Fragrant rose tree
10 Types of Fragrant Roses to Grow
By
Marie Iannotti
Marie Iannotti
Marie Iannotti is a life-long gardener and a veteran Master Gardener with nearly three decades of experience. She's also an author of three gardening books, a plant photographer, public speaker, and a former Cornell Cooperative Extension Horticulture Educator. Marie's garden writing has been featured in newspapers and magazines nationwide and she has been interviewed for Martha Stewart Radio, National Public Radio, and numerous articles.
Learn more about The Spruce's Editorial Process
Updated on 02/25/22
Reviewed by
Julie Thompson-Adolf
Reviewed by Julie Thompson-Adolf
Julie Thompson-Adolf is a Master Gardener and author. She has 30+ years of experience with year-round organic gardening; seed starting and saving; growing heirloom plants, perennials, and annuals; and sustainable and urban farming.
Learn more about The Spruce's Review Board
The Spruce / Adrienne Legault
Roses are one of the most popular flowering shrubs for the garden. And the Rosa genus includes more than 300 species of perennial plants and thousands of varieties from which gardeners can choose. Today, most roses used for landscaping are hybrid cultivars, developed for certain desirable qualities. And what separates the good roses from the exceptional roses is their fragrance.
The American Rose Society has designated the following roses as having "fabulous fragrance." The organization sorts through all the new rose introductions each year and chooses only one out of the top performers to be awarded its Rose of the Year designation.
This collection of roses is considered tops for their fragrance.
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01 of 10
Double Delight (Rosa 'Double Delight')
Aflo / Getty ImagesDouble Delight, a hybrid tea rose with a long season of bloom, was an American Rose Society winner back in 1977. The double blossoms feature a creamy white to pale pink center with deep ruby edging. They have a bushy habit, growing to about 4 to 6 feet with a 2- to 3-foot spread. Double Delight shows good disease resistance, though less so in wet weather. Expect a sweet, spicy scent.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 10
- Height: 4 to 6 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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02 of 10
Elle (Rosa 'Elle')
TeleMakro Fotografie (Ina Hensel) / Getty ImagesElle, a 2005 American Rose Society winner, is another hybrid tea rose. It displays above average disease resistance, especially to black spot and mildew. The blossoms are a soft shell pink set off by glossy, dark green foliage. The plant gives off an intoxicating spicy, citrusy scent. Plus, Elle promises to make an excellent cut flower, with 4- to 5-inch wide blooms on 10- to 14-inch stems.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 10
- Height: 2 to 3 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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03 of 10
Fourth of July (Rosa 'Fourth of July')
JHVEPhoto / Getty ImagesIn 1999, Fourth of July was the first climbing rose to win the American Rose Society award in 23 years. Its blossoms are everything you'd expect from a rose named Fourth of July. The plant features clusters of large, 4-inch flowers in vibrant red with white stripes on 10- to 14-foot arching stems. Its scent is exceptional, and Fourth of July has the bonus of being a repeat bloomer.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 9
- Height: 10 to 14 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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04 of 10
Honey Perfume (Rosa 'Honey Perfume')
chipmunk_1/Flickr/CC By 2.0
Not many floribunda roses boast any scent, let alone deserve the name Honey Perfume. A wonderful spicy scent and apricot yellow blooms truly set Honey Perfume apart from the already wonderful category of floribundas. Growing up to 4 feet high and up to 3 feet wide, Honey Perfume makes a great focal point or low hedge. It also exhibits good rust and mildew resistance.
- USDA Growing Zones: 6 to 10
- Height: 3 to 4 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
-
05 of 10
Memorial Day (Rosa 'Memorial Day')
é¿æ© HQ / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 2. 0
Memorial Day is arguably the frontrunner for fragrance. As the American Rose Society puts it, "Experts say one bloom perfumes almost an entire room." This is another popular hybrid tea rose. It features 5-inch pink blossoms that emanate a lavender glow. The fragrance is described as similar to the old-fashioned damask roses. Stems are nice and long for cut flowers, and the bushes are an especially good choice for hot climates.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 10
- Height: 4 to 6 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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06 of 10
Midas Touch (Rosa 'Midas Touch')
emkaplin / Getty ImagesMidas Touch won its American Rose Society prize in 1994 and can be found in many gardens today. It shines with golden yellow 4-inch blossoms on an upright 5-foot plant. Midas Touch is yet another hybrid tea beauty with a warm, musky scent. And it is a great plant to attract bees and other pollinators to your garden.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 10
- Height: 5 to 6 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
-
07 of 10
Mr. Lincoln (Rosa 'Mr. Lincoln')
mtigrek / Getty ImagesIt's hard to believe Mr. Lincoln won its American Rose Society distinction back in 1965. This velvety, deep red hybrid tea is still one of the most popular garden roses. Beautiful and strongly scented, Mr. Lincoln's blossoms are held on stiff, upright stems. The bushes can be expected to grow up to 5 feet tall and about 2 feet across.
