MAURICE UTRILLO – pink-yellow tea-hybrid rose - Delbard
In a compact London front garden or small family plot, colour and calm matter as much as reliability, and Maurice Utrillo delivers painterly, red‑and‑yellow striped blooms that keep returning from summer into autumn with reassuring regularity. This upright hybrid tea builds steadily on its own roots for a long-lived, easy-going presence, settling into heavy clay or urban ground that faces frequent rainfall and gusty weather with minimal fuss. Plant once in peat‑free compost, water with collected rainwater, and you can enjoy armfuls of long‑stemmed flowers for the vase while the shrub keeps its neat, compact outline for small spaces. Year by year the root system deepens, the framework thickens and flowering improves, moving naturally from quiet first‑season establishment to generous, fully developed garden impact by the third year. With glossy dark foliage as an elegant backdrop, this rose offers an easy way to add a sustainable, long-term accent of French artistry to an everyday British garden.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small London front garden |
The naturally upright, compact habit fits narrow beds along steps or railings, giving strong colour without dominating the space, while own-root plants mature steadily for dependable structure over many seasons, ideal for the busy city homeowner seeking easy-care. |
| Specimen in mixed flower border |
Distinctive, painterly striping stands out against perennials and grasses, and regular repeat flowering keeps the display going through the season, so one shrub provides a lasting focal point without constant replacement, suiting the gardener who appreciates impact. |
| Cutting patch for home bouquets |
Long, straight stems with large, cup-shaped blooms are perfect for vases, and the mild fruity fragrance adds refinement indoors; own-root vigour supports regular cutting without weakening the plant, ideal for home florists who value versatility. |
| Rainwater-conscious front garden design |
Performs well in typical urban soils when planted with added grit and organic matter, and responds reliably to watering from water-butts rather than sprinklers, supporting a more sustainable approach that appeals to gardeners prioritising conservation. |
| Clay or chalky suburban beds |
Once established in improved planting holes, the robust root system copes with heavier or alkaline soils, maintaining an upright framework and glossy foliage over many years, offering reassurance to householders gardening on challenging ground who want reliability. |
| Wind-exposed, coastal-leaning sites |
The dense foliage and sturdy, upright structure help the shrub stand up to blustery, damp conditions, provided the soil is well drained, aligning well with gardens that regularly face wet, windy weather yet still need attractive planting for resilience. |
| Large container on balcony or patio (50–60 L) |
In a generous, 50–60 litre peat-free container, the bushy habit and repeat flowering create a long-season feature by the front door or seating area, with modest care needs that align with the lifestyle of urban balcony owners wanting simplicity. |
| Family garden focal point |
Medium maintenance suits households that can manage occasional deadheading and feeding, rewarded by colourful, stripy blooms that children notice and remember, combining durability and charm for family gardens where long-term planting choices support beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Painterly-Entrance – Frame a terraced-house doorway with Maurice Utrillo underplanted with lavender and soft grasses for a gallery-inspired welcome – for design-conscious city homeowners.
- Striped-Showpiece – Use a single shrub in a gravelled front bed with nepeta and low sage to highlight its bold stripes – for small-garden owners who like strong colour statements.
- Balcony-Bouquet – Grow in a 50–60 L planter with trailing thyme and compact carex for easy cutting and tidy structure – for urban renters wanting portable, low-fuss beauty.
- Family-Focus – Place as a focal point by a lawn corner, edged with creeping phlox for year-round interest – for families seeking a durable, memorable garden feature.
- Rainwise-Border – Combine with sedges and permeable gravel paths so heavy showers soak in around resilient planting – for sustainability-minded gardeners improving front-garden drainage.
Technical cultivar profile
| Feature | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as DELstavo, marketed as Maurice Utrillo from the Les Roses de Peintres collection, exhibition-quality blooms suitable for both garden display and cutting for shows. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France, registered in 2004 and introduced after 2004 by Pepinières & Roseraies Georges Delbard, with parentage not publicly disclosed by the breeder. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised internationally with a Certificate of Merit at Lyon in 2000 and a Gold Medal at Rose Hills in 2005, confirming its ornamental value and performance under trial conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub reaching about 85–120 cm high and 70–95 cm wide, with moderately thorny stems and dense, glossy dark green foliage forming a solid, formal-looking garden presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped blooms with 17–25 petals, borne in clusters on long stems, opening repeatedly in strong flushes through the season, particularly generous in the second main flowering wave. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Bright red base petals boldly striped with butter-yellow and creamy white; colouring shifts slightly in strong sun as striping softens, yet overall variegated effect remains striking in mixed plantings. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Light, fresh scent with a fruity character, noticeable at close range rather than across the garden, adding refinement without overwhelming nearby seating or small enclosed outdoor spaces. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces few hips due to semi-double, exhibition-style blooms; when present, hips are small ellipsoids about 10–15 mm across, coloured orange-red and of mainly ornamental, minor wildlife interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy in typical UK winters down to about −21 °C, with medium resistance to black spot, mildew and rust, benefiting from good air circulation and basic preventive care in humid climates. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; space 50–90 cm apart depending on use, water regularly in dry spells, and deadhead spent blooms to encourage cleaner appearance and repeat flowering. |
MAURICE UTRILLO offers a compact, repeatedly flowering striped hybrid tea with long-term structure from its own roots, making it a refined yet practical choice for thoughtful gardeners considering their next planting.