FANNY ARDANT – light pink hybrid tea rose – Adam
Bring a touch of film-star elegance to an everyday family garden with FANNY ARDANT, a pastel light-pink hybrid tea bred for generous blooms, reliable flowering and quietly romantic presence. Large, high-centred flowers open from pointed buds into silvery-pink cups brushed with cream, ideal for cutting and arranging beside afternoon tea. On its own roots this rose settles steadily, building long-term resilience, the ability to regenerate after tougher winters and a reassuringly long lifespan with stable shape and colour. Its upright habit and glossy foliage lend natural structure to cottage-style borders, while good disease resistance keeps care pleasantly simple. Performs reliably even in breezier gardens where strong stems help anchor the plant against coastal winds, fitting beautifully into cosy, storybook planting schemes that balance charm and practicality.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Cottage-style mixed border near a seating area |
The large hybrid tea flowers and pastel colouring create an instantly romantic focal point around a bench or small terrace, with repeat blooms providing interest well beyond the first flush; ideal for those who want gentle summer scent without complex pruning, especially beginners. |
| Cutting patch or kitchen garden edge |
High-centred, exhibition-type flowers on strong stems make this variety excellent for home-cut bouquets, rewarding even modest care with vase-ready stems throughout summer while remaining compact enough to edge vegetable beds, appealing to practical homeowners. |
| Feature rose in a small front garden |
The upright, tidy habit and glossy foliage give clear structure without overwhelming a small plot, allowing a single plant or tight group to frame a doorway or path, suiting those who like a neat, traditional look but have limited time, typically busy families. |
| Low-maintenance rose bed for busy gardeners |
Strong resistance to common fungal diseases and low overall maintenance needs mean fewer sprays and less remedial pruning, letting the plant mature gracefully year by year from rooting to full ornamental effect, reassuring time-pressed urbanites. |
| Own-root long-term planting in a family garden |
Being grown on its own roots supports a long-lived, stable shrub that can regenerate from the base if damaged, maintaining colour and form over the years without concerns over graft failure, which suits cautious, value-minded buyers. |
| Rose and perennial border in exposed or breezy spots |
Sturdy, upright growth and moderate height help this rose hold itself well in windier sites, while its dense foliage offers visual weight amongst lighter perennials, making it a sound choice where secure anchoring in blustery gardens is needed by coastal gardeners. |
| Large container on patio or balcony (40–50 L+) |
Its compact spread and vertical habit work well in a sizeable pot, and with sensible watering it offers good flowering and fragrance close to seating, ideal for those with only a terrace or balcony who still want a classic rose, particularly space-limited residents. |
| Mass planting or short, romantic rose hedge |
Planted in groups, the regular height and steady repeat-flowering create a softly unified ribbon of pink, while own-root plants fill out over successive seasons for a more solid hedge line, appealing to planners of cohesive, storybook-style borders. |
Styling ideas
- Tea-party arbour – Train FANNY ARDANT beside a simple metal arch and underplant with fragrant sweet alyssum to frame a bistro table, perfect for romantic afternoon tea settings – ideal for sociable family hosts.
- Pastel cutting strip – Line a narrow bed with this rose and interplant low Gypsophila repens for airy contrast, giving an easy source of pastel stems for indoor arrangements – suited to home floristry enthusiasts.
- Cottage path edging – Use evenly spaced plants along a front path, backed by lavender and catmint to soften the upright form and echo the pink blooms – attractive for lovers of classic cottage charm.
- Container parlour – Position a single plant in a 50-litre terracotta pot with trailing viola at the rim to enjoy fragrance and colour close to seating – convenient for balcony and patio gardeners.
- Storybook rose room – Create a dedicated rose bed mixing FANNY ARDANT with traditional hedging and seasonal annuals, letting its reliable structure and repeat flowers anchor the scene – appealing to romantic-style planners.
Technical cultivar profile
| Property | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose; registered as ADArocona, marketed as Fanny Ardant within the NIRPALWAYS collection, approved ARS exhibition name Fanny Ardant for hybrid tea show and garden use. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Michel Adam in France, 2001; introduced by NIRP International in 2004 as a premium hybrid tea suitable for both garden planting and exhibition-quality cutting, with refined flower form. |
| Awards and recognition |
Highly decorated: Monza Rose of the Year gold medal 2001; Baden‑Baden gold medal and Most Beautiful Ladies' Rose 2001; Lyon Prestige de la Rose and Maurice Carron awards 2002 for overall quality. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, moderately thorny shrub reaching about 90–120 cm high and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy medium to dark green foliage providing good structural presence in mixed borders and rose beds. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, semi-double, high-centred blooms with 13–25 petals, classic pointed hybrid tea buds and mostly solitary flowers on long stems, remontant with a plentiful second flush in suitable conditions. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Light pastel pink with subtly darker centre; buds mid-pink, opening to warm inner tones that fade to silvery pink and cream, with good colour retention and gradual softening as the flower ages on the plant. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Fresh, medium-strength fruity scent noticeable at close range, adding sensory interest to seating areas and cut arrangements without becoming overpowering indoors, making it versatile for family gardens. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose-hip production generally low due to semi-double, cut-flower type blooms; occasional small, spherical, bright red hips around 8–12 mm for modest late-season decorative interest. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7, typically hardy to around −21 to −18 °C and USDA 6b; good resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, with moderate tolerance of heat when given regular watering and mulching. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with fertile, well-drained soil; suitable for borders, specimen planting, low hedges and large containers, with low maintenance needs but benefits from deadheading and annual formative pruning. |
FANNY ARDANT combines large pastel blooms, dependable repeat flowering and a strong, upright habit with the long-lived security of an own-root plant; a thoughtful choice if you would like a quietly romantic yet practical garden rose.