Scatters - Climbing Roses - In Store Now!

Happy to annouce the latest bundle of scatters for Ultrascatter 2 - Climbing roses. This bundle complemnts the rambling roses (and the other scatters bundles too) and comes with premade ultrascatter two presets (scene subsets) which can be parented to the object upon which you wish them to grow ( note that some objects do this better than others due to the way their mesh as been mapped, but you can usually use a primative as a skin and scatter on that before making the primative invisable where things get a little sparse. 

Find Them Here! 

Comments

  • LeanaLeana Posts: 12,735

    Those are very beautiful.:)

  • richardandtracyrichardandtracy Posts: 7,077
    edited November 6

    Very lovely.

    I'm curious. Is there any way a 'Masquerade' rose could be done? The blooms start yellow and the outer petals turn pink then dark red as the petals age, with the red working its way to the middle as the whole bloom ages. It means every bloom on a nearly covered rose can look a different mix of colours. I suspect the answer is no, but want to ask, as it's my favourite rose.

    My wife's favourite is the 'Paul's Himalayan Musk', all white/slightly pink, tiny blooms but a VAST number on a mind bogglingly vigorous plant. Single flush of very smelly blooms. The mound the rose makes when in bloom in our garden is right over the top of a 150yo pear tree (20ft high) and creeping across the ground for 20ft all round. The pear.. well, the 2 pears a year taste vile when ripe.

    Regards,

    Richard

    Post edited by richardandtracy on
  • TykeyStudiosTykeyStudios Posts: 863
    edited November 7

    richardandtracy said:

    My wife's favourite is the 'Paul's Himalayan Musk', all white/slightly pink, tiny blooms but a VAST number on a mind bogglingly vigorous plant. Single flush of very smelly blooms. The mound the rose makes when in bloom in our garden is right over the top of a 150yo pear tree (20ft high) and creeping across the ground for 20ft all round.

    Many years ago, my grandmother had a Paul's Himalayan Musk. She loved that rose. It was breathtaking but sadly not hardy enough for our bitter cold winters. One winter it got ridiculously cold (-30) and the poor Paul's Musk died to the ground. It came back from the roots, but it never recovered and withered away.

    These climbers were an instant purchase. What a great selection of colors and so natural looking. I'm going to get a ton of use out of these.

     

    Post edited by TykeyStudios on
  • MelanieLMelanieL Posts: 7,711
    edited November 7

    richardandtracy said:

    Very lovely.

    I'm curious. Is there any way a 'Masquerade' rose could be done? The blooms start yellow and the outer petals turn pink then dark red as the petals age, with the red working its way to the middle as the whole bloom ages. It means every bloom on a nearly covered rose can look a different mix of colours. I suspect the answer is no, but want to ask, as it's my favourite rose.

    My wife's favourite is the 'Paul's Himalayan Musk', all white/slightly pink, tiny blooms but a VAST number on a mind bogglingly vigorous plant. Single flush of very smelly blooms. The mound the rose makes when in bloom in our garden is right over the top of a 150yo pear tree (20ft high) and creeping across the ground for 20ft all round. The pear.. well, the 2 pears a year taste vile when ripe.

    Regards,

    Richard

    That takes me back - it's years since I saw Masquerade anywhere. My parents used to grow it in the 1960s/1970s - it was one of my Dad's favourites too.

    I also made the mistake of planting a Paul's Himalayan Musk in my newly made front garden, having seen a (small presumably juvenile) example growing in a garden I visited and loving the flowers. It rampaged all over the pergola which was supposed to be growing three other rose varieties and was trying to kill them so had to come out. If I ever have a gigantic garden I'll consider it again!

    ETA: And of course it goes without saying that I snapped up this latest scatter set at the earliest opportunity!

    Post edited by MelanieL on
  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 107,858

    It would, I assume, be another product but I'd like a simpler  rose. No idea what this is, but it is very vigorous (invades the rhododendron here, and when we had a holly tree at the top of the steps it climbed well up that; the holly was blown down in '87).

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  • It looks a lot like Americain Pillar or something simelar. I didnt do a single version but may do in the future, 

  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 107,858

    I shall live in hope - and buy future releases to encourage you.

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