THE DARK LADY – crimson English rose - Austin
If you dream of a romantic, “girly” corner in an Irish cottage or Dublin front garden, Dark Lady surrounds you with velvety crimson petals and a full old-rose fragrance, offering an easy-care shrub that copes gracefully with cool summers and frequent rainfall. Its bushy, upright habit and dense, glossy foliage give year-round structure, while reliable repeat flowering keeps colour returning from early summer into autumn. As an own-root plant it settles in steadily, rewarding you with strong roots in the first year, more confident shoots in the second, and full ornamental splendour from the third season, becoming a long-lived, low-fuss garden companion.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature shrub near a seating area |
Rich, crimson rosettes and a medium-strength, old-rose scent make this variety ideal beside a bench or favourite chair, where you can appreciate its colour and perfume on mild Irish evenings – perfect for the fragrance-loving homeowner. |
| Romantic mixed border in a family garden |
The bushy, upright form and 100–150 cm height give dependable structure in a mixed border, pairing beautifully with lavender, coneflowers and meadow sage for a softly romantic, cottage-style display – ideal for the relaxed hobby-gardener. |
| Dublin terraced-house front garden focal point |
As a single specimen at 180 cm spacing, it provides a generous, welcoming burst of crimson colour with tidy, dark green foliage, adding character without overwhelming a smaller plot – a fine choice for the busy urban gardener. |
| Informal flowering hedge |
Planted at around 110 cm intervals, the dense branching and foliage knit into an informal hedge that offers privacy, seasonal colour and classic charm, suiting those who prefer a softer boundary – well matched to the style-conscious resident. |
| Cut flowers for the house |
Large, very full rosette blooms on sturdy stems make excellent cut flowers, bringing the old-rose fragrance and rich, shifting crimson tones indoors for casual arrangements – appealing to the creatively minded collector. |
| Long-term, low-fuss planting scheme |
The own-root form encourages a long lifespan and stable performance, quietly rebuilding from the base if ever cut back hard, so your initial planting becomes a durable part of the garden – reassuring for the mindful garden investor. |
| Irish cottage-style bed with reliable repeat colour |
Good remontancy provides a strong second flush after deadheading, so even in short Irish summers you enjoy waves of bloom rather than a single show, especially where cool, moist conditions prevail – perfect for the colour-loving beginner. |
| Large container on patio or driveway |
In a generously sized pot of at least 40–50 litres with free-draining compost, this rose thrives as a movable feature that handles breezy, damp conditions typical of our coasts and cities, adding flexible impact for the practical urban owner. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-Romance Border – Mix with lavender, meadow sage and coneflowers to echo traditional cottage borders, softening paths and lawn edges – for those who love relaxed, storybook-style gardens.
- Crimson-Accent Front – Use a single shrub by your front door with pale gravel and terracotta pots, letting the dark blooms pop against lighter tones – for city dwellers wanting instant kerb appeal.
- Evening-Scent Nook – Place near a small bench, underplanted with low catmint, so you brush past the flowers and release fragrance on summer evenings – for anyone who unwinds outdoors after work.
- Heritage-Style Bed – Combine with other English roses and old-fashioned perennials like foxgloves and hardy geraniums, creating a romantic, slightly formal display – for enthusiasts of classic, period-inspired planting.
- Patio-Showpiece Pot – Grow in a 50-litre half-barrel with a light, well-drained mix and trailing thyme around the base, turning a small patio into a lush focal point – for balcony and terrace gardeners with limited soil.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property |
Data |
| Name and registration |
English shrub rose from the English Rose Collection, registered as AUSbloom, marketed as The Dark Lady – crimson English rose - Austin, a romantic “Rós rómánsúil” garden variety. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by David C. H. Austin in the United Kingdom from ‘Mary Rose’ × ‘Prospero’, introduced and registered in 1991 as a classic English Rose with rich colour and form. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, upright shrub to about 100–150 cm high and wide, with dense, slightly glossy dark green foliage and moderate prickles, forming a solid, rounded garden presence. |
| Flower morphology |
Very full, rosette-style blooms with over 40 petals, mostly solitary, large at 7–10 cm across, repeating well through the season with a generous second flush after deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Deep crimson to dark carmine-red, RHS 187A and 60A, with purplish-red inner tones; colour may lighten towards raspberry pink in heat yet remains richly shaded in cooler weather. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, full old-rose fragrance typical of English Roses, offering a rounded, nostalgic scent that is noticeable but not overpowering in garden and indoor settings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Forms small numbers of spherical red hips, around 9–15 mm across, providing modest late-season interest without significantly affecting overall flowering performance in the garden. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about -26 to -23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b), with good resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, moderate rust resistance, and average tolerance of heat and drought. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in a sunny spot with fertile, well-drained soil; allow 110–180 cm spacing, water in dry spells, deadhead for repeat bloom and use balanced feeding for sustained flowering. |
The Dark Lady brings rich crimson blooms, classic old-rose fragrance and dependable repeat flowering on a durable own-root shrub, making it a thoughtful, long-lived choice for your Irish garden.