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Lady of Shalott Rose

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Lady of Shalott Rose

Apricot-Peach Blooms That Glow From Across the Garden

Lady of Shalott Rose brings a color that makes a border feel sunlit—even on an overcast day. Buds open in rich orange-red tones, then soften into chalice-shaped blooms that read apricot, peach, and salmon all at once. The petals often show a warm golden underside, which gives the flowers extra depth and a “lit from within” look when they catch the afternoon sun. The form is classic English rose—full and beautifully cupped—without feeling stiff or formal, so it looks equally at home in a cottage border or a clean, modern foundation planting.

The show isn’t just a one-time event. Lady of Shalott is known for blooming in flushes, returning again and again through the season when it’s planted in sun and cared for consistently. Deadhead spent blooms to keep energy moving into new flowers, or leave a few late-season blooms to mature if you enjoy the look of hips. If you want a rose that reads “high-end garden” with minimal complexity, this is a strong pick: vibrant color, reliable repeat flowering, and flowers that look gorgeous on the plant and in a vase.

Warm Tea Fragrance That Feels Cozy and Classic

If you like roses for fragrance as much as looks, Lady of Shalott delivers a welcoming scent that’s noticeable without being overpowering. The fragrance is often described as warm tea with subtle spice—an inviting, cozy perfume that feels right near patios, seating areas, and entry paths. Place it where you’ll brush past it in the morning or evening, and it becomes part of the everyday experience of your garden, not just a “look at me” shrub at the back of the yard.

Because the scent pairs so well with the color palette, it’s a natural choice for a cutting garden. A few stems on the kitchen table can make a whole room feel softer and more lived-in. For the best fragrance and flower quality, give it full sun and avoid overhead watering late in the day so blooms open cleanly and foliage dries faster. A simple routine—deep watering, mulch, and steady feeding—helps the shrub keep pushing fresh growth and new bloom cycles, giving you more chances to enjoy that warm, tea-like perfume throughout the season.

A Bushy, Arching Shrub That Looks Full Without Fuss

Lady of Shalott quickly forms a handsome, bushy plant with gently arching stems that look natural and “garden-y,” not rigid. The foliage is a pleasing mid-green, and new growth can carry a slightly bronzed tone, adding interest even between bloom flushes. In the landscape, it reads as a substantial flowering shrub—one that fills space, softens edges, and provides a steady rhythm of color rather than a short-lived burst.

It’s also a rose that tends to reward simple, practical care. Give it good airflow, keep the root zone evenly moist while it establishes, and feed to support repeat flowering. Like all roses, it performs best when it’s not crowded: space it so air can move through the canopy and sunlight can reach the interior stems. That small planning step helps leaves stay cleaner, reduces stress in humid weather, and keeps the plant looking fuller from top to bottom. If you want a rose that’s friendly for newer rose growers—but still impressive for experienced gardeners—this one checks a lot of boxes.

Landscape Uses That Feel Instantly Established

Lady of Shalott is an easy “anchor rose” for beds and borders: one plant can visually tie together perennials, grasses, and shrubs with a consistent thread of warm color. Use it along a walkway to create a welcoming approach, tuck it into a mixed border for season-long flowering, or make it the focal point of a small planting bed for dependable impact. It’s also a beautiful companion to blue and purple tones—lavender, catmint, salvia, and ornamental grasses make the apricot blooms look even richer.

It can also be grown in a large container when you want rose color on a patio or near a front door. The key is sizing up the pot, watering more consistently than in-ground shrubs, and feeding to support repeat blooms. On slopes, it works best as a supported feature plant rather than true erosion control—pair it with deep-rooted companions if soil stabilization is the goal. Whether you plant one as a statement or repeat a few down a border, the overall effect is the same: a garden that feels mature, romantic, and intentionally designed.

Apricot-Peach Blooms That Glow From Across the Garden

Lady of Shalott Rose brings a color that makes a border feel sunlit—even on an overcast day. Buds open in rich orange-red tones, then soften into chalice-shaped blooms that read apricot, peach, and salmon all at once. The petals often show a warm golden underside, which gives the flowers extra depth and a “lit from within” look when they catch the afternoon sun. The form is classic English rose—full and beautifully cupped—without feeling stiff or formal, so it looks equally at home in a cottage border or a clean, modern foundation planting.

The show isn’t just a one-time event. Lady of Shalott is known for blooming in flushes, returning again and again through the season when it’s planted in sun and cared for consistently. Deadhead spent blooms to keep energy moving into new flowers, or leave a few late-season blooms to mature if you enjoy the look of hips. If you want a rose that reads “high-end garden” with minimal complexity, this is a strong pick: vibrant color, reliable repeat flowering, and flowers that look gorgeous on the plant and in a vase.

Warm Tea Fragrance That Feels Cozy and Classic

If you like roses for fragrance as much as looks, Lady of Shalott delivers a welcoming scent that’s noticeable without being overpowering. The fragrance is often described as warm tea with subtle spice—an inviting, cozy perfume that feels right near patios, seating areas, and entry paths. Place it where you’ll brush past it in the morning or evening, and it becomes part of the everyday experience of your garden, not just a “look at me” shrub at the back of the yard.

Because the scent pairs so well with the color palette, it’s a natural choice for a cutting garden. A few stems on the kitchen table can make a whole room feel softer and more lived-in. For the best fragrance and flower quality, give it full sun and avoid overhead watering late in the day so blooms open cleanly and foliage dries faster. A simple routine—deep watering, mulch, and steady feeding—helps the shrub keep pushing fresh growth and new bloom cycles, giving you more chances to enjoy that warm, tea-like perfume throughout the season.

