GRISELIS™ – grey-lilac nostalgia rose - Massad
With its cool grey-lilac blooms and romantic, ball-shaped flowers, GRISELIS™ creates a quietly luxurious focal point for compact urban front gardens and shared family spaces. Bred by Dominique Massad for atmospheric, once-a-year summer spectacle, it rewards you with a concentrated flush of nostalgic blossom that reads beautifully against brickwork, gravel and soft planting. This own-root shrub offers long-term stability and the reassuring ability to regenerate from the base, ideal where borders must cope with changeable weather and occasional neglect in a typical British year of showers and breezy days with dependable performance in wet, windy spells and on heavier soils. Medium maintenance needs and good general health make it a practical choice if you want impact without constant spraying, while its dense, glossy foliage adds season-long structure even when not in flower. In the first year the plant quietly invests in roots, in the second it builds confident shoots, and by the third season it reaches its full nostalgic character, settling into a balanced, sustainable part of your garden’s long-term design.
Usage options
| Target area | Reasoning |
| Small London front garden feature |
Plant GRISELIS™ as a single shrub by your front steps or railings to create a seasonal focal point of pearl-grey flowers that read clearly from the pavement, while remaining compact and manageable in a tight plot for the style-conscious city homeowner. |
| Rainwater-friendly mixed border |
Combine this shrub with perennials such as Artemisia, nepeta or low grasses in a free-draining strip over improved clay, allowing you to direct roof or path run-off into a planted bed that slows water, adds depth and copes well with wet, windy spells and heavier soil for the sustainable-minded town gardener. |
| Romantic nostalgia hedge |
Planted at 50–55 cm intervals, GRISELIS™ will form a low, informal hedge with a single dramatic flowering season, ideal along a path where you pass close enough to enjoy the spicy scent and soft colour shift from pink-edged buds to grey-lilac blooms for the nostalgic garden appreciator. |
| Statement container on balcony or patio |
In a 40–50 litre peat-free container with good drainage, this bushy, dense shrub provides vertical structure, glossy foliage and one generous flush of scented blossom, delivering maximum decorative value in minimal space for the balcony or terrace-focused city dweller. |
| Shrub group in family back garden |
Using three or five plants at recommended spacing creates a billowing, medium-height shrub group that anchors a lawn edge or play area, offering visual screening, a defined seasonal highlight and resilient own-root regrowth after accidental knocks for the practical family gardener. |
| Part-shade side return or passage |
GRISELIS™ tolerates partial shade, and its grey-lilac tones actually hold better out of full sun, so a side return or shared alley can become a quietly scented, atmospheric passage instead of a dead space for the space-conscious urban homeowner. |
| Low-maintenance cottage-style border |
Pair this once-flowering nostalgia rose with long-season companions such as lavender, sage or phlox to extend interest beyond its main flush, while relying on its own-root durability and moderate disease resistance to keep care tasks simple for the time-poor hobby gardener. |
| Feature for sustainable gravel or courtyard garden |
Set GRISELIS™ in a mulched or gravelled bed with drought-tolerant perennials and a modest understorey, using its bushy form as the soft focal point that ties hard landscaping to planting without demanding constant watering for the eco-conscious small-garden owner. |
Styling ideas
- Front-door vignette – Underplant GRISELIS™ with soft grasses and low nepeta in a narrow bed by the doorstep, using its grey-lilac flush as a calm welcome – ideal for design-aware terraced-house owners.
- Courtyard romance – Place one shrub in a large clay pot with gravel mulch and flanking lanterns, letting its nostalgic bloom form the seasonal highlight – perfect for balcony or small courtyard gardeners.
- Soft-contrast drift – Repeat GRISELIS™ along a path with Artemisia ‘Nana’ and blue globe thistle for silvery foliage and cool blue accents – suited to those seeking a restrained, elegant palette.
- Cottage blend – Mix this rose with phlox, catmint and old-style perennials in a relaxed border, allowing its single flowering wave to anchor summer – good for lovers of traditional English gardens.
- Side-return calm – Use one or two shrubs in partial shade with slate chippings and ferns to transform a side passage into a scented grey-green walk – appealing to busy urban gardeners wanting simple serenity.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter | Data |
| Name and registration |
Les Provençelles® nostalgia shrub rose, registered as MASgris, marketed as GRISELIS™ and Quai des Brumes; a romantica-type shrub with grey-lilac colouring and dense, decorative foliage. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by Dominique Massad in France from Rêve d’Or × ‘Magenta’ (Kordes 1954); breeding completed 1993, introduced 2006 via Jardirose, reflecting old-rose charm with modern shrub performance. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Bushy, medium shrub reaching about 95–125 cm high and 65–95 cm wide, with dense, light green glossy foliage and moderate prickliness; forms a rounded, well-filled structure in beds or containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Medium-sized, double flowers (around 26–39 petals) borne in clusters, ball to pompon shaped; once-flowering with a concentrated seasonal flush rather than continuous repeat bloom across the year. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Soft greyish-lilac tones with pearly grey base and pink shading; buds silvery grey with purplish sheen, colour lightening in strong sun and holding cooler, greyer tones better in partial shade. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Medium-strength, clearly perceptible scent with a spicy character; fragrance is most noticeable when blooms are fully open during the main flowering period in early to mid-summer garden conditions. |
| Hip characteristics |
Hip set is generally low due to the very double, closed flowers; where formed, hips are small, mostly around 10–16 mm in diameter and appear only sporadically on established plants. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Rated H7 with approximate hardiness to around −21 to −18 °C; good resistance to powdery mildew and black spot, moderate susceptibility to rust, overall medium disease resistance in typical UK gardens. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Suitable for beds, specimen use, shrubs in groups, hedging, large containers and cutting; prefers well-drained soil, medium maintenance, and occasional plant protection where rust pressure is high. |
GRISELIS™ offers a single, spectacular grey-lilac flowering wave, reliable shrub structure and long-term own-root resilience; a thoughtful choice if you value atmosphere, durability and calm, seasonal impact.