1Climbing Roses
Erin Silversmiths//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: 'Zephirine Drouhin'
Despite what the name may imply, climbing roses aren’t vines. They have stiff canes that can be trained along a trellis, fence, or downspout. These types of roses produce more flowers when grown horizontally and tend to have large flowers that almost always rebloom.
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2English Roses
Lakelady//Getty Images Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Graham Thomas
If you’re looking for a hardy, disease-resistant rose with a delightful rose scent, this may be the rose for you. Available in a range of colors, these varieties have been carefully cultivated for reliability, most notably by David Austin in England. Most are shrubby, which makes them ideal for practically any garden situation—containers, hedges, and more formal settings.
3Floribunda Roses
dumbledad//Flickr Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Sexy Rexy
A cross between Hybrid Tea and Polyantha roses, these are ideal for mixed borders and large bed plantings. They don’t typically have much of a scent, although you can find newer breeds that are fragrant. The blooms present in large clusters to give color over a long season.
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4Groundcover Roses
Libby Norman//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Avon
These shrubby roses, also known as “landscape” roses, are low-growing, sprawling specimen that are one of the newer trends in roses. They bloom from spring to frost with little effort and can be found in single and double bloom forms. Typically, they reach up to 3 feet tall and spread far beyond.
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5Grandiflora Roses
Home in Salem//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Montezuma
These are a mix of reblooming Floribunda paired with the clustered blooms of Hybrid Tea roses, albeit on slightly shorter, yet still long stems. Shades range from soft pastels to deep purples and typically have a hint of sweet floral perfume.
6Polyantha Roses
Joe Jirang//Shutterstock Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Fairy Rose
This compact plant typically grows up to 3 feet high and flowers in large clusters of small, 1-inch blooms making them wonderful additions to containers and small gardens. They’re known to be covered in flowers from spring to fall and are hardy, low-maintenance, plants.
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7Hybrid Tea Roses
A. Barra//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Soleil d'Or
These garden roses have large, high-centered buds with 30 to 50 petals each that are supported by long, straight, upright stems. They make for popular cut flowers and are inclined to rebloom. They grow up to 8 feet tall and 3 feet wide. Hybrid teas aren’t known for being disease resistant, so many home gardeners shy away from the variety, but they are the standard rose of the floral industry.
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8Rambling Roses
Ulf Eliasson//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Kiftsgate
Rambling roses are often confused with climbers, but they are far more vigorous and often only bloom once during the summer season. They can be trained to climb with supports but will reach across anything in their path if not coaxed to grow up. (Think of the roses Maleficent sent crawling over Aurora’s kingdom.)
9Bourbon Roses
Jengod//Wikimedia Commons Type: Old Garden Rose
Shown: Louise Odier
Named for the Île Bourbon (now called Réunion) of the coast of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, these gorgeous full bloomers often have a lovely, heady scent. They typically have few to no thorns and can be trained to climb.
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10Miniature Roses
Javier Martin//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Venus
This extremely hardy variety is bred to stay small in size but comes in a range of types and colors. They only reach up to about 10 inches in height, making them perfect for small gardens, containers, or planted as a border into the front of a rose garden.
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11China Roses
A. Barra//Wikimedia Commons Type: Old Garden Rose
Shown: Old Blush
Cultivated in East Asia for centuries, these typically add less fragrance and smaller blooms than other old garden roses. They’re known for their tendency to “suntan” or darken over time rather than fading in color like other roses’ blooms.
12Damask Roses
A. Barra//Wikimedia Commons Type: Old Garden Rose
Shown: Autumn Damask
Named for Damascus, these roses were brought from the Middle East to Europe between 1254 and 1276. These roses tend to sprawl and have strongly scented blooms. Summer damasks bloom once, while Autumn of Four Season damasks bloom once in summer and once later in the season.
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13Shrub Roses
Salicyna//Wikimedia Commons Type: Modern Rose
Shown: Swany
These are generally hardy and easy to care for roses. They're easy to identify by the way the roses bloom on the bush. Rather than one bloom per stem, shrub roses sprout blooms in clusters, and they can grow up to 6 feet tall and 15 feet wide.
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14Noisette Roses
Anna Reg//Wikimedia Commons Type: Old Garden Rose
Shown: Blush Noisette
This rose was first born in South Carolina by combining a China rose and a musk rose. They are winter-hardy vigorous climbers with huge clusters of blooms. They were especially important in introducing orange and yellow hues into Old Garden Roses.
15Tea Roses
Paul Sullivan//Flickr Type: Old Garden Rose
Shown: Catherine Mermet
Originating in China, these roses are the O.G. of today’s classic florist rose form. They’re not hardy in colder climates. They have pointed buds that open in a spiral and often roll back at the edges giving the bloom a pointed tip. Original teas were yellow, but the repeat-bloomers were bred to include shades of white, pink, and yellow to apricot.
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16Wild Prairie Roses
Alex W. Covington//Wikimedia Commons Type: Wild Rose
Shown: Rosa Arkansana
The name of this rose comes from Colorado's Arkansas River where the species is found. This particular variety is native to North America and is found between the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains all the way south to New Mexico and Texas.
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Erynn Hassinger is the Design Director of Country Living Magazine.
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