PURPLE KID – purple bedding shrub rose – Ducher
If You enjoy a light garden stroll in soft rain, PURPLE KID surrounds You with cheerful colour and fragrance that sit happily in a small Dublin front garden or informal cottage border, coping well with cool summers and frequent showers and rainfall. Its semi-double, magenta‑purple blooms with a bright white eye flower in generous waves, filling the air with a fragrant, classically rosy scent that lifts the mood on even grey days. This modern shrub rose forms a naturally bushy structure with dense, mid‑green foliage and works beautifully as a specimen or in a relaxed hedging line, giving a softly glowing focus outside the sitting‑room window. Planted as an own‑root antoniaROSE® ORIGINAL in a 2‑litre pot, it settles in steadily – first building roots, then shoots, and by the third year offering full ornamental impact and dependable flowering for the long term, with the quiet renewal capacity that helps it recover from Irish winters and everyday family‑garden life.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Irish cottage-style flower bed by the front door |
PURPLE KID builds into a broad, bushy shrub that anchors a small cottage-style bed with strong purple colour and a bright white eye, giving the entrance a welcoming focus without fussy pruning demands for the busy homeowner. |
| Dublin terraced-house front garden hedge |
Planted at hedging distance, its rounded, branching habit and dense foliage quickly read as a low, informal hedge that softens railings or walls, offering long-season interest even where space is tight in urban streetscapes. |
| Feature shrub beside a sitting-room window |
The strong, classic rose scent and generous repeat flowering make it ideal near paths and windows, where regular household use means You can appreciate the fragrance and colour every time You pass, suiting fragrance-loving gardeners. |
| Mixed perennial border with romantic “girly” tones |
Its vivid magenta-purple blooms with a clean white halo pair beautifully with soft pinks, whites and lilacs, fitting a playful, romantic planting scheme that still feels natural and relaxed for style-conscious cottage-garden owners. |
| Specimen shrub in a small lawn or gravel area |
Grown as a stand‑alone plant at specimen spacing, the bushy structure and repeat waves of colour give strong visual impact from one plant, ideal for those who want a single, reliable focal rose in a modestly sized family garden. |
| Lightly shaded border with afternoon or dappled shade |
PURPLE KID tolerates partial shade, and its colour even deepens slightly out of full sun, so it works well against north‑ or east‑facing walls where many roses struggle, particularly for urban gardeners with limited sunny spots. |
| Large container on patio or balcony (40–50 litre minimum) |
In a generously sized container with good drainage, its bushy habit and repeating blooms bring cottage-garden charm to paved spaces that cannot be dug, making rose growing accessible to beginners and busy urban owners. |
| Low-maintenance family border with long-term structure |
As an own‑root shrub it ages gracefully, renewing shoots from the base and recovering well after weather damage, giving a stable, long-lived framework that copes with our cool, damp climate and suits time-pressed garden beginners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romantic Trio – Combine PURPLE KID with Liatris spicata ‘Alba’ and soft pink campanulas for a relaxed, “girly” Irish cottage feel – ideal for homeowners wanting charm by the front gate.
- Dublin Railings Softener – Plant a short row along terrace railings, underplant with low lavender, to create an easy-care, fragrant purple ribbon in compact city front gardens – perfect for busy urban dwellers.
- Evening-Scent Corner – Place a single shrub near a bench, with white Salvia nemorosa and silvery Stachys, so the strong fragrance and rich colour stand out in low light – suited to fragrance-focused gardeners.
- Playful Purple Border – Mix with Crocosmia and airy ornamental grasses for a lively, movement-filled strip along a driveway, keeping interest from summer into autumn – for families wanting colour without formality.
- Patio Feature Pot – Grow in a 40–50 litre terracotta or half-barrel with trailing thyme and violas to bring cottage style onto hard landscaping – ideal for renters or balcony gardeners who cannot plant in soil.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
PURPLE KID is a modern bedding shrub rose from the Rósra bhláthchlóis group, marketed as an own-root, container-grown garden shrub; formal registered cultivar name data are not currently available. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Fabien Ducher at Roseraie Ducher, France, and introduced in 2018, this modern shrub rose was selected for striking purple-lilac tones and repeat flowering suitable for ornamental beds and small gardens. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub habit reaching about 120–160 cm high and 100–140 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a substantial, rounded structure in beds and hedging lines. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, flat blooms, typically 4–7 cm across, carried in clusters; around 13–25 petals with clearly visible stamens, flowering in repeating flushes that provide an abundant second bloom later in the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Buds open vivid magenta with a white eye and golden stamens, then age to smoky mauve-lilac; colour holds well and deepens slightly in semi-shade, maintaining a saturated crimson-purple impression through the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Displays a strong, classic rose fragrance that is long-lasting in typical garden conditions, making it particularly suitable for planting near paths, doors, terraces or seating areas where scent can be regularly enjoyed. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms small ovoid red hips about 10–14 mm across, adding a subtle autumn detail, though not produced in large quantities and generally secondary to the ornamental value of the flowers and foliage. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3), but notably sensitive to powdery mildew and rust, with medium black spot issues; regular preventative plant protection is advised in humid, mild regions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in well-drained, fertile soil with mulching on heavier Irish clays; suitable for beds, hedges and urban plantings, including light shade, with spacing between 110 and 200 cm depending on hedging, massing or specimen use. |
PURPLE KID offers rich purple blooms, strong classic fragrance and a bushy, structural habit, while its own-root form supports long-lived renewal and recovery; if You enjoy easy charm with lasting value, this rose deserves consideration.