- USDA Growing Zones: 5 to 9
- Height: 4 to 6 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
-
08 of 10
Scentimental (Rosa 'Scentimental')
Garden Photo World/Georgianna Lane/Getty Images
This floribunda with a spicy scent was the first striped rose to win the American Rose Society award. With burgundy and creamy white stripes, Scentimental hardly needs its wonderful fragrance to attract attention. But that's what made it an award winner in 1997. This plant is excellent at attracting butterflies to your garden, and it makes for great cut flowers.
- USDA Growing Zones: 6 to 10
- Height: 3 to 4 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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09 of 10
Sheer Bliss (Rosa 'Sheer Bliss')
rmgardener / Flickr / CC BY 2.0
Sheer Bliss is a delicate, pale pink hybrid tea rose. While it needs a bit of winter protection, its delicate beauty, sweet fragrance, and repeat blooming habit make it a favorite of many gardeners. The large flowers bloom on long stems that are perfect for cutting.
- USDA Growing Zones: 7 to 10
- Height: 5 to 7 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
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10 of 10
Sun Sprinkles (Rosa 'Sun Sprinkles')
Forest and Kim Starr/Flickr/CC BY 2.0
Sun Sprinkles, a miniature rose, won its award in 2001. Brilliant yellow blooms open early and repeat all summer. Growing up to 2 feet, Sun Sprinkles can be used as an edger, in containers, or as a specimen planting. The plant is fairly resistant to disease. And its spicy, musky fragrance and vivid color will make people stop for a closer look.
- USDA Growing Zones: 6 to 10
- Height: 1 to 2 feet
- Sun Exposure: Full sun
It's never a bad idea to fill your garden with sweet-smelling roses. If you're looking for other fragrant flowers, consider gardenias, jasmine, or lilacs.
18 Great Roses for Shady Gardens
Article Sources
The Spruce uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
Disease-Resistant Roses Make Gardening Life Easier. Oregon State University Extension.
US Patent: Hybrid tea rose plant named 'MEIBDEROS'. Justia Patents.
Rosa JAChal: Sun Sprinkles. North Carolina State Extension Gardener Toolbox.
10 scented varieties for a garden |
Fragrant roses are well known for their captivating scents, and one of the greatest pleasures of gardening has to include strolling between these beautiful, blousy blooms, breathing in the delicious perfumes.
Scent adds another dimension to your garden and is an increasingly sought after quality in roses, so is one of the elements to consider when planning your rose garden ideas.
Fragrant climbing roses can scramble over an arbour or pergola; potted roses placed on a patio next to a seating area, and shrub or tree roses planted near a window or next to a path to perfume the air.
Fragrant roses to plant
As well as their gorgeous range of flowers forms, ‘roses are enormously variable in fragrance, so it’s good to try and include all different types of fragrant roses in your garden,’ advises world leading rosarian Michael Marriott .
When you are considering how to plant roses, a key decision is the position of your sweet smelling choices.
‘Plant fragrant roses where you can best enjoy their scent, such as beside a path, next to a seating area, and at nose level,’ says garden designer Jo Thompson .
1. Fragrant rose 'Desdemona'
(Image credit: Alamy / Deborah Vernon)
Rosa 'Desdemona' has a terrific Old Rose fragrance, described as having hints of almond blossom, cucumber and lemon zest.
The bushy shrub rose has beautiful pale, pink-hued blooms and is a favorite of garden designer Richard Miers .
'Fragrance is always something I look for when choosing roses for my clients,' Richard says.
To enjoy more of the fragrant rose blooms around your front or back yard in the most cost-effective ways, learn how to take rose cuttings and nurture young rose plants.
2. Rosa ‘Zéphirine Drouhin’
(Image credit: Alamy / R Kautzsky)
'Dark pink flowered Rosa ‘Zephirine Drouhin’ Is one of the best climbing roses. It is free flowering and thornless, with an extremely strong fruity fragrance with hints of raspberry,’ says garden designer David Stevens .
'Most people want any plant to provide interest over as long a period as possible and fragrant roses such as climbers, floribundas and Hybrid Teas can flower from as early as May, right the way through to Christmas, albeit with less flower towards the end,' adds David.
Climbing roses usually repeat flower throughout the season, and it is important to know how to prune climbing roses to get a profusion of the best flowers, year after year.
