DALDIRECTOR – cream-pink nostalgic rose - Dalla Libera
Bring a touch of quiet romance to a Dublin terrace or Irish cottage path with DALDIRECTOR, a cream-pink nostalgia rose that feels made for gentle strolls in soft, green light. Its large, very double blooms unfold in lush rosettes, opening from a pink‑tinted bud into a serene cream with the faintest blush, giving your garden a calm, elegant centre that looks beautiful in moody skies and low sun alike. Bred as a shrub rose, it forms an upright, bushy, mid‑green mound that is easy to manage and well suited to the realities of Irish rainfall and heavier soils, where good drainage and simple mulching help it thrive despite persistent humidity. The medium, sweet fragrance adds a sense of comfort close to your front door or favourite bench, while own‑root plants settle in reliably: in the first year they focus on roots, the second on strong new shoots, and by the third you enjoy their full ornamental presence with minimal fuss.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front‑garden focal shrub |
DALDIRECTOR’s upright, bushy habit and 80–105 cm height make it ideal as a single “greeter” rose by a gate or front step, giving structure without overwhelming a small urban space. The lush bloom form and soft colouring create a calm, welcoming note for homeowners who want reliable impact with little fuss, especially beginners. |
| Cottage‑style border |
The very double, rosette flowers and cream‑pink palette fit perfectly into informal, “girly” cottage borders with foxgloves and campanulas, adding romance without clashing with bolder perennials. Repeating flushes through the season keep gaps filled so your mixed border never looks bare, suiting those who like relaxed abundance, especially cottage‑gardeners. |
| Low flowering hedge |
Planted at around 55 cm spacings, DALDIRECTOR forms a continuous, waist‑high ribbon of dense foliage and nostalgic blooms, ideal for lightly separating a lawn from a path or drive. Own‑root plants knit together steadily over the years, giving a long‑lived, easily maintained hedge for families wanting soft boundaries, especially homeowners. |
| Feature in clay‑soil gardens |
With simple preparation – improving drainage with compost and a light mulch – DALDIRECTOR suits heavier Irish soils, rewarding modest care with strong growth and flowering. This makes it a reassuring choice where other plants struggle, offering dependable structure and bloom in changeable, damp weather for practical, time‑pressed gardeners. |
| Cut‑flower and vase use |
As an exhibition tea‑hybrid type with large, full rosettes on good stems, DALDIRECTOR gives luxurious, cream‑pink cuts for the house. The medium, sweet fragrance and good colour retention mean the blooms look composed in a vase for days, ideal for those who enjoy bringing their garden indoors, especially rose‑lovers. |
| Own‑root long‑term planting |
Grafted roses can age unevenly, but DALDIRECTOR on its own roots keeps its character over time, regenerating from the base if pruned harder or weather‑damaged. This supports a stable, long lifespan and reduces replacement costs, well suited to settled family gardens planned for the long term, especially planners. |
| Low‑maintenance family garden feature |
With moderate disease resistance and a medium maintenance rating, this rose fits a “little and often” care routine: a winter prune, basic feeding, and occasional protection in high‑pressure years, yet dependable flowering all summer despite frequent Irish rain and soft winds in Atlantic‑influenced gardens, suiting busy urban families. |
| Large container on patio or terrace |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container with free‑draining compost, DALDIRECTOR becomes a portable focal point, ideal beside seating where its medium, sweet fragrance can be enjoyed up close. Container growing suits rented homes and paved terraces, giving flexibility without digging, especially for space‑conscious urban residents. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage‑lane – Plant DALDIRECTOR in a staggered line along a path with Campanula persicifolia and foxgloves for a storybook cottage feel – ideal for romantic cottage‑garden fans.
- Front‑step – Use one or three shrubs as a loose triangle by the front door, underplant with low lavender for scent and structure – perfect for busy city homeowners.
- Pastel‑border – Combine with Salvia nemorosa, pale pink hardy geraniums and soft grasses to echo its cream‑pink rosettes – suited to relaxed, low‑maintenance borders.
- Container‑retreat – Grow it in a 50‑litre terracotta pot near a bench, adding trailing thyme at the rim, to enjoy fragrance on summer evenings – ideal for balcony and patio users.
- Soft‑hedge – Create a short hedge along a drive, weaving English lavender between plants for year‑round line and summer perfume – great for families wanting gentle screening.
Technical cultivar profile
| Trait |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Romantic rose collection shrub; registered as DALdirector, traded as Daldirector Romantic rose DALdirector; ARS exhibition name Rosenkavalier Kleiber; nostalgia type, Romantica group. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Davide Dalla Libera of Novaspina, Teolo, Italy; parentage not published; introduced and registered in 2016 as a modern romantic shrub rose selection. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, bushy shrub 80–105 cm tall, 60–80 cm wide; dense, glossy mid‑green foliage; moderately thorny stems; works as specimen, low hedge, or mixed‑border structural rose. |
| Flower morphology |
Large 7–10 cm, very double rosette blooms with 40+ petals; cluster‑flowered with strong remontant habit, producing generous first flush and abundant repeat flowering in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream‑pink flowers; RHS 36D outer, 158C inner; off‑white buds with pink tips open to creamy petals with soft pink edges, then fade gently to near‑cream while retaining an even tone. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Noticeably fragrant with a medium, pleasantly sweet character; best appreciated near seating or paths; decorative emphasis rather than perfume‑rose intensity, but clearly detectable in still air. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional ovoid hips, 12–18 mm, orange‑red when ripe; modest decorative effect in autumn and winter; not a prolific hip producer due to very double, densely petalled flowers. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Moderate resistance to black spot, mildew and rust; benefits from basic hygiene and, in high‑pressure seasons, timely treatment; winter hardy to about −21 to −18 °C (H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3). |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Use as border shrub, specimen, low hedge or cut rose; space 65 cm in masses, 55 cm for hedging, 100 cm as specimen; plant 2.4–2.7 plants/m²; medium maintenance with occasional protection. |
DALDIRECTOR offers romantic cream‑pink blooms, repeat flowering and long‑term own‑root reliability for Irish family gardens, a thoughtful choice if you favour lasting beauty with manageable care.