FABULOUS™ – pink hybrid tea rose - Ford
Layer your garden with gentle romance as FABULOUS™ fills a sunny border or large pot with perfectly formed, exhibition-style blooms in soft pastel pink. This upright, compact plant suits smaller family gardens where you want a focal rose that looks at home beside herbs, cottage perennials and even a kitchen-plot fence. Own-root production means steady recovery, reliable regrowth after pruning and the promise of a long-lived, stable display without complicated graft care. In its first years it quietly builds roots, then stronger shoots, before reaching its full ornamental impact by about the third season. FABULOUS™ is best in open, sunny sites with decent air movement, helping it cope better with our damp spells and frequent showers.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Feature rose near a terrace or seating area |
The classic, high-centred hybrid tea blooms make a graceful focal point beside a patio table or bench, ideal where you’ll appreciate each flower at close range and can pick a few for the house – perfect for those who enjoy a refined, romantic garden look for afternoon-tea-lovers. |
| Cutting patch within a cottage-style border |
Strongly remontant flowering and long-stemmed, pointed buds suit regular cutting, so you can fill jugs and vases without stripping the garden, integrating a productive cutting corner into an informal, “girly” border for home-bouquet-makers. |
| Single specimen in a small front garden |
The upright, moderately tall habit forms a tidy column of bloom in a modest space; one plant can anchor a front lawn or path, giving structure year after year thanks to its own-root resilience for kerb-appeal-seekers. |
| Paired planting to flank an arbour or path entrance |
Planted as a matching pair, FABULOUS™ frames an archway or path with symmetrical form and repeated pastel-pink flowers, naturally suiting storybook entrance ideas and traditional front approaches for romantic-entrance-planners. |
| Large container on a sunny patio (40–50 litres+) |
In a substantial pot it stays upright and compact, allowing you to create a moveable focal point; own-root growth copes well with periodic repotting and rejuvenation pruning, ideal on hard landscaping for balcony-and-terrace-gardeners. |
| Mixed cottage border with perennials and shrubs |
The soft pink, slightly lavender-tinted flowers blend effortlessly with blues, mauves and silvers, while the dark, glossy foliage gives a neat backdrop, sitting comfortably among asters, herbs and light-textured shrubs for cottage-border-stylists. |
| Flower bed in sunny, well-drained raised beds |
Planting in a raised, well-prepared bed improves drainage and air circulation, helping it cope better with our cool, damp spells and frequent showers, while own-root plants respond well to renewal pruning over time for careful-bed-planners. |
| Lightly formal rose bed with spacing emphasis |
Its proportional, upright form and solitary blooms lend themselves to a simple, repeat pattern planting where each bush has space, reducing congestion and simplifying routine care in a traditional, organised layout for low-fuss-formalists. |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Parlour – Combine FABULOUS™ with pale foxgloves, soft pink asters and silvery foliage for a drawing-room-soft border – for gentle-romance gardeners.
- Kitchen Gate – Plant by a picket fence near herbs and salad beds so you can cut blooms on your way to the kitchen – for home-growers who like utility and beauty.
- Front-Door Welcome – Use a pair in terracotta pots either side of the step for a refined, year-on-year greeting – for homeowners who value classic entrances.
- Tea-Corner Nook – Place one close to a small bistro set, under a simple arbour with climbers, to enjoy its exhibition-style flowers at eye level – for afternoon tea sitters.
- Blended Border – Weave FABULOUS™ among smoke bush ‘Royal Purple’ and airy perennials to contrast dusky foliage with luminous pink blooms – for colour-composition enthusiasts.
Technical cultivar profile
| Aspect |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as FORfab, marketed as Fabulous™ Hybrid tea rose FORfab; exhibition-type, double, pointed blooms suited to cutting and garden display. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by John Ford of Ford Roses, Palmerston North, New Zealand; introduced in 2016 via Style Roses in the United Kingdom, from unknown parentage selected for form and colour. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, moderately thorny bush 85–115 cm tall and 60–90 cm wide, carrying dense, dark green, glossy foliage that frames solitary, long-stemmed hybrid tea blooms through the season. |
| Flower morphology |
Large, double, high-centred, pointed-budded flowers with 26–39 petals, borne mainly singly on stems; strongly remontant, delivering a generous second flush for cutting and display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft pastel pink with a delicate lavender veil; buds pale mauve-pink, ageing to light, silvery pink with creamy hints, moderate colour retention and gradual, elegant fading on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, pleasant scent of classic rose character; noticeable at close range around seating areas or in cut stems indoors, without overwhelming stronger-scented plants nearby. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional, small ovoid hips 10–14 mm across, colouring orange-red; mainly ornamental, adding a light seasonal accent but not a dominant feature of the plant’s appeal. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3, USDA 6b); disease tolerance moderate to weak, so regular monitoring and timely protection are advisable in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; regular deadheading and protective spraying improve health, while own-root stock supports renewal pruning and long-term garden performance. |
FABULOUS™ Hybrid tea rose FORfab offers elegant cut-quality blooms, harmonious upright form and dependable own-root longevity; consider it if you want a refined, long-term focal rose without committing to complex collections.