Climbing fragrant roses can be trained to scramble up and over arbours or pergola ideas to surround you with the fragrance on all levels.
3. Rosa ‘Margaret Merril’
(Image credit: Alamy )
Rosa ‘Margaret Merril’ is a quintessential floribunda with an award-winning, sweet, citrus perfume. It is a favorite of Rosebie Morton of scented flower bouquet supplier The Real Flower Company , who described it as being 'my raison d’etre behind my career'.
This upright shrub rose with clusters of flowers is an ideal choice for borders, especially placed close to a pathway as a shrub for the front of the house to welcome visitors with its sweet fragrance.
Rosebie is passionate about restoring the growing of exquisitely fragrant roses and flowers, just as nature intended, and uses sustainable garden ideas, which in turn help to improve and enhance the natural scent of the blooms.
4. Rosa ‘New Dawn’
(Image credit: Alamy/ Jason Smalley)
A climbing rose with a sweet, fruity scent and glossy foliage, fragrant rose ‘New Dawn’ produces lots of medium sized, soft pink blooms.
‘I plant this for height, fragrance and its long flowering period,’ says designer Jo Thompson.
She recommends designing a rose garden so that you are enveloped by the blooms around and overhead.
5. Rosa ‘Munstead Wood’
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
'Rosa ‘Munstead Wood’ bears sumptuous, very deep crimson velvety petals,’ says David Marriott.
It has an Old Rose fragrance with notes of blackberry, blueberry and damson. It is perfect for growing at the front of a border where its perfume can be better appreciated, or in more of a formal rose bed.
6. Rosa ‘Lady of Shalott’
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
With a pleasant, warm tea fragrance, with hints of spiced apple and cloves, 'Rosa ‘Lady of Shalott’ was bred by David Austin.
'The shrub rose has lovely deep orange blooms flushed with yellowy-pink that repeat-flower. It is a hardy and reliable fragrant rose, so is a great choice for beginners,' explains gardening writer and photographer Leigh Clapp.
As with all roses, know when to plant roses, and where to plant them, to ensure they have the right growing conditions to deliver the best results.
7. Rosa ‘Rambling Rector’
'For a vigorous rambling rose, you will find white Rosa Rambling Rector, with its powerful, musky scent, hard to beat,’ says David Stevens.
'As opposed to repeat flowering climbers, fragrant rambling roses tend to produce a spectacular but single flowering time,' he adds.
However 'there are some modern rambling roses that work beautifully in a naturalistic planting design, and will repeat flower through the summer months and into fall,' advises garden designer Colm Joseph .
8. Rosa 'Evelyn'
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Beautiful David Austin shrub rose ‘Evelyn’ has shallow cupped flowers flushed soft apricot and pink with a rich, fruity scent. It is a recommended variety to grow in Zone 7 by US rose consultant Paul Zimmerman .
'Rest assured this one is very fragrant,' he explains.
As with mixing plants generally, 'be careful with mixing roses. They should be chosen in relation to the space they occupy, and the surroundings,' explains David Stevens.
There will be some varieties of fragrant roses that do better in different climates, so check the ones recommended for the zone in which you live, or the position they will have in your yard.
9. Rosa ‘Bella Rosa'
(Image credit: Alamy)
Rosa 'Bella Rosa' is a patio rose with multi-toned lemon petals suffused with pink edges and a delightful fragrance, ideal for a compact design,’ says David Stevens
As a patio idea, smaller shrub roses are ideal for planting in containers around a seating area where their beautiful scent can be enjoyed to the full.
Choose hardy varieties such as this one that will require less maintenance.
10. Rosa ‘Paul’s Himalayan musk’
(Image credit: Leigh Clapp)
Fragrant rose 'Paul’s Himalayan musk' has beautiful, little, rosette-shaped flowers that are a lovely pale pink colour and have a wonderfully strong, musky fragrance.
'Although it is only once flowering, its blooms are borne in great abundance, making a magnificent display. An exceptionally tall, vigorous climber, it produces many long, slim, flexible branches which trail gracefully, hanging down elegantly from their support,' explains Leigh Clapp, so is a great choice as a flowering climber.
Which roses are most fragrant?
Old garden roses, also known as antique and historic roses, which mostly flower once, tend to be the most richly fragrant roses. The classic perfume is found in gallica roses and their hybrids, such as damasks, while clove scents are found in musk roses.
Modern roses are repeat-flowering, with diversity of form, color and fragrance, with some being more scented than others. These include hybrid teas, floribundas, climbers, miniature and David Austin English roses.
Versatile shrub and tree roses can take the combined characteristics of the old and modern, so can be very fragrant.
