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jedmar 
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Rose Listing Omission
Paint It Black
https://www.hagebau.de/p/rose-rosa-hybrida-paint-it-black-max-wuchshoehe-120-cm-anP7000569590/ https://www.kiefl.de/shop/pflanzen/gartenpflanzen/rosen/rosa-paint-it-black https://shop.blumen-stelzl.at/artikel/71404/rosa-paint-it-black https://www.1a-garten-ammer.de/artikel/30349/rosa-paint-it-black https://www.promessedefleurs.com/rosiers/rosiers-par-variete/rosiers-the-grandes-fleurs/rosier-a-grandes-fleurs-paint-it-black.html
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#1 of 1 posted
today by
jedmar
We are not sure whether this is really distinct from 'Black Baccara'. It is not available at the German and Austrian sites listing it.
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Rose Listing Omission
Stand Speak Rise Up
Commercially available
VISperpur
Bred by Martin Vissers (Belgium, 2017) Introduced in Luxembourg in 2022 by Patrimoine Roses pour le Luxembourg a.s.l.b.
Floribunda, Hybrid Hulthemia persica
Buttercream, fading to white. Red center. Yellow buds. Mild fragrance. Medium, single (4-8 petals), in small clusters, flat bloom form. Blooms in flushes throughout the season.
Bushy, upright. Semi glossy, dark green foliage.
Height:60 to 70 cm. Width: up to 50 cm
seed: Peace and Love (CHEWsumsigns) pollen: unnamed seedling LENbar x LENarvere
The mission of this rose is to erect a symbolic monument - from nature- to a cause deemed to be of general importance, such as the fight against sexual violence in fragile environments and conflicts.
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#1 of 1 posted
2 days ago by
jedmar
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Initial post
2 days ago by
Johno
KORgilpet has a magnificent Spring flush but subsequent blooms are strictly limited.
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#1 of 3 posted
2 days ago by
jedmar
For which class was it declared?
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#2 of 3 posted
2 days ago by
Johno
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#3 of 3 posted
2 days ago by
jedmar
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I'm not sure this rose was bred by Frau Von Hepp, and if she ever raised a single rose from seed. She was just a garden enthusiast in her city of Nürnberg and was growing many kind of ornamental plants. The source : Von Reider, Annalen der Blumisterei, 1825, pp.83-84, doesn't say at all she was the breeder of this rose. I also think that there is a mispelling in this source, it may have been 'Tigridia' instead of 'Tigrina', thus 'Tigridia' was a rose bred by Toutain (of Le Mans, France), before 1824. This was a gallica-damask, purple-red with dots (marbled, mottled or stripped : "ponctué" in french). On HMF, there is also the same mistake for this lady, with a so called "Querin" rose... La rose Guérin!
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#1 of 1 posted
2 days ago by
jedmar
Your comments are very welcome. The article in Annalen der Blumisterei had a number of spelling mistakes and I agree with your very educated guesses. Both 'Querin' and 'Rosa tigrina' have been meged to their proper place, and the synonyms relegated to "Hidden" names. Justine von Hepp's garden seems to have been famous in the 1820s. We added some notes despite that she is no longer a breeder.
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