ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ – light pink tea-hybrid rose
With its porcelain-pale blooms and sweet fragrance, ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ creates a distinctly romantic corner in even a small family garden, offering secure anchoring and dependable performance in breezy, coastal-style conditions. This hybrid tea was bred for both beauty and longevity, forming an upright, compact bush that slots easily into cottage-style borders or a kitchen-garden framework. On its own roots it builds strength steadily, giving a stable shape and the ability to regenerate after pruning or weather damage, so its structure and flowering remain reliable over many years. The classic high-centred buds open to XL, exhibition-style flowers, ideal for cutting for the table, while their pastel, powder-pink tones blend effortlessly with soft blues, whites and silvers. A strong, fruity fragrance carries beautifully around a terrace or seating area, and repeat flowering ensures a generous second flush once the first display is over. In an average British garden with mixed soils and changeable summers, this variety offers assurance and a refined, storybook charm without demanding advanced skills: simply plant, water and enjoy as it matures from roots to fullness in the seasons ahead.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Main rose border in a family garden |
Its upright, compact habit and dense, glossy foliage form a neat backbone in mixed cottage borders without overwhelming smaller spaces, giving long-term shape and a refined look with minimal reshaping year by year, ideal for beginners. |
| Feature by a seating area or terrace |
The strong, fruity scent and large, pastel blooms create a romantic, afternoon-tea ambience close to where you sit, while the reliable remontant habit keeps flowers appearing through summer for relaxed enjoyment by fragrance-lovers. |
| Cutting patch or kitchen-garden edge |
High-centred, XL flowers on straight stems lend themselves to vases and informal arrangements, so a small row can supply elegant, light-pink cut roses while still looking ordered and tidy for practical-minded homeowners. |
| Own-root long-term garden plan |
As an own-root plant it thickens gradually from the base, retains its variety-true character after hard pruning or winter damage, and supports a long planting horizon for those planning a durable framework, reassuring for planners. |
| Small urban front garden or narrow bed |
The moderate height and limited spread fit slim borders along paths or drives, providing an elegant vertical accent and year-on-year continuity without constant replanting, well suited to space-conscious city-gardeners. |
| Raised beds over heavier or challenging soils |
Planted in well-prepared, free-draining soil in raised beds, it establishes a strong root system that anchors securely and copes better with wet spells and wind, giving peace of mind to gardeners coping with heavy ground conditions. |
| Mixed cottage-style planting with perennials |
The soft, uniform pastel pink and classic hybrid tea form pair gently with blues and pale tones, weaving into traditional cottage schemes without clashing and supporting a coherent colour story cherished by stylists. |
| Containers and large patio planters (40–50 litres+) |
In a generous container it develops a well-balanced crown and can be positioned where scent and colour are most appreciated, with pruning kept flexible and simple for time-pressed but design-conscious busy-owners. |
Styling ideas
- COTTAGE-ARCH BORDER – Train ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ as upright accents near a simple wooden arch, underplanted with Lupinus ‘Gallery Pink’ and soft catmint for layered pink-and-lilac blooms – perfect for romantic cottage-style enthusiasts.
- TEA-TABLE TERRACE – Place two large 50-litre pots on either side of a seating nook, combining the rose with trailing thyme and pale violas to enjoy scent and cut stems close by – ideal for urban owners with compact patios.
- KITCHEN-GARDEN EDGE – Line a vegetable plot with a short row of these roses, interplanting Verbena hastata ‘Blue Spires’ and herbs for a productive yet decorative cutting strip – appealing to practical gardeners who love homegrown bouquets.
- FRONT-GARDEN WELCOME – Position single specimens between low evergreen hedging such as cherry laurel ‘Klári’ to frame the path with glossy foliage and powder-pink flowers – suited to families wanting tidy, traditional kerb appeal.
- RAISED-BED RETREAT – In a brick or timber raised bed, combine this rose with airy grasses and white foxgloves to soften edges while keeping roots in well-drained soil – attractive to those managing heavier ground yet seeking elegance.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Hybrid tea rose, registered as POUlht001, marketed as ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ Hybrid Tea POULSEN®; ARS exhibition name Royal Copenhagen, premium bronze grade own-root plant. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by L. Pernille and Mogens Nyegaard Olesen (Poulsen Roser A/S, Denmark) from unknown seedling × ‘Tivoli’; bred 1994, registered 2004, introduced internationally after 2004. |
| Awards and recognition |
Monza Gold Medal 2002 at the Monza International Rose Competition, recognising its combined ornamental value and performance as a refined hybrid tea cultivar. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright hybrid tea, about 75–105 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, glossy dark green foliage; moderately thorny shoots, weak self-cleaning so deadheading improves appearance and repeat bloom. |
| Flower morphology |
Large XL, high-centred, pointed buds with 26–39 double petals, mostly solitary on stems; remontant habit with a plentiful second flush given appropriate feeding and routine deadheading. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Uniform pastel light pink with subtle lavender tint, ARS lp, RHS 65C–65B; colour holds well, fading to powder pink then near-white, especially soft and stable in cooler UK summer conditions. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Pronounced, sweet fruity fragrance typical of scented hybrid teas; highly double flowers offer limited pollen, so value is chiefly sensory and ornamental rather than for supporting garden pollinators. |
| Hip characteristics |
Occasional small spherical hips, about 10–14 mm diameter, red RHS 40A; usually sparse on well-deadheaded plants grown primarily for continuous flowering and high decorative impact. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −26 to −23 °C (RHS H7, USDA 5b, Swedish Zon 4); medium resistance to mildew, black spot and rust, benefits from good airflow and occasional plant protection in humid seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in full sun with moist, well-drained soil; plant 50–90 cm apart depending on use; containers from 40–50 litres; medium maintenance with routine watering, feeding and periodic disease monitoring. |
ROYAL COPENHAGEN™ offers large scented blooms, elegant compact growth and enduring own-root reliability for years of pastel charm in a family garden, making it a thoughtful choice if you value both romance and long-term ease of care.