MARSEILLE EN FLEURS – yellow flower-bed shrub rose
With its storybook clusters of yellow-and-rose blooms, MARSEILLE EN FLEURS brings a sense of afternoon-tea romance to an everyday family garden, creating a cosy cottage feel around a seating area, play lawn or kitchen plot. This upright shrub forms a dense, leafy screen that is ideal for soft boundaries or informal hedges, while its semi-double, cuttable flowers offer a touch of elegance indoors. Bred for streets and parks, it combines reliable health and urban tolerance with a strong, classic rose scent that adds perfumed charm to paths and patios. The own-root, 2‑litre plant establishes steadily for a long-lived, easily renewed structure, giving you the reassuring development of roots, then shoots, then full ornamental value over three seasons. Especially valuable where breezy weather and heavier soils call for secure anchoring and thoughtful water management, it is a practical, low-fuss choice for those seeking enduring cottage-garden comfort.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Front garden focal shrub by the path |
MARSEILLE EN FLEURS forms an upright, generous shrub with dense foliage, giving immediate structure and a welcoming focal point beside the front path or gate. Repeating clusters of large, cup-shaped blooms draw the eye for months, while the strong, classic rose fragrance greets you each time you come and go, suiting homeowners. |
| Romantic cottage-style flower bed |
The golden-yellow flowers edged in red and softening to cream and rose-pink create a warm, storybook colour range that blends naturally with cottage perennials. Its long flowering season and semi-double form offer a relaxed, informal look without appearing fussy, ideal for low-maintenance, traditional borders favoured by cottage-garden lovers. |
| Informal flowering hedge along a boundary |
Reaching around 130–180 cm with a spread of up to 120 cm, this shrub makes a fluid, semi-transparent hedge that softens fences or separates garden “rooms”. Recommended spacings make it straightforward to plan a run, and the dense foliage gives all-season presence with repeated colour, appreciated by family-garden planners. |
| Low-effort rose display for busy gardeners |
Bred for urban green spaces, this variety is notably resistant to black spot, powdery mildew and rust, so routine spraying is unnecessary in most gardens. With modest pruning needs and good heat tolerance, it suits those who want dependable flowering and tidy growth without a long task list, ideal for busy beginners. |
| Long-lived structural rose in a mixed border |
Supplied on its own roots, this shrub thickens steadily from the base, renewing older stems naturally and recovering well from weather damage or harder pruning. The result is a stable, long-term feature that maintains its ornamental value year after year with simple seasonal trimming, attractive to long-term planners. |
| Cutting patch for scented garden bouquets |
Large, semi-double, cluster-borne blooms in a sophisticated yellow-and-red blend are excellent for informal vases. Their strong, classic rose fragrance adds depth to mixed arrangements, making it easy to bring the romance of the garden indoors from late spring to autumn, particularly pleasing for home florists. |
| Coastal or exposed family plots |
The combination of good heat tolerance, robust shrub build and breeding for urban, open settings means this rose copes well where winds and showers are frequent, provided the soil drains reasonably and watering is managed in prolonged dry spells, a reassurance for coastal gardeners. |
| Large container on terrace or courtyard |
In a 40–50 litre container with quality compost and good drainage, this upright shrub becomes a vertical accent beside outdoor seating. Its repeated flowering and strong scent create a “mini-arbour” feeling even in compact spaces, with only simple seasonal pruning required, perfectly suited to urban balcony-owners. |
Styling ideas
- Cottage-hedge – run a loose line of shrubs along a boundary, underplanting with dwarf lavender for a soft, fragrant edge – for lovers of traditional countryside gardens.
- Tea-corner – place a single shrub by a bench, surrounded by sea thrift and low sedums to echo coastal meadows – for those creating a calm afternoon reading spot.
- Kitchen-border – weave the rose between herbs and vegetables, where its colour and scent frame a productive plot – for home cooks who enjoy romantic potager style.
- Pathway-arcade – plant in staggered pairs along a main path so upright shrubs gently lean and meet, suggesting an arbour – for families wanting a storybook route through the garden.
- Courtyard-focus – grow one plant in a large terracotta pot with gravel mulch and compact lavender to emphasise Mediterranean warmth – for urban owners needing strong structure in small spaces.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Garden shrub rose marketed as MARSEILLE EN FLEURS (Les Provençelles®), registered as MASmarfle; flowerbed shrub type within the bed rose group, verified cultivar authenticity for consumer planting. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad in France around 2009, introduced in 2010 via Novaspina, from the Les Provençelles® collection; parentage not disclosed but selected specifically for ornamental and urban performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Upright shrub 130–180 cm tall and 85–120 cm wide, with dense, mid-green, slightly glossy foliage and moderate prickles; best effect at recommended spacings for hedging, mass plantings or single accent shrubs. |
| Flower morphology |
Semi-double, large cup-shaped blooms (approximately 7–10 cm) carried in clusters, with 13–25 petals and repeat-flowering habit that provides an abundant second flush after the main early-summer display. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Petals rich golden yellow with carmine-red edging (RHS 14B and 46A); buds open with strong contrast, then soften through cream and rose-pink as they age, giving a variable, warm palette across the flowering period. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Strong, classic rose fragrance perceptible close to the bush, contributing significantly to sensory impact near paths, seating areas and entrances; suitable for gardeners who value scent as much as flower colour. |
| Hip characteristics |
Rose hips form only occasionally due to semi-double bloom structure; when present they are small, spherical, red fruits about 8–12 mm across, adding a subtle seasonal accent without dominating the plant’s appearance. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 and hardy to approximately –21 to –18 °C (USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); good heat tolerance with watering in long droughts, and high resistance to black spot, powdery mildew and rust under typical garden conditions. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Performs best in full sun with well-drained soil; suitable for beds, borders, hedges, parks and urban greens. Low maintenance demands, with light annual pruning and deadheading sufficient for most family gardens. |
MARSEILLE EN FLEURS offers long-season, scented colour, reliable disease resistance and enduring own-root structure for relaxed, romantic gardens; an excellent choice if you seek a dependable, easy-care shrub rose.