Wild roses are considered the wildflower type of rose. Wild Roses, or 'species roses,' typically have a single bloom and can have a wonderful scent, as nature intended, to attract pollinators and wildlife.
'While repeat-flowering roses will probably be the basis of your rose garden, include ones that flower only once as they are often the most showy, tend to be healthier and many are beautifully scented,' advises Leigh Clapp.
Which color roses are the most fragrant?
While darker colored fragrant roses tend to have a more powerful fragrance than lighter colored varieties, each rose and color will have its own unique scent that will appeal for different reasons.
Red and pink roses can have a more classic old rose smell, while paler yellow and white roses tend to boast a lighter, more citrus perfume, or orange roses a fruitier scent.
Just as beauty is in the eye of the beholder, 'people react to fragrance differently and while the perfume of one rose might be attractive to some, it might not be to others, particularly if it's very heavily scented,' advises David Stevens.
He recommends to visit to an established rose garden to see and smell different varieties. Or bury your nose in fragrant rose plants at nurseries and garden centers before buying to see if you like the specific scent.
Planet of Aromas. Rosewood essential oil, 10 ml
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10/17/17 | Aromatherapy: history, theory, realities, More than a healthy lifestyle, Cosmetic life hacks, Ethereal world
It is believed that the gates of Paradise are built from rosewood - Aniba rosaedora and that it helps lost souls return to the light, saving them from mournful insensitivity, anger and pride. Elastic bitter-woody, impregnated with pinkish solar resin and warm smoke, the aroma of rosewood is magic in itself. Under this aroma, it is easy to think, intuition, insight, the ability to subtly perceive and analyze what is happening flourishes in full bloom.
What's in your name, Aniba rosaedora? Your leaves know what Eternity is: they never wither and never leave the branches covered with red bark, on which radiant golden flowers shine like precious pearls, singing frivolous ethereal songs to the winds. Your woody flesh, soaked in the joyful nectar of the Sun, is hard and resilient. Your essential oil saves the mind from illusions, and the body from impotence, helping to endure any trials with dignity. The aroma of rosewood is invigorating for emotions, it dissolves the dull colors of irritability, sadness, melancholy and annoyance in a vigorous palette of deafening optimism.
Rosewood essential oil is a famous beauty elixir. It heals the skin after injuries and burns, preventing the formation of scar defects in the connective tissue, and also fights stretch marks (stretch marks). Rosewood preparations are a source of radiance, freshness, virgin smoothness and purity of the skin. Literally one fragrant drop added to the water for morning and evening ablutions is enough to preserve youth, ideal color and skin turgor.
Another feature of this wood oil is acclimatization and reduction of skin lability to external factors (contact, climatic, theatrical dermatitis, idiosyncrasies, diathesis, diaper rash and maceration). Rosewood heals the skin in case of injuries and cracks, stimulates cellular metabolism, enhances microcirculation, eliminates swelling, rosacea. It is effective for hormone-dependent dermatitis (PMS, menopause, juvenile acne), neurodermatitis and dry eczema. This aromatic essence is a true salvation for people prone to skin reactions to cosmetics: just 3 k rosewood in 5 ml of a cosmetic product activates the functions of macrophages and Langengars cells, preventing the immune "war" and eliminating the skin's allergic response to a number of provoking components. Rosewood stimulates the production of histaminase and diamine oxides (histamine antagonists), eliminating the effects of atopic dermatitis.
The energy of the sun inspires the body, helping to overcome colds (hot and warm inhalations provide a drainage, broncho- and antispasmodic effect, eliminating the symptoms of an unproductive cough in bronchitis, tracheitis, bronchospasm, as well as a smoker's cough). Local application of 10 drops of rosewood essential oil with a base base (50 drops) heated to a temperature of 50 ° C - avocado oil, wheat germ, St. John's wort, black cumin oil - in the form of compresses on the problem area eliminates inflammation, pain, colic. This method is effective for myositis, neuralgia, arthritis (including gout), as well as after trauma to activate regeneration. The ancient Incas, for example, instead of gypsum for fractures, used pink wood so that the bone tissue would grow together faster.
In matters of the heart and "cardiovascular" components of Aniba rosaedora increase the elasticity of the vascular wall, eliminating the symptoms of atherosclerosis and intravascular stasis, being an active angiotonic and angioprotective agent that returns the body's carrier system to its original productivity. Rosewood oil is effective for rosacea, varicose veins, it optimizes hemodynamics, microcirculation, stimulates lymphatic drainage, improving oxygen exchange and metabolism. Due to its warming, antispasmodic properties, this oil quickly relieves headache attacks, including migraines, hangovers, and the effects of overwork.