Pamela Anderson's DIY Beauty Secret is this Stunning Rose – and November is the Perfect Time to Plant It
It seems Pamela Anderson’s favorite rose is as much a beauty cupboard staple as it is the shining star of her garden…
They say a rose by any other name would still smell as sweet, so it makes sense that these beautiful flowers feature heavily in the life of the one and only Pamela Anderson.
The Last Showgirl star has been through something of a renaissance of late, reclaiming her narrative via a powerful Netflix documentary and favouring a barefaced, makeup-free look after years spent as a glamour icon. Time and time again, she’s said that she owes much of her soulful reinvention to the pretty outdoor space she’s cultivated on her family’s Vancouver Island plot – and, in particular, one of the hybrid tea varieties in her beloved rose garden.
“I love my Yves Piaget roses. [And] I also harvest rose hips and make face oils and all sorts of beauty treatments out of them,” she recently told Architectural Digest.
Honestly, it’s one hell of a garden-to-beauty secret worth stealing: grow a gorgeous rose, harvest its fruit, then turn it into your own skincare staple. And for gardeners across the U.S., November is the perfect month to start.
Why Pamela Anderson’s Favorite Rose is a Standout Beauty
Named for the French fashion designer known for his romantic couture, the Yves Piaget rose is every bit as show-stopping as its namesake: think deep, peony-pink petals with a velvety texture, a wonderful fragrance with hints of citrus, and long stems with blooms so lush they look like they belong in a perfume ad.
Even better? Pamela Anderson’s favorite rose 100% delivers the perfect ingredient for DIY beauty rituals, too.
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If you’re now tempted to follow in the actor’s footsteps and plant one of your own, you’re in luck. November is the perfect time to plant bare-root roses across the bulk of USDA Plant Hardiness Zones – and it’s actually a great way to save money, too.
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Yes, really: a ready-grown Yves Piaget will cost you anywhere between $70 and $129, whereas you can bulk buy bare-root varieties starting at a wallet-friendly $37.60 apiece.
How to Plant Yves Piaget Bare-Root Roses
In November, bare-root roses are dormant, meaning they can settle their roots quietly through the winter and burst into life come spring. And you can buy Yves Piaget bare-root roses via Grace Rose Farm, which lists the variety as hardy across USDA Zones 6–10: positively ideal for much of the continental U.S.
To give yours the best start, choose a sunny spot (at least six hours of sunlight a day), dig a generous hole, and enrich the soil with compost before gently spreading the roots. Keep the graft point just at or below the soil line in cooler regions, and a touch above in warmer zones.
Water deeply, then mulch to protect from frost. By the time spring rolls around, your Yves Piaget® rose will reward you with those famously fragrant, ruffled pink blooms that made Pamela fall in love in the first place.
How to Care for Your Bare-Root Rose
To keep Pamela Anderson’s favorite rose healthy and abundant, feed itregularly with an organic fertiliser such as Espoma Rose-Tone or Dr Earth Total Advantage Rose & Flower Food (both available on Amazon). Deadhead spent flowers to encourage repeat blooming, and keep an eye out for aphids and black spot: a quick spritz of Amazon’s Neem oil spray will usually keep pests and diseases at bay.
Come late summer, you can let a few blooms fade naturally to form hips… as in, yes, the very same glossy seed pods Pamela harvests for her home-made oils.
Whether you use them or simply enjoy how they catch the autumn light, there’s something quietly restorative about completing that same garden-to-self loop. Because, as the actor well and truly proves, tending roses isn’t only about the flowers you grow: it’s about the calm, beauty, and sense of renewal that take root along the way.

Kayleigh is an enthusiastic (sometimes too enthusiastic!) gardener and has worked in media for over a decade. She previously served as digital editor at Stylist magazine, and has written extensively for Ideal Home, Woman & Home, Homes & Gardens, and a handful of other titles. Kayleigh is passionate about wildlife-friendly gardening, and recently cancelled her weekend plans to build a mini pond when her toddler found a frog living in their water barrel. As such, her garden – designed around the stunning magnolia tree at its centre – is filled to the brim with pollinator-friendly blooms, homemade bird feeders, and old logs for insects to nest in.