DIORESSENCE® – purple bedding floribunda rose – Delbard & Delbard-Chabert
Step outside to a soft, mossy path and the raindrops seem scented when DIORESSENCE® opens its lush, purple blooms: a classic floribunda that turns a small Irish garden into a gentle, perfumed escape. Bred by Delbard for the Grands Parfums collection, its very strong, lingering fragrance fills a cottage border or Dublin front garden with relaxed, old-world charm. In our own-root 2‑litre form it establishes steadily, giving you a reliable, long-lived rose that shrugs off wind and rainfall and copes well where summers are short. Plant it once, then watch it move from settling roots to stronger shoots to full ornamental value over three seasons, bringing a feeling of contentment rather than gardening chores. Its compact, bushy habit makes spacing and shaping simple in the typical family plot, yet the shimmer of silvery-lilac petals against glossy foliage feels quietly luxurious and thoroughly modern.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Cottage-style front garden bed |
The compact, bushy habit and medium height suit narrow Dublin or village front gardens where you want big impact from a small footprint. Large, double, purple blooms and intense fragrance give a romantic cottage feel without complicated pruning for beginners. |
| Fragrant seating corner |
As a specimen near a bench or terrace, DIORESSENCE® delivers very strong, classic rose perfume that lingers in still evening air. Its remontant flowering keeps scent coming in waves through summer, giving daily pleasure to the fragrance-loving homeowner. |
| Mixed perennial border with structure |
The upright, bushy form and glossy dark foliage anchor looser perennials, while the rich purple clusters repeat between flushes of herbaceous colour. Recommended spacings make it easy to weave through existing beds for the relaxed gardener hobbyist. |
| Feature rose in small family garden |
In typical Irish family plots, one or three plants at specimen spacing create a focal point that matures steadily: year one for roots, year two for top growth, year three for full display. The own-root form supports long-term reliability for the time-poor urbanite. |
| Cut-flower patch or picking border |
Large, cup-shaped blooms on floribunda clusters are ideal for cutting; the colour nuances and powerful perfume give vase arrangements a luxuriant, “perfume house” feel. Regular picking also encourages fresh buds, which suits the creative garden stylist. |
| Structured bedding and low hedge planting |
Clear spacing guidelines (40–50 cm for edging, 75 cm as specimens) make planning simple, even for new gardeners. Repeating plants in a line or block creates a tidy but soft boundary that fits a family-friendly, manageable garden. |
| Weather-resilient rose display |
Once established on its own roots, the shrub copes reliably with cool, damp Irish conditions and repeated summer showers, offering stable ornamental value with modest care. This supports a relaxed approach for the busy yet nature-loving resident. |
| Container planting on patio or balcony |
In a large 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, its upright habit and fragrant, silvery‑lavender blooms give a sense of luxury even in tight urban spaces, while occasional deadheading and feeding remain manageable for the casual rose-growing novice. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage Romance – Underplant DIORESSENCE® with airy grasses and pink or white campanulas to echo its lilac tones and fragrance – ideal for those creating a soft Irish cottage ambience.
- Front-Garden Welcome – Line a short path with evenly spaced plants, edging with low evergreen box or Euonymus for year-round structure – perfect for homeowners wanting a neat but characterful entrance.
- Evening Perfume Corner – Combine with pale nepeta and white gaura near a favourite chair so scent and soft colours glow at dusk – suited to fragrance lovers who relax outdoors after work.
- Cutting-Strip Luxury – Plant in a dedicated row with verbena and cosmos behind for airy height, giving a steady supply of scented stems – great for creative gardeners who enjoy arranging home-grown bouquets.
- Urban Pot Jewel – Grow one shrub in a 50‑litre terracotta container with trailing thyme around the rim to soften edges – tailored to city dwellers seeking maximum effect from minimal space.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Dioressence® Grands Parfums DELdiore; registered as DELdiore, floribunda bedding rose, floribunda–grandiflora group, ARS exhibition name Dioressence, premium silver merit rating. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges and André Delbard-Chabert, France, 1984; parentage (‘Holstein’ × ‘Bayadère’) × ‘Prélude’; introduced and initially distributed by Delbard in the same year. |
| Awards and recognition |
Seven national and international awards, including the Monza International Rose Competition Gold Medal for Fragrance in 1984, confirming its status as a top-tier scented garden rose. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub to around 75–95 cm tall and 60–80 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickliness; self-cleaning weak, so spent blooms benefit from deadheading. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, double, cup-shaped, cluster-flowered blooms with 26–39 petals; remontant habit with a notably abundant second flush, suitable for cut flowers, beds, hedging and specimen planting. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep, cool-toned purple with crimson undertone; ARS code M, RHS 75A/75C; colour lightens in strong sun and deepens in cool weather, with silvery lavender-lilac shimmer as flowers open and age. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Very strong, classic rose fragrance of intense, long-lasting character; primarily ornamental, not selected for culinary or cosmetic use, but ideal where scent is a key garden design objective. |
| Hip characteristics |
Limited hip set due to very double flowers; occasional small ellipsoid hips, about 10–14 mm diameter, ripening to orange-red and adding discreet autumn interest without heavy seeding. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3); medium disease resistance overall, resistant to black spot, medium to powdery mildew and rust, appreciates watering in prolonged heat. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun, in well-drained soil with organic mulch; spacing 40–50 cm for hedges, 75 cm as specimens; 4.2–4.8 plants/m² for mass planting; medium maintenance with occasional protection and deadheading. |
Dioressence® offers intense purple blooms, powerful fragrance and compact, reliable growth on long-lived own roots, making it a refined yet easy-going choice I can confidently recommend for Irish family gardens.