IMPÉRATRICE FARAH™ – white-red tea-hybrid rose – Delbard
Bring a touch of Parisian elegance to an Irish cottage border or small Dublin front garden with IMPÉRATRICE FARAH™, a tall hybrid tea rose whose sculpted blooms shrug off rainfall and cool, changeable summers. This own-root, premium Delbard variety rewards simple, regular deadheading with a generous second flush of high-centred, exhibition-style flowers on long, straight stems – ideal when you fancy stepping outside for a quick cut-rose wander under soft showers, feeling contentment in your green, light-filled space. The large, white blooms edged in carmine-red hold their colour well and look almost luminous against the glossy dark foliage, making even a narrow terrace bed feel quietly luxurious. Planted in a sunny spot with sensible drainage and a little mulch on heavier clay, this rose settles in steadily – roots in year one, strong framework in year two, and full garden impact by year three, giving you a long-lived, reliably ornamental feature that’s easy to keep .
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a front door |
The striking white-and-red blooms on tall, upright stems create a welcoming focal point beside a path or porch, without demanding elaborate care routines, suiting small city gardens where one statement plant must carry the scene for busy homeowners. |
| Cutting patch in a family garden |
High-centred, long-stemmed flowers are bred for the vase, so a simple square of three to five plants supplies elegant cut roses all summer; regular picking doubles as deadheading, making upkeep easy for enthusiastic but time-poor beginners. |
| Mixed cottage-style border |
Planted with cranesbill or low perennials, the upright habit and moderate spread slot neatly into a cottage border, while own-root vigour supports a long lifespan with minimal fuss, ideal for nature-loving gardeners. |
| Specimen rose in a narrow bed |
Its vertical habit and 130–170 cm height give structure against a wall or railing where space is tight; good colour retention keeps blooms smart between showers, helping compact front gardens look cared-for with little input from residents. |
| Container on patio or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre pot with free-draining compost, this rose forms a tall, shapely accent plant whose glossy foliage and sculpted flowers bring formality to small paved spaces, manageable even for new urban gardeners. |
| Low-maintenance rose bed on clay soil |
With sensible preparation for improved drainage and a mulch layer, it settles reliably into heavier Irish soils, then repays occasional feeding and deadheading with regular flowering, making care straightforward for practical owners. |
| Weather-resilient showpiece in exposed gardens |
The firm, double blooms and sturdy stems cope well with breezy, damp conditions and a short Irish summer, giving dependable display where delicate varieties might sulk, reassuring coastal and suburban gardeners. |
| Long-term family garden investment |
As an own-root rose it regenerates well from the base, avoids graft failures and builds a durable framework over time, so once settled it offers stable ornamental value for many years with moderate effort from committed homeowners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve border – weave IMPÉRATRICE FARAH™ through a curving bed with pink cranesbill and soft grasses for a relaxed, romantic feel – ideal for cottage-loving homeowners.
- Formal front focus – plant a single specimen in a clipped low hedge or box-edged rectangle to echo classic French formality – suited to tidy, design-conscious city dwellers.
- Patio show-vase – grow in a 50 litre terracotta container by the back door so you can cut stems quickly for indoor vases – perfect for busy families who love fresh flowers.
- White-and-red scheme – pair with white perennials and red foliage accents to echo the bicolour blooms and create a coordinated entrance bed – appealing to colour-focused beginners.
- Walkway companion – line a short path with widely spaced plants underplanted with groundcover cranesbill to enjoy repeated blooms on the way to the door – great for small-garden urban owners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as DELivour, marketed as Impératrice Farah™; ARS exhibition name Impératrice Farah, commercial group Rós taehibride for garden and cutting use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Georges Delbard in France, 1986; introduced by Delbard and Georges Delbard SA in 1992, with parentage recorded as unknown in available breeder documentation. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold medal in Rome in 1992 plus a further seven international competition distinctions, confirming its value as both a show-quality hybrid tea and a reliable garden performer. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea reaching 130–170 cm high and 70–95 cm wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage and densely thorned stems; spent blooms generally require manual removal. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, 7–10 cm, double blooms with 26–39 petals, classic high-centred and pointed-budded hybrid tea form; flowers are mostly solitary on stems, repeating well with a strong second flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Pure white petals with vivid carmine-red margins; edges fade to pale pink while the base creams slightly yet remains light, giving good colour retention from bud through full bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fragrance is very weak, with a barely noticeable rosy character; this variety is chosen primarily for its sculptural flower form and colour contrast rather than for scented-garden planting. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally sparse due to double blooms; where formed, hips are small, egg-shaped, orange-red, about 10–14 mm across, offering modest late-season ornamental interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (USDA zone 6b, RHS H7); black spot resistance is good, while powdery mildew and rust show medium susceptibility, needing occasional protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; suitable for beds, specimens, hedging and 40–50 litre containers, spaced 50–100 cm apart depending on use and planting density aims. |
IMPÉRATRICE FARAH™ offers tall, exhibition-quality blooms, steady repeat flowering and long-lived own-root reliability for Irish gardens, making it a refined choice if you would like a sculptural, easy-care focal rose.