SWEET BLONDIE™ – creamy-white bedding floribunda rose - Vissers
Imagine returning home after rain, your front path edged with creamy clusters of Sweet Blondie™, the glossy foliage still beaded with droplets and the air carrying a delicate hint of fragrance. This compact floribunda gives a romantic, “girly” look that feels at home in London terraces and small family gardens, while coping reliably with typical British showers and breezes and supporting sustainable planting choices. Own-root plants establish steadily for a long, reliable life in the border, and in larger containers of at least 40–50 litres they create a soft, welcoming entrance display that looks thoughtfully designed with surprisingly little effort. Over the first three years it quietly builds from roots to shoots to full ornamental impact, fitting naturally into rainwater-friendly, low-fuss urban garden routines.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden bedding strip |
Ideal for narrow front borders where you want dependable colour and a soft “sweet blonde” tone that flatters brickwork and paving. Mass planting 40 cm apart gives a neat, upright line of blooms along the path, suiting beginners seeking gentle structure in a small footprint for the busy urban garden owner. |
| Romantic terrace or patio container |
Performs well in a 40–50 litre or larger pot, giving you a movable cloud of creamy, cupped flowers that pairs beautifully with soft grasses or lavender. Container growing also makes it easier to manage feeding and pruning where soil is poor, helpful for the beginner hobby gardener. |
| “Girly” city front garden |
The pastel cream-and-pink palette suits feminine, welcoming planting schemes with pastel bedding and light paving. It works especially well with neat box or low evergreen structure to keep the look tidy through winter, appealing to the style-conscious townhouse owner. |
| Formal edging and low hedge |
At 35 cm spacing it forms a low, upright hedge that marks boundaries without feeling harsh, perfect along drives or between front garden and pavement. The dense foliage gives a defined line even when between flushes of flowers, reassuring the order-loving home gardener. |
| Mixed perennial border accent |
The compact 80–100 cm height fits neatly in front of taller perennials like iris, coneflower or yarrow, its pastel blooms softening stronger colours. This creates depth and a long season of interest, which is attractive to the creative planting enthusiast. |
| Rainwater-focused planting scheme |
Suited to gardens where rainwater is directed into planting beds, combining well with free-draining soil improvements in heavier ground so roots stay healthy despite frequent showers and coastal breezes, giving confidence to the sustainability-minded city gardener. |
| Cutting for small indoor arrangements |
The medium, cupped clusters are excellent for short-stem posies in jugs or small vases, bringing their gentle, restrained scent indoors. Regular cutting also encourages new flowering, making the most of every stem for the rose-loving homemaker. |
| Long-term own-root investment planting |
As an own-root shrub it builds a durable framework that recovers more readily if damaged, and over seasons it maintains its character without suckering from a graft. This gives a stable bed or border display valued by the long-view garden planner. |
Styling ideas
- Pastel-Front Welcome – Line a narrow terrace front garden with Sweet Blondie™ and soft pink tulips for spring, creating a creamy, romantic path edge – ideal for design-aware urban homeowners.
- Container-Boudoir – Plant one rose per 50 litre pot with trailing silver thyme and soft pink diascia for a “dressing-table” look – perfect for balcony and patio gardeners wanting easy glamour.
- Tea-Rose Border – Combine with lavender, nepeta and low sage for a fragrant, informal edge that frames a seating area – suited to families who enjoy relaxed summer evenings outdoors.
- Soft-Structure Hedge – Use as a low hedge with clipped box balls behind, giving gentle colour and clear definition around drives or paths – useful for those wanting tidy structure without severity.
- Perennial-Show Companion – Thread plants through drifts of bearded iris, coneflower and yarrow, where the creamy flowers calm stronger tones – appealing to gardeners who like layered, evolving borders.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Sweet Blondie™ bedding floribunda rose (VISswepat), a floribunda group bed rose with ARS exhibition name ‘Sweet Blondie’, bred for clustered flowering and decorative garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in Belgium in 2002 by Martin Vissers from ‘Sweet Juliet’ × ‘Poustinia’; introduced 2010 through Viva International BVBA, with breeding rights held by Vissers International BVBA. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised with multiple awards: Orléans gold medal 2006, Kortrijk Golden Rose Award 2010, Hradec Králové Golden Rose 2011 and The Hague Audience Award 2012 for garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, compact shrub reaching 80–100 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; moderately self-cleaning, some spent blooms need light deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Floribunda clusters of medium, cupped, double blooms with 26–39 petals; flowers in repeated flushes with a notably abundant second wave, enhancing bed impact through the main season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream-white outer petals and delicate rosy-cream centre; buds open pastel cream with pale pink wash, then fade softly in strong sun, maintaining a light, gentle overall effect in the border. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Soft, restrained fragrance with a delicate character, noticeable at close range rather than across the garden, adding refinement without overwhelming nearby seating or paths. |
| Hip characteristics |
Due to double flowers, hip set is generally sparse; where formed, expect small spherical red hips around 7–10 mm, offering occasional discreet late-season interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −18 to −21 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease-sensitive, especially to powdery mildew and rust, requiring regular, proactive plant protection in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; suitable for beds, borders, hedging and large patio containers, planted 35–65 cm apart depending on use and desired density. |
SWEET BLONDIE™ offers compact creamy bedding colour, romantic cut flowers and long-lived own-root reliability; consider it where you want soft structure and gentle charm with manageable care.