PIROUETTE – red-and-white bedding floribunda rose – Lens
With its vividly bicoloured flowers and graceful, upright habit, PIROUETTE brings a touch of ballet-like movement to even the smallest family garden, creating a cosy, romantic focus without complicated maintenance. This own-root shrub rose establishes reliably in ordinary garden soils and copes well where breezy, unsettled weather and heavier ground call for thoughtful drainage. Clusters of semi-double blooms open freely all summer, drawing the eye with their clean red-and-white contrast and offering easy access for visiting bees. Over time, the plant forms a dense, leafy framework that anchors borders and low hedges, while its own-root resilience supports decades of quiet continuity with minimal intervention. Ideal for pairing with classic cottage perennials in informal planting schemes, it sits comfortably beside kitchen gardens and lawns alike, contributing soft structure and cheerful colour to paths, play areas, and seating corners. In larger containers of at least 40–50 litres it becomes a portable focal point for paved terraces, and in the border its reliable regrowth provides reassuring security after pruning or winter weather, rewarding regular but straightforward care with a long season of abundance, gentle fragrance and enduring charm.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-border cottage bedding |
Its upright, medium-height shrub form and dense foliage create a clear vertical line that stops low cottage borders looking messy, while the strong red-and-white display gives instant storybook focus from the house or patio, particularly for beginners. |
| Family play garden edging |
Clusters of semi-double blooms repeat well through the season, so paths and play-lawn edges stay colourful between school holidays with only basic deadheading and feeding, providing a consistently cheerful boundary that suits busy families. |
| Large containers on terrace or balcony |
In a 40–50 litre pot it develops a well-balanced, upright shrub that is easy to water and trim, giving long-lasting structure and colour close to seating areas without demanding expert pruning, ideal for time-pressed urban homeowners. |
| Low informal hedge along paths |
Planted at hedge spacing, the bushy habit knits into a loose, romantic line, the bicolour effect reading as a soft, moving ribbon of colour that helps define paths and vegetable plots with limited clipping, appreciated by cottage-style gardeners. |
| Pollinator-friendly mixed border |
The semi-double, open flowers present pollen clearly in generous clusters, encouraging bees and other insects while still looking refined, so wildlife interest can be added to a traditional scheme without sacrificing neatness, suiting nature-conscious buyers. |
| Exposed or breezy garden corners |
The sturdy shrub framework and good anchoring root system help it stand up to windier spots where fences and hedges funnel gusts, especially when the soil is improved for drainage, making it reassuring for coastal and open-site planters. |
| Long-term feature in family garden |
As an own-root shrub it can regenerate from the base after strong pruning or winter damage, keeping its shape and flower quality over many years with simple annual trimming, which appeals to long-view, low-fuss owners. |
| Seasonal focal point near seating |
The repeat flushes of vivid bicolour blooms and light fruity scent create a gentle summer backdrop to afternoon tea or evening sitting-out, delivering dependable romance without intensive care routines, especially valued by relaxation-focused users. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-curve border – Sweep PIROUETTE in a loose curve with catmint, campanulas and soft grasses to frame a lawn and create a romantic kitchen-garden feel – ideal for cottage-style enthusiasts.
- Pastel-and-scarlet mix – Combine with pale pink roses, white foxgloves and silvery foliage so the crisp red-and-white blooms pop without looking harsh – suited to homeowners wanting gentle drama.
- Patio-focal container – Plant one rose in a 50-litre terracotta pot with trailing thyme and lobelia at the base to highlight its upright form beside seating – perfect for balcony and terrace gardeners.
- Wildlife-friendly strip – Line a fence with PIROUETTE and interplant echinacea and penstemon to extend nectar and colour from early summer into autumn – appealing to nature-loving families.
- Storybook front path – Flank a front path with paired shrubs spaced for a soft hedge, underplanted with low lavender or salvias for scent and structure – ideal for those seeking classic kerb appeal.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda shrub rose, registered as LENwil, marketed as Pirouette Bedding rose LENwil; a bicolour bed rose intended for mass bedding, edging and specimen use in private and public gardens. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Louis Lens in Oudenburg, Belgium (Lens Roses; Pépinières Louis Lens SA); bred 1983, introduced 1984 by Lens Roses, with parentage recorded as unknown in current documentation. |
| Awards and recognition |
Bronze medal at IGA Baden-Baden, Germany in 1983 and Silver medal at the Kortrijk International Rose Competition, Belgium in 1985, acknowledging ornamental value and garden performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub reaching about 120–160 cm in height and 75–105 cm spread, with dense, mid-green, matt foliage and moderate prickliness, forming a well-filled, vertical accent suitable for beds and hedges. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, cupped, medium-sized blooms (approximately 4–7 cm), cluster-flowered with 13–25 petals, remontant habit giving an abundant second flush, effective for extended seasonal display in beds. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Clean red-white bicolour effect; inner petals bright fire-red, outer reverses off-white; blooms fade to raspberry pink with creamy centres while retaining contrast; ARS code RB; RHS 155C and 45A tones. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild but noticeable fresh, fruity scent, most evident at close quarters; semi-double flowers and open clusters also enhance garden atmosphere through movement and visual lightness in mixed plantings. |
| Hip characteristics |
Produces moderately abundant, bottle-shaped orange-red hips around 8–12 mm, offering additional late-season ornamental interest and a soft wildlife-friendly feature after the main flowering period. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated to about –15 to –12 °C (RHS H6; Swedish Zone 2; USDA 7b); medium resistance to powdery mildew, black spot and rust, requiring only occasional routine monitoring and standard preventive care. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny positions with improved drainage; spacing 55–100 cm depending on use; medium maintenance with occasional pest and disease control; suitable for flowerbeds, parks, containers and urban greens. |
PIROUETTE offers vivid bicolour bedding display, reliable repeat flowering and long-lived own-root resilience, making it a thoughtful choice if you want enduring cottage charm with straightforward care.