to keep the plant tidy and flowering well. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, high-centred, pointed-budded hybrid tea blooms with 13–25 petals. Large solitary flowers, remontant with a notable second flush, sized around 7–10 cm, ideal for cutting and display purposes. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, velvety dark-red flowers with blackish tones; outer petals nearly black on opening. Colour holds strongly in sun, later shifting towards dark burgundy-purple with only slight fading over the life of the bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, clearly perceptible classic rose fragrance, noticeable both on the plant and indoors as a cut flower. Scent intensity is reliable through the main season, adding sensory value to compact garden spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderate quantities of small, spherical orange-red hips 10–14 mm in diameter. Hips extend seasonal interest into autumn and may provide incidental wildlife food while remaining visually unobtrusive. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Demonstrates good resistance to black spot, mildew and rust. Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3). Moderate heat tolerance; needs watering in prolonged drought and very hot spells. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with free-draining soil; enrich planting holes in clay or chalk. Space 50–90 cm depending on use, at 2.8–3.2 plants/m² for mass beds. Ideal for beds, specimens and cut flowers with low maintenance needs. |
MAGIA NERA™ offers velvety dark-red, fragrant blooms on a disease-resistant, own-root shrub that settles in for long, reliable service in compact gardens and containers, making it a thoughtful choice if you prefer beauty with minimal ongoing effort.