Dozens of Wonderful Multi-Colored Roses

A close up of a flower

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A close up of a flower

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What do George Burns, Picasso, and Playboy have in common? Well, I don’t know whether the two famous individuals fell into the playboy category, but the connection for rose lovers is that they are all beautiful, multi-colored roses. What do I mean by multi-colored? In this context, these are roses that have two or more distinct colors on a single bloom. Some may be a picotee type, with the edges of the petals a different color from the remainder of the bloom, like ‘Hannah Gordon’’. There are the classic blends of colors – yellows and oranges like ‘Peace’ and ‘Playboy’. There are striped roses, that are just that – stripes of one color and the remaining petals another; ‘Honorine de Brabant’ and ‘Hurdy Gurdy’ are good examples. And a relatively new group of multi-colored roses are the “hand painted” types – where each rose is unique, and one color appears to have been painted on the background color. All these multi-colored roses present unique combinations of color and can often change depending on the age of the bloom, or the exposure to sun.

You may think that multi-colored roses are just a current fashion in roses – but in fact, one of the most popular striped roses is Rosa gallica versicolor, more commonly known as Rosa mundi. This peppermint pink striped rose dates to 1581 and was originally called “Rosamonde” after the mistress of Henry II, who ruled England from 1154 – 1189. ‘Mutabilis’ is another old rose, and a very interesting one that not only has multi-colored petals, but the five-petaled bloom changes color completely as it ages, and the entire plant looks like a mixture of colored butterflies.

A close up of a flower

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Now fashion does have something to do with it. Modern hybridizers are always trying to develop new and different roses. Three of them have made a significant contribution in creating multi-colored roses in the past thirty years. Ralph Moore, creator of more miniature roses than anyone, introduced wonderful color combinations like ‘Magic Carousel’ and ‘Over the Rainbow’. The king of the “hand-painted” rose was Sam McGredy IV of New Zealand, with the uniquely colored roses ‘Picasso’, ‘Stretch Johnson’ and ‘Roller Coaster’. Tom Carruth, formerly of Weeks Roses, added to the multi-colored class with striped gems like All American Rose Selection winners ‘Fourth of July’ and ‘Scentimental’, along with ‘George Burns’ and ‘Berries & Cream’.

All these roses are categorized by the American Rose Society (ARS) as “blends”. If you are looking for something different for your garden, add a couple of these multi-colored winners!

Name Type Color ARS Rating Year Introduced
R. gallica versicolor Species Red blend 8.9 <1581
Louis Philippe China Red Blend 8.9 1834
Royal Sunset Large-Flowered Climber Apricot blend 8.9 1960
Mutabilis Hybrid China Yellow blend 8.8 <1894
Hannah Gordon Floribunda Pink blend 8.6 1984
Baronne Edmonde de Rothschild Hybrid Tea Red blend 8.5 1970
Rainbow’s End Miniature Yellow blend 8.5 1984
Cocktail Shrub Red blend 8.4 1958
Erfurt Hybrid Musk Pink blend 8.4 1939
Fruhlingsmorgen Hybrid Spinosissima Pink blend 8.4 1940
Gemini Hybrid Tea Pink blend 8.4 1999
Magic Carrousel Miniature Red blend 8.4 1973
Playboy Floribunda Red blend 8.4 1976
Double Delight Hybrid Tea Red blend 8.3 1976
Hot Tamale Miniature Yellow blend 8.3 1993
Westerland Shrub Apricot blend 8.3 1976
Fourth of July Large-Flowered Climber Red blend 8.2 1999
Priscilla Burton Floribunda Red blend 8.2 1977
Roller Coaster Miniature Red blend 8.2 1988
Betty Boop Floribunda Red blend 8.1 1999
Honorine de Brabant Bourbon Pink blend 8.1 no date
Hurdy Gurdy Miniature Red blend 8.1 1987
Sheila’s Perfume Floribunda Yellow blend 8.1 1982
Peace Hybrid Tea Yellow blend 8.0 1945

By Nanette Londeree, Master Rosarian
Photos from top: ‘Hannah Gordon’, ‘Stretch Johnson’, ‘Gemini’; all photos by the author
Updated December 2019

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