ORIGAMI ® – cream-red bedding floribunda rose – Meilland Richardier
Bring a feeling of cheerfulness to your Irish garden with ORIGAMI ®, a compact floribunda whose cream-and-red, star-shaped blooms look as if they’ve been folded by hand. Its bushy habit suits small front gardens and cottage-style borders where you want colour without fuss. As an own-root rose it offers reassuring longevity, quietly rebuilding from the base if a stem is damaged and keeping its shape year after year. Plant once, then enjoy as it develops from establishing roots in the first year, to stronger shoots in the second, and a settled, full display by the third. It copes well with Irish breezes and wet spells while still appreciating good drainage on heavier soils, making it a reliable choice for borders, paved terraces and containers that brighten everyday wanderings between house and garden.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal point near the door |
Use ORIGAMI ® as a welcoming feature by the path or doorstep, where its neatly bushy shape and eye-catching bicolour flowers offer instant charm. The compact height works beautifully in tight Dublin terraces without overwhelming the space – ideal for the busy homeowner. |
| Cottage-style mixed border |
In an Irish cottage border, this floribunda brings repeated flushes of cream-red colour against dark green foliage, threading cheerfully between perennials. Own-root growth means the clump remains stable and long-lived, rewarding a single good planting with years of consistent display – perfect for the romantic gardener. |
| Small family garden flower bed |
Plant in small beds where you want reliable, season-long flowering without complex pruning. Regular cluster blooms add structure and brightness at a child-friendly height, making it easy for all ages to enjoy up close in everyday family life – suited to the practical family. |
| Container on balcony or paved terrace |
In a large 40–50 litre pot with good drainage, ORIGAMI ® gives you a moveable splash of colour for balconies and terraces. Its bushy habit fills containers attractively, while the own-root system provides long-term stability so you can keep repotting the same plant – ideal for the urban balcony-owner. |
| Colour-contrast bedding schemes |
For bedding and massed planting, the regular height and spread make spacing straightforward, creating ribbons of cream-red stars along paths or lawns. The predictable form makes it easy to mix with grasses and airy perennials for a soft, modern take on traditional bedding – appealing to the design-conscious gardener. |
| Cut flowers for kitchen table or windowsill |
Sturdy, medium-sized blooms on bushy stems are easy to snip for short indoor arrangements. A few stems in a jug quickly bring that cottage feel into the kitchen, and own-root vigour helps the plant recover well from cutting, season after season – appreciated by the home decorator. |
| Partially shaded side garden |
Where houses or fences give only part-day light, this variety still performs, provided the soil is reasonably drained and enriched. It offers dependable structure and colour in those awkward side strips that link front and back, supporting that short, rain-dappled garden walk – perfect for the space-maximising owner. |
| Low informal hedge or edging line |
Planted at recommended hedge spacing, ORIGAMI ® creates a low, informal line of colour that softens drives or paths. The own-root habit means if a stem dies back it can be replaced from the base, helping the hedge keep an even look over many years with modest effort – ideal for the low-maintenance gardener. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon Border – Run a low line of ORIGAMI ® along a path with foxgloves and campanulas, letting the bicolour blooms pick up pastel tones – for gardeners seeking a gentle country feel in town.
- Balcony Jewel Pot – Plant one rose in a 40–50 litre terracotta container with trailing thyme, using its compact bushy form as the calm centre of a small seating area – for apartment dwellers wanting a simple focal point.
- Front-Door Welcome – Flank the entrance with paired pots of ORIGAMI ® underplanted with spring bulbs, giving year-round structure and a friendly burst of colour for visitors – for house-proud owners who like an easy hello.
- Textured Prairie Mix – In a sunny bed combine ORIGAMI ® with Echinacea ‘Delicious Nougat’ and Panicum ‘Sangria’ for a modern, long-lived blend of starry blooms and airy grasses – for design-led gardeners who enjoy contrast.
- Family Picking Corner – Group three bushes with low herbs and catmint so children can easily cut a few stems while adults enjoy the tidy shape and repeat flowering – for families wanting a forgiving, interactive planting.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose, Collection Classics; registered as MEImozahiq, marketed as Origami ® Classics MEImozahiq, exhibition name Origami, bush and floribunda exhibition categories. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in France by Michèle Meilland Richardier for Meilland International; breeding year 1999, introduced 2015, initial distribution by Meilland Richardier, parentage not publicly documented. |
| Awards and recognition |
Australian National Rose Trial Garden Gold Medal and Rose Hills Trophy 2010; Tokyo International Rose and Gardening Show Silver Medal 2010; further recognition at Saint Feliu, Pere Dot Award. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub reaching about 70–90 cm high and 40–60 cm wide with moderately thorny stems and dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage, suitable for beds, borders and larger containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Densely double, medium-sized blooms of 4–7 cm carried mostly in clusters; flower form is a blend of cup-shaped and striking star-shaped blooms, with 40 or more petals and very little visible centre. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Bicolour cream-red flowers; cream-white base with vivid red margins on opening, later softening to pale white with a gentle red edge, and colour fade increasing in strong sun through successive flowering stages. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Primarily an ornamental variety with only a very weak, barely noticeable scent character; flowers are heavily double so stamens are obscured, offering low interest for fragrance-focused plantings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is usually light due to the densely double flowers, but occasional spherical hips 8–12 mm across can form, ripening orange-red and adding a small decorative note in late season. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Classified as very susceptible to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, requiring regular protection; hardy to about -21 to -18 °C, corresponding to RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3 and USDA Zone 6b climates. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny or lightly shaded beds, borders and large containers; needs preventative spraying routine, fertile but well-drained soil, and plant spacing from 30 to 55 cm depending on whether hedging, bedding or specimen use. |
ORIGAMI ® Classics MEImozahiq offers distinctive star-shaped bicolour blooms, a compact bushy habit and dependable own-root longevity; consider it if you would like a structured, long-lived feature for a modest garden space.