A Bushy, Arching Shrub That Looks Full Without Fuss

Lady of Shalott quickly forms a handsome, bushy plant with gently arching stems that look natural and “garden-y,” not rigid. The foliage is a pleasing mid-green, and new growth can carry a slightly bronzed tone, adding interest even between bloom flushes. In the landscape, it reads as a substantial flowering shrub—one that fills space, softens edges, and provides a steady rhythm of color rather than a short-lived burst.

It’s also a rose that tends to reward simple, practical care. Give it good airflow, keep the root zone evenly moist while it establishes, and feed to support repeat flowering. Like all roses, it performs best when it’s not crowded: space it so air can move through the canopy and sunlight can reach the interior stems. That small planning step helps leaves stay cleaner, reduces stress in humid weather, and keeps the plant looking fuller from top to bottom. If you want a rose that’s friendly for newer rose growers—but still impressive for experienced gardeners—this one checks a lot of boxes.

Landscape Uses That Feel Instantly Established

Lady of Shalott is an easy “anchor rose” for beds and borders: one plant can visually tie together perennials, grasses, and shrubs with a consistent thread of warm color. Use it along a walkway to create a welcoming approach, tuck it into a mixed border for season-long flowering, or make it the focal point of a small planting bed for dependable impact. It’s also a beautiful companion to blue and purple tones—lavender, catmint, salvia, and ornamental grasses make the apricot blooms look even richer.

It can also be grown in a large container when you want rose color on a patio or near a front door. The key is sizing up the pot, watering more consistently than in-ground shrubs, and feeding to support repeat blooms. On slopes, it works best as a supported feature plant rather than true erosion control—pair it with deep-rooted companions if soil stabilization is the goal. Whether you plant one as a statement or repeat a few down a border, the overall effect is the same: a garden that feels mature, romantic, and intentionally designed.

$33.13

Original: $110.45

-70%
Lady of Shalott Rose—

$110.45

$33.13

Description

Apricot-Peach Blooms That Glow From Across the Garden

Lady of Shalott Rose brings a color that makes a border feel sunlit—even on an overcast day. Buds open in rich orange-red tones, then soften into chalice-shaped blooms that read apricot, peach, and salmon all at once. The petals often show a warm golden underside, which gives the flowers extra depth and a “lit from within” look when they catch the afternoon sun. The form is classic English rose—full and beautifully cupped—without feeling stiff or formal, so it looks equally at home in a cottage border or a clean, modern foundation planting.

The show isn’t just a one-time event. Lady of Shalott is known for blooming in flushes, returning again and again through the season when it’s planted in sun and cared for consistently. Deadhead spent blooms to keep energy moving into new flowers, or leave a few late-season blooms to mature if you enjoy the look of hips. If you want a rose that reads “high-end garden” with minimal complexity, this is a strong pick: vibrant color, reliable repeat flowering, and flowers that look gorgeous on the plant and in a vase.

Warm Tea Fragrance That Feels Cozy and Classic

If you like roses for fragrance as much as looks, Lady of Shalott delivers a welcoming scent that’s noticeable without being overpowering. The fragrance is often described as warm tea with subtle spice—an inviting, cozy perfume that feels right near patios, seating areas, and entry paths. Place it where you’ll brush past it in the morning or evening, and it becomes part of the everyday experience of your garden, not just a “look at me” shrub at the back of the yard.

Because the scent pairs so well with the color palette, it’s a natural choice for a cutting garden. A few stems on the kitchen table can make a whole room feel softer and more lived-in. For the best fragrance and flower quality, give it full sun and avoid overhead watering late in the day so blooms open cleanly and foliage dries faster. A simple routine—deep watering, mulch, and steady feeding—helps the shrub keep pushing fresh growth and new bloom cycles, giving you more chances to enjoy that warm, tea-like perfume throughout the season.

A Bushy, Arching Shrub That Looks Full Without Fuss

Lady of Shalott quickly forms a handsome, bushy plant with gently arching stems that look natural and “garden-y,” not rigid. The foliage is a pleasing mid-green, and new growth can carry a slightly bronzed tone, adding interest even between bloom flushes. In the landscape, it reads as a substantial flowering shrub—one that fills space, softens edges, and provides a steady rhythm of color rather than a short-lived burst.

It’s also a rose that tends to reward simple, practical care. Give it good airflow, keep the root zone evenly moist while it establishes, and feed to support repeat flowering. Like all roses, it performs best when it’s not crowded: space it so air can move through the canopy and sunlight can reach the interior stems. That small planning step helps leaves stay cleaner, reduces stress in humid weather, and keeps the plant looking fuller from top to bottom. If you want a rose that’s friendly for newer rose growers—but still impressive for experienced gardeners—this one checks a lot of boxes.

Landscape Uses That Feel Instantly Established

Lady of Shalott is an easy “anchor rose” for beds and borders: one plant can visually tie together perennials, grasses, and shrubs with a consistent thread of warm color. Use it along a walkway to create a welcoming approach, tuck it into a mixed border for season-long flowering, or make it the focal point of a small planting bed for dependable impact. It’s also a beautiful companion to blue and purple tones—lavender, catmint, salvia, and ornamental grasses make the apricot blooms look even richer.

It can also be grown in a large container when you want rose color on a patio or near a front door. The key is sizing up the pot, watering more consistently than in-ground shrubs, and feeding to support repeat blooms. On slopes, it works best as a supported feature plant rather than true erosion control—pair it with deep-rooted companions if soil stabilization is the goal. Whether you plant one as a statement or repeat a few down a border, the overall effect is the same: a garden that feels mature, romantic, and intentionally designed.