MANDARIN® – yellow dwarf-mini rose - Kordes
Imagine your London front garden edged with neat, glowing cushions of colour, each cluster of petite blooms bringing a soft, lemon-to-cream light to even the smallest space. Mandarin® forms a compact, bushy shape that fits comfortably into narrow beds, low edging and sustainable container schemes, coping reliably with cool, damp spells and typical British rainfall that can challenge less robust miniature roses. Its glossy dark green foliage provides year-round structure, while the own-root form offers long-term security as the plant matures from establishing roots in year one, through increasing top growth in year two, to full ornamental presence by year three. Easy spacing, simple care and dependable remontant flowering support a relaxed gardening rhythm, allowing you to enjoy its gentle presence as part of a low-effort, water-wise urban sanctuary.
Usage options
| Target area |
Reasoning |
| Terraced-house front garden edging |
Compact height and bushy habit form a tidy, flowered edging along short paths or low front-garden borders without overwhelming the space, ideal where planting depth is limited for busy city homeowners and beginners. |
| Small containers on steps or balconies |
The miniature, upright form suits large pots of 40–50 litres, giving stable roots and long-term structure while keeping pruning light and straightforward for time-poor balcony gardeners and urban renters. |
| Mixed planting with herbs and perennials |
Its lemon-to-cream flowers sit beautifully with lavender, Nepeta and sage, creating a soft colour drift that supports low-input, drought-aware schemes appreciated by sustainability-minded family gardeners. |
| Low mini-hedge beside paths or driveways |
Regular spacing at 25–30 cm creates a neat, miniature hedge that is easy to maintain, bringing definition and seasonal interest even in small front gardens for practical, design-conscious owners. |
| Mini standard for courtyard focal points |
Grafted as a mini standard, its dense foliage and repeat-flowering clusters provide a refined vertical accent in tight courtyard or patio settings for style-focused urban residents. |
| Clay or chalky suburban borders |
Once established in improved soil with good drainage, the hardy root system and own-root resilience cope steadily with typical British clay or chalk conditions for low-fuss home gardeners. |
| Water-wise, rainwater-fed planting |
Works well in rainwater-managed beds or pots, using collected water and modest supplementary watering, fitting a future-proof, water-conscious approach popular with eco-aware city households. |
| Long-term family garden planting |
The own-root form supports regeneration, stable size and consistent flowering over many seasons, rewarding patient planting as the plant builds from roots to full ornamental value for forward-planning family buyers. |
Styling ideas
- Front-step glow – Position in a 40–50 litre charcoal or terracotta pot by the front door, underplant with Nepeta x faassenii to soften edges – ideal for urban residents wanting instant welcome with low care.
- Butter-and-lavender – Combine with English lavender and silvery foliage in a narrow front border for a calm, aromatic strip – perfect for homeowners seeking classic charm in a small footprint.
- Mini-parterre – Use as low edging in geometric beds around a central feature, repeating plants at regular spacing – suited to hobby gardeners who enjoy ordered structure without complex maintenance.
- Courtyard accent – Train as a mini standard in a large, peat-free container with underplanting of thyme and creeping Campanula – attractive for design-conscious balcony and patio dwellers.
- Soft-play border – Plant in a short row beside play areas, pairing with groundcover Euonymus for all-season greenery and colour – good for families wanting robust planting near everyday activity.
Technical cultivar profile
| Parameter |
Data |
| Name and registration |
Miniature (Polyantha) dwarf rose; registered as KORcelin, marketed as Mandarin® Mini - dwarf rose KORcelin, ARS exhibition name Mandarin, classified as a miniature exhibition rose. |
| Origin and breeding |
Bred by W. Kordes & Sons, Germany (breeding year 1979), introduced and registered in 1987 by W. Kordes’ Söhne, with parentage not recorded but selected for compact habit and floriferous display. |
| Awards and recognition |
Awarded the Golden Prize of the City of Glasgow at the Glasgow International Rose Trials in 1994, highlighting its dependable ornamental value and garden performance under temperate maritime conditions. |
| Growth and structural characteristics |
Compact, bushy upright plant, typically 45–55 cm tall with 35–45 cm spread, clothed in dense, glossy dark green foliage and moderately thorny stems, forming a neat dwarf shrub for edging and containers. |
| Flower morphology |
Small double, cupped blooms (approximately 0.5–1.5 inches), 26–39 petals, produced in clusters; reliably remontant with an abundant second flush, providing a long, decorative flowering season in summer. |
| Colour data and phenology |
Vivid yellow blooms with occasional faint pink-edged petals; ARS code AB, RHS 33C outer and 24C inner; colour softens from lemon-gold to buttery cream and ivory as flowers mature and eventually fade. |
| Fragrance and aroma |
Delicately sweet but very weak fragrance, generally barely noticeable in normal garden use; chosen mainly for colour, compact habit and repeat flowering rather than for pronounced scent or aromatic intensity. |
| Hip characteristics |
Poor hip set due to dense double flowers; when produced, hips are small, spherical, about 5–7 mm in diameter, coloured orange-red and generally of minor ornamental impact in comparison with the flowering display. |
| Resistance and winter hardiness |
Hardy to approximately −21 to −18 °C (RHS H7, USDA 6b, Swedish zone 3); good resistance to powdery mildew with moderate tolerance to black spot and rust, benefiting from routine monitoring in damp seasons. |
| Horticultural recommendations |
Best in a sunny position; suitable for containers, mini standards, small beds, edging and mixed plantings; plant at 25–45 cm spacing, 13–15 plants per m², with medium maintenance and occasional health checks. |
MANDARIN® – yellow dwarf-mini rose - Kordes offers compact long-season flowering, reliable performance in small spaces and the regenerative security of an own-root plant; a thoughtful choice if you prefer steady beauty with minimal fuss.