JOSEPH'S COAT – yellow-red climbing rose - Armstrong & Swim
Bring storybook colour to your garden with Joseph's Coat, a large-flowered climbing rose that paints pergolas and fences in ever-changing sunset tones. Its clusters open from glowing red-orange buds to golden-yellow centres, then mellow into peach and copper, giving you a constantly shifting display from late spring into autumn. On its own roots it builds a reliable, long-lived framework that rebounds well after pruning or weather setbacks, so your romantic feature will quietly mature year by year. Once established, it anchors strongly and copes well with exposed sites where rain and wind meet older garden walls. Medium self-cleaning and only moderate maintenance needs keep jobs manageable, while its moderate height makes it easier to shape than more rampant climbers. Plant in a roomy border or a 40–50 litre container, and enjoy the natural rhythm of year 1 roots, year 2 shoots, and year 3 full ornamental abundance around your outdoor seating for afternoon tea and relaxed gatherings.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Pergola over a seating area |
Ideal for framing a cosy afternoon-tea corner, its moderate 2.4–4 m height clothes a pergola without overwhelming it. Repeating clusters of colour-changing blooms create a romantic overhead canopy and dappled shade for beginners. |
| Climbing feature on a garden fence |
Trains neatly along wires on a family-garden boundary, softening hard lines with multi-hued flowers and glossy foliage. Own-root growth forms a stable framework that can be renewed gradually, giving long-term structure for busy-owners. |
| Wall-trained beside a patio or terrace |
Perfect against a sunny house or garage wall, where the warm masonry enhances its yellow–orange–red palette. Medium maintenance and moderate vigour make shaping and tying-in a simple seasonal task for time-poor-gardeners. |
| Romantic cottage-garden arch |
Use two plants to clothe a metal or wooden arch at a path entrance. The ever-changing flower colours and gentle fragrance give a storybook welcome without demanding complex pruning, ideal for cottage-style-lovers. |
| Large container for small urban gardens |
In a 40–50 litre pot with a sturdy obelisk or trellis, it brings vertical interest and rich colour to balconies, roof terraces or paved yards, suiting those with limited borders who still want a “proper” climber for city-dwellers. |
| Feature rose in mixed cottage border |
Planted at the back of a mixed border, it rises through softer perennials and herbs. Its repeat clusters of medium-sized blooms add height and movement, while own-root resilience keeps the display reliable for family-gardens. |
| Screening between garden “rooms” |
Train along a simple post-and-wire run to divide lawn from kitchen garden, its medium foliage density and shimmering colour providing a gentle visual screen that still lets light through, especially useful for small-plots. |
| Exposed coastal or windy sites |
Once well rooted, its climbing framework anchors securely to supports and copes with blustery, rain-swept conditions along established fences, so you gain dependable colour where few shrubs thrive, particularly valued by coastal-gardeners. |
Styling ideas
- Country-Pergola – Train Joseph's Coat over a timber pergola, underplant with Irish moss and thyme for a soft green carpet – for those seeking a classic English countryside tea corner.
- Kitchen-Border – Let it rise at the back of a productive kitchen garden, threading through obelisks with herbs and beans below – for home cooks who love a romantic yet practical plot.
- Warm-Wall – Pair it on a south-facing wall with espaliered fruit trees and honeysuckle to echo its sunset colours – for gardeners wanting a richly coloured, storybook backdrop.
- Cottage-Arch – Use two plants on an arch with foxgloves and campanulas at the base for layered height and pastel contrast – for admirers of soft, feminine cottage style.
- Urban-Obelisk – Grow it in a 50 litre container around a slim obelisk with low groundcovers such as barren strawberry – for balcony or courtyard owners needing vertical charm.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Large-flowered climbing rose marketed as Joseph's Coat Climbing rose Armstrong & Swim; exhibition name Joseph's Coat; commercial climber/rambling type; own-root 2-litre container-grown form. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred in the United States by Dr David L. Armstrong and Herbert C. Swim; cross of ‘Buccaneer’ × ‘Circus’; introduced and registered in 1964 by Armstrong Roses. |
| Awards and recognition |
Recognised in major European trials: National Rose Society Trial Ground Certificate in 1963 and prestigious Bagatelle (Paris) Gold Medal in 1964 for garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Climbing habit to around 2.4–4 m high and 1–1.8 m wide, with moderately dense, glossy dark green foliage on densely thorned shoots; medium self-cleaning, some deadheading required. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double, cup-shaped flowers with 26–39 petals borne in clusters; remontant with notably abundant second flush, providing repeated displays through the main season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Multicoloured yellow-red blooms: buds red-orange, opening to golden-yellow with orange and carmine; shades shift to peach, golden and copper as flowers age, with fiery red petal edges at full bloom. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, fresh and crisp fragrance best appreciated at close range on still days; primarily a visual feature rose rather than a strongly scented variety, yet adds a gentle background perfume. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional spherical orange-red hips form after flowering, about 8–13 mm in diameter; ornamental in autumn but not produced heavily enough to be a key decorative feature. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to about -32 to -29 °C (RHS H7, USDA 4b, Swedish zone 5); medium resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust; benefits from basic hygiene and, if needed, light protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suited to pergolas, fences and walls, as a specimen or in looser hedging; plant around 150–250 cm apart; prefers sun, moderate watering in drought, and straightforward annual pruning and tying-in. |
JOSEPH'S COAT – yellow-red climbing rose - Armstrong & Swim offers shifting sunset colours, repeat flowering and a long-lived, renewably pruned framework on its own roots, making it a thoughtful choice for your next cottage-style planting.