PURPLE RAIN ® – violet-purple groundcover rose - Kordes
Let Purple Rain bring soft, lilac-purple colour to your Irish cottage or city front garden with almost effortless care. This spreading groundcover shrub forms a low, gently arching carpet of bloom, ideal for edging paths or clothing awkward banks where you need tidy coverage rather than constant pruning. Specially bred for reliable health, it shrugs off common fungal problems and keeps its foliage neat even in humid weather and frequent showers, coping well with blustery conditions and damp spells near the Atlantic coast. Self-cleaning flowers mean you spend more time enjoying its vivid, rosette-shaped clusters and less time deadheading, while the own-root form builds a stable framework that endures for years. Think of it as a slow, steady investment: roots in the first season, stronger shoots in the second, and full ornamental impact from the third, creating lasting garden structure, low-maintenance groundcover and easy-going beauty.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Low-maintenance groundcover in family gardens |
PURPLE RAIN forms a broad, spreading mat that naturally suppresses many weeds and covers bare soil with dense foliage and clusters of small, rosette flowers. Its self-cleaning habit reduces deadheading, ideal for beginners. |
| Urban front gardens and kerbside beds |
Selected for dependable performance in urban conditions, this rose copes well with heat-reflecting hard surfaces and bouts of moderate drought once established. Its tidy habit and continuous colour bring polish to compact spaces for the busy homeowner. |
| Irish cottage-style mixed borders |
The vivid crimson-lilac blooms sit nicely at the front of a border, flowing around perennials without overpowering them. Plant in groups at 65 cm spacing to create an informal, romantic edging suitable for the relaxed cottage-gardener. |
| Clay-prone family plots with improved drainage |
Once drainage is corrected, the strong, spreading root system and resilient top growth offer long-term structure at 40–65 cm height and 60–100 cm spread, thriving through showery spells and cool summers for the practical planner. |
| Containers and large patio pots |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, this variety forms a low, cascading mound that softens pot edges and steps. Minimal pruning and good self-cleaning make it a good choice near doors and seating areas for the time-poor urbanite. |
| Family gardens seeking low-chemical solutions |
High resistance to black spot, mildew and rust means less reliance on spraying, so you can keep maintenance simple while still enjoying attractive foliage and bloom over the season, which suits the eco-conscious family. |
| Long-lived planting schemes and hedging ribbons |
As an own-root shrub, it regenerates well after harsh pruning or winter damage, avoiding issues with suckering from a different rootstock and keeping its habit stable for many years, giving reassurance to the long-term planner. |
| Edging paths and lawn transitions |
The naturally prostrate growth habit flows neatly along paths and over lawn edges without growing too tall, creating a colourful, gently arching line that remains easy to step past, perfect for the style-conscious walker. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Ribbon – run a loose ribbon of PURPLE RAIN along a low picket fence, weaving between clumps of sweet alyssum for frothy white contrast – ideal for romantic cottage-garden lovers.
- Terrace-Edge – frame a small Dublin terrace front with a single row of these shrubs, letting them spill over gravel for a neat but informal boundary – perfect for busy city homeowners.
- Colour-Carpet – mass-plant in a sunny bed to create a bold violet-lilac carpet, punctuated with upright Rudbeckia for golden highlights – suited to confident colour enthusiasts.
- Pot-Cascade – place one plant in a 50 litre terracotta pot and allow the branches to trail over the rim, softening hard paving and steps – great for balcony and patio gardeners.
- Bank-Softener – plant on a slight slope where mowing is awkward; the spreading habit will drape and knit the surface together – useful for practical family-garden owners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Groundcover shrub rose from the Vigorosa collection; registered as KORpurlig, marketed as PURPLE RAIN ® Vigorosa®, exhibition name Purple Rain in American Rose Society listings. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Tim-Hermann Kordes in Germany (1998) from ‘Bassino’ × ‘KORpeligo’; introduced and registered in 2009 by W. Kordes’ Söhne, later distributed by Star Roses & Plants. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in European trials with multiple gold and bronze distinctions; awarded a Certificate at Hradec Králové (2014) and Silver Medal at Wilhelmsburg International Rose Competition (2013). |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Low, spreading, prostrate shrub 40–65 cm high and 60–100 cm wide; moderately dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage; moderate prickles; good natural self-cleaning of spent blooms. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, rosette-shaped clusters on short stems; over 40 petals per bloom; small flowers 1–4 cm in diameter; remontant with a rich first flush followed by a plentiful repeat flowering. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Crimson-lilac blooms, RHS 77B outer, 77A inner; fresh flowers vivid violet with reddish depth, ageing to pastel violet-purple with a soft rosy-lilac sheen; colour holds reasonably before gently lightening. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
No noticeable fragrance reported; flowers are primarily ornamental, valued for their colour impact, abundance and groundcover display rather than scent or pollinator support in mixed plantings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces small, spherical green hips around 5–8 mm across; hips are moderately set and generally hidden within the foliage, contributing little visual impact in typical garden use. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Very good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; hardy to approximately -26 to -23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish zone 4); tolerates heat and moderate drought with supplemental watering. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to groundcover, beds, edging, parks, containers and urban green spaces; plant 60–100 cm apart; prefers drained soil with mulch; maintenance low, light pruning and occasional feeding sufficient. |
PURPLE RAIN ® offers low-maintenance groundcover, resilient health and long-lived own-root reliability for Irish family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you value easy colour and enduring structure.