SWEET BLONDIE™ – creamy-white bedding floribunda rose - Vissers
Imagine an arbour filled with creamy clusters of SWEET BLONDIE™, an upright floribunda that settles quickly and rewards you with repeat flowering in a classic, cottage-style border. This compact, medium-height rose fits beautifully into small to medium family gardens, where you want romance without giving up weekend time. As an own-root plant it promises reassuring long-term stability, quietly rebuilding from below ground if stems are damaged and keeping its shape year after year. In a larger pot from around 40–50 litres it works just as well beside a patio bench, keeping its growth compact yet generous in buds. Plant once and follow the natural rhythm – strong roots in the first year, more confident shoots in the second, and a fully developed ornamental presence by the third season. Its soft colour palette blends effortlessly with hedging, herbs and kitchen-garden planting, creating a relaxed English-countryside cottage feel even where winds roll in from the coast and good drainage needs some thought. Moderate self-cleaning makes routine tidying straightforward, while remontant flushes keep your seating areas and paths edged with consistently romantic blooms.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Front-of-border cottage bed |
SWEET BLONDIE™ forms a low to medium, upright front layer, with cream clusters that light up mixed cottage borders without dominating the view. Its moderate self-cleaning means fewer spent blooms to remove by hand, suiting relaxed, storybook-style beds for the busy gardener |
| Patio rose in a large container |
In a 40–50 litre or larger container, the plant’s compact footprint and tidy, upright habit give reliable structure beside seating or doors. Own-root vigour supports long-term use in pots, offering years of repeat flowering without frequent replacement, ideal for the urban homeowner |
| Family garden seating corner |
The rounded, moderately tall habit frames benches and small arbours with romantic clusters, while the mild fragrance remains pleasant and unobtrusive for close sitting. Its predictable outline makes pruning flexible and unintimidating, reassuring the beginner gardener |
| Low flowering hedge or path edging |
Regular spacing creates a soft, cream-toned edging that guides the eye along paths or driveways. The upright, evenly branched structure arches slightly under bloom, forming a coherent line that remains attractive with modest trimming, suiting the traditionalist buyer |
| Mixed bed with perennials |
The pastel cream and blush tones weave easily among perennials such as coneflowers, irises and yarrow, creating layered, summer-long interest. Its remontant second flush fills gaps after earlier perennials fade, giving dependable colour continuity valued by the cottage-garden lover |
| Small front garden focal point |
Where space is tight, the dense foliage and medium height provide clear presence without overwhelming narrow beds. Own-root resilience gives a reliable long lifespan from a single planting, simplifying long-term planning for the time-pressed homeowner |
| Beds in exposed or open sites |
The sturdy, upright framework anchors well in breezier positions and keeps blooms presented neatly above foliage. Good soil preparation and raised planting help it perform consistently even where heavier ground demands better drainage, reassuring the practical gardener |
| Kitchen garden or cutting patch |
Clustered, medium-sized blooms in soft cream tones lend themselves to informal jugs and vases, while upright stems are easy to cut. Long-term own-root growth supports continuous garden development, giving reliable stems each year for the home flower arranger |
Styling ideas
- Pastel Pathway – line a front path with SWEET BLONDIE™ and low lavender for a softly scented, cream-and-lilac welcome – ideal for homeowners who like a calm, traditional entrance.
- Kitchen-Nook Border – mix with chives, sage and bearded irises along the edge of a kitchen garden bed to blur the line between ornament and utility – for cottage-style cooks who enjoy picking as they wander.
- Romantic Patio Pot – plant one rose in a 50 litre tub with trailing thyme around the rim to frame a bistro set – perfect for balcony or courtyard users wanting easy elegance in limited space.
- Storybook Hedge – stagger plants in a loose row, interplanted with common yarrow, to make a low, airy hedge that hints at an English country lane – for families seeking a gentle, child-friendly garden edge.
- Evening Tea Corner – cluster three shrubs near a small arbour, underplanted with white campanulas, to glow softly in evening light – suited to those who savour quiet, after-work moments outdoors.
Technical cultivar profile
| Characteristic | Data |
| Name and registration |
Floribunda bedding rose; registered as VISswepat, marketed as SWEET BLONDIE™ Bedding rose VISswepat, with ARS exhibition name Sweet Blondie for show and catalogue purposes. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Martin Vissers in Belgium in 2002 from ‘Sweet Juliet’ × ‘Poustinia’; introduced by Viva International BVBA in 2010 after registration in 2008 for European garden use. |
| Awards and recognition |
Gold medal Orléans 2006; Golden Rose Award Kortrijk / Courtrai 2010; Golden Rose Hradec Králové 2011; Audience Award The Hague 2012, confirming broad ornamental appeal. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright, medium-height shrub reaching about 80–100 cm tall and 50–70 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles giving a classic floribunda outline in beds. |
| Flower morphology |
Clustered, cupped, double blooms with 26–39 petals, medium-sized at approximately 1.5–2.75 inches, remontant with a notably abundant second flush that keeps beds coloured deep into the season. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Cream-white outer petals with a delicate pink centre; pastel cream on opening, fading to softer cream with a slight pink trace, colour holding moderately in strong sun before gradually lightening. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Mild, restrained scent with a delicate, soft character; pleasant at close range without dominating seating areas, making it suitable for patios and paths where fragrance should remain subtle. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips form only occasionally because of the double flowers; when present they are small, spherical, red (RHS 44A), around 7–10 mm in diameter, adding modest late-season detail. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to around –21 to –18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); disease-sensitive, especially to powdery mildew and rust, so benefits from regular monitoring and timely plant protection. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in sunny beds, borders and containers; spacing 35–65 cm depending on use, 5.7–6.6 plants/m² for massing; prefers regular care and protection, plus irrigation during prolonged drought periods. |
SWEET BLONDIE™ Bedding rose VISswepat offers romantic repeat flowering, a compact upright habit and dependable long-term garden value from its own-root form; consider it if you want lasting cottage charm with reassuring structure.