PRINCESS HITOMI – pink tea hybrid rose – Kunieda
In a romantic, cottage-style corner of your garden, Princess Hitomi settles quickly as an own‑root rose that combines gentle pastel charm with reliable repeat flowering, creating the feeling of afternoon tea beneath an arbour. Its upright, medium-tall habit is easy to place in small family plots, while glossy foliage and dense growth help it hold its shape with only straightforward pruning. As an own‑root plant it offers a reassuringly long lifespan, naturally regenerating from the base if stems are damaged and keeping its ornamental value stable over time. In coastal and breezier gardens it anchors well and responds positively to improved drainage on heavier soils, making it particularly suitable where you need a rose that copes with damp, changeable weather. Over the first seasons the root system establishes, then the framework fills out, until by the third year it delivers its full, storybook effect of cupped, very double blooms for the vase and the border. For many households it will be a practical, medium‑care choice that rewards simple, regular watering and light deadheading with refined, sugar‑glazed pink blooms across the summer.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Main feature rose near a seating area |
The compact, upright habit and medium height fit neatly beside a bench or small terrace, where you can appreciate the medium, pleasantly spreading scent at close range and enjoy the romantic, pastel tea‑rose effect during afternoon breaks – ideal for beginners. |
| Cottage-style mixed border with perennials |
Very double, cupped blooms in soft, uniform pink pair beautifully with classics such as lady’s mantle and calamint, lending a gentle, “girly” cottage feel while the dense, glossy foliage provides a steady green backdrop between flushes – perfect for romantics. |
| Cutting patch for home arrangements |
Bred originally as a cut-flower hybrid tea, the long, straight stems and high petal count create refined, long‑lasting blooms in the vase, so a small clump in the kitchen garden gives reliable stems for jugs and table pieces without the need for specialist techniques – suited to homemakers. |
| Specimen rose in a narrow front garden bed |
The moderate spread and upright structure allow you to place it confidently in slim borders along drives and paths, where own‑root resilience and a long lifespan mean it will mature into a stable feature without frequent replacement, even under typical urban pressures – reassuring for homeowners. |
| Small rose group for informal low hedge |
Planted at the recommended distances, several plants knit into a low, airy line of glossy foliage, punctuated by sugar‑glazed pink clusters; moderate maintenance and the ability to regenerate from the base keep the hedge attractive over many seasons with only simple annual pruning – attractive to families. |
| Roses in raised beds over heavier soils |
Where clay soils tend to sit wet, planting this own‑root rose into raised beds or improved drainage allows its root system to establish steadily and anchor well, so it copes gracefully with breezy, damp spells common in many British gardens – reassuring for coastal gardeners. |
| Large patio container by a doorway |
In a 40–50 litre or larger pot, its upright growth and moderate width remain in proportion, giving a tidy, fragrant welcome by doors or on balconies; regular watering and feeding are usually all that is needed, while the own‑root habit supports long-lived, dependable performance – convenient for busy owners. |
| Low-maintenance focal point in a family play garden |
Placed where children and pets pass by but do not constantly brush against it, this medium-maintenance, remontant rose offers repeat colour without complex pruning; if stems are damaged, the own‑root base reshoots to restore shape, keeping the planting forgiving over the years – practical for parents. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-arch – Plant PRINCESS HITOMI near a light metal arch with honeysuckle or Lonicera nitida below, creating a soft pink focal point by a path – ideal for romantic cottage-garden lovers.
- Kitchen-row – Line a short edge of the kitchen garden with three plants and underplant with Alchemilla mollis, so you can cut blooms while keeping a traditional potager look – perfect for home cooks.
- Pastel-border – Combine with soft mauve Calamintha and white perennials in a sunny border, using its glossy foliage as a backdrop to a restrained, powdery colour palette – suited to fans of calm schemes.
- Patio-hero – Grow a single plant in a generous 50‑litre terracotta container near garden seating, where its scent and tidy height frame afternoon tea moments – great for balcony and courtyard owners.
- Front-garden – Use one or three plants as a welcoming feature by the front door, with clipped evergreen hedging behind to set off the sugar‑glazed pink blooms – appealing to traditional front-garden enthusiasts.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
PRINCESS HITOMI hybrid tea rose, exhibition tea hybrid; commercial group Hybrid Tea. American Rose Society approved exhibition name PRINCESS HITOMI; former names not recorded in registration sources. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Kunieda Keiji at Rose Farm Keiji, Shiga Prefecture, Japan. Parentage is not published. Registered in 2018 and introduced in 2019, initially distributed by Wabara in the Japanese market. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in professional floristry circles with SAF Blue Ribbon and SAF Red Ribbon show awards, supporting its value as a refined hybrid tea for cutting and decorative use. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, about 95–125 cm tall with a 50–70 cm spread. Dense, medium-green, glossy foliage on moderately thorny stems; bush form suits flower beds, specimen planting and larger containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Very double, cupped blooms with over 40 petals, usually in small clusters on branching stems. Small flower size but generous petal count, providing a classical tea-rose look; remontant with a good secondary flush. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft, uniform pastel pink (RHS 65C outer, 65D inner); buds off‑white pink, opening to creamy pink and then sugar‑glazed pink. Colour is generally long-lasting, lightening only slightly in strong sunlight. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength scent described as pleasantly spreading, best appreciated at close range in still air or when used as a cut flower indoors. Overall character harmonious with its delicate pastel flower presentation. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasionally forms small ornamental hips, recorded as 0–0 mm diameter in trial notes, indicating seed set is minimal and hips are of negligible decorative or wildlife interest in normal garden conditions. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to about −21 to −18 °C (USDA 6b, RHS H7, Swedish Zone 3). Disease resistance moderate overall: good against black spot, with medium susceptibility to powdery mildew and rust if not monitored. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with regular watering and feeding; maintenance level medium. Space at 50–90 cm depending on use. Benefits from deadheading due to weak self-cleaning and appreciates routine plant protection. |
PRINCESS HITOMI offers elegant pastel blooms, a compact upright habit and reliable cutting quality in a long-lived own-root form that suits busy family gardens, making it a thoughtful choice if you value romantic style with manageable care.