Rose Show 2019 Central Florida Rose Society - Saturday, April 20, 2019 - Noon until 4 pm

 
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Central Florida Rose Society
Rose Show 2019

Saturday, April 20, 2019 — Noon until 4 pm
            Harry P. Leu Gardens
           1920 N. Forest Avenue
             Orlando, FL 32803
CFRS 2019 Rose Show Location
                  Harry P. Leu Gardens
       1920 North Forest Avenue, Orlando, FL 32804
          407.246.2620 www.leugardens.org

From Kissimmee and Attractions Area
Take I-4 east to Exit #85, Princeton Street. Turn right on to
Princeton Street and follow the signs to Leu Gardens.

From the Airport Area
Take Semoran Blvd./State Road 436 and head north to Route
50/Colonial Drive. Make a left on to Route 50/Colonial Drive,
head west to Mills Avenue. Turn right on to Mills Avenue head
north to Virginia Avenue. Turn right on to Virginia Avenue and
follow the signs to Leu Gardens.

From the Daytona & Altamonte Springs Area
Take I-4 west to Exit #85, Princeton Street. Turn left on to
Princeton Street and follow the signs to Leu Gardens.
Section I: Horticulture
                      Rules and Information
This show will be governed by the standard rules, regulations and
guidelines of the American Rose Society. Anyone is eligible to compete
so long as the exhibitor is present at the show site and has grown the
roses they are entering in their own private outdoor garden. An exhibi-
tor may enter any class, regardless of residence or club membership,
except those classes having specific restrictions listed. Only one entry of
the same variety will be allowed from the same garden in any one class
unless otherwise stated.

The preparation area will open at Harry P. Leu Gardens, 1920 N. Forest
Drive, Orlando, FL 32803 at 6:00 am Saturday, April 20, 2019. Entries will
be received from 7:00 to 10:00 am. Entries placed on the classification
table after 10:00 am will not be accepted! All roses entered in the show
become the property of the show committee.

The show committee will furnish official entry tags and uniform contain-
ers that must be used unless noted otherwise. Both the top and bottom
of the entry tag must be filled in using pencil and/or printed address
labels. You must provide class, variety name(s), and exhibitor's name
and address. The reverse side of the tag may be used to list variety
names for collections. The entry tag should be attached to vases with a
rubber band and may be attached to other containers with clear tape.
Entry tags should be left open until the Classification Committee passes
the entry. The placement committee will place entries in alphabetical
order for each class (except for Challenge classes which must be placed
by the exhibitor).

Any specimen may have unwanted side growth, spent bloom, and
damaged petals removed to improve its' appearance, subject to penalty
according to the degree of impairment. Removals should be made
cleanly, leaving no stubs, dark scars, or torn tissue. Thorns and leaves
above the top of the container should not be removed.

Except for "fully open" and "single type" (4 to 8 petals) classes, a Hybrid
Tea, Grandiflora, Miniature and Miniflora is generally considered to be
at its most perfect phase of beauty (exhibition stage) when it is one-half
to three fourths open and is gracefully shaped with sufficient petals
symmetrically arranged in an attractive circular outline, tending
toward a well-defined, high and pointed center. The stem and
foliage should be clean, undamaged, and sufficiently abundant and
of proper size to compliment the bloom. The stamens of specimens
in fully open classes and single type classes must be easily visible
and should be fresh. Petaloids may be removed. Climbing sports
must be exhibited with their bush counterparts.

Specimens shown as sprays must have at least two blooms. Buds do
not count as blooms. Preference is given to sprays with the most
blooms at or near the most perfect phase of beauty for that partic-
ular variety.

Entries will be disqualified for the following reasons:
A. Misnamed, misclassed, misplaced, unlabeled, or mislabeled.
B. Stem on stem, (a specimen exhibited with a portion of the
   previous stem growth attached). Exception: Old Garden Roses
   and Shrubs may be shown stem on stem.
C. The presence of a foreign substance applied to the foliage,
   stem, or bloom to improve the appearance of the specimen.
   This disqualification also applies to exhibition aids accidentally
   left in or on the exhibit. This rule does not prohibit the use of
   water to clean the foliage, a practice that is encouraged.
D. Not disbudded. Any class calling for one bloom per stem
   specimens must be exhibited without side buds.
E. An entry in violation of ARS rules or local society rules applying
   to this show.

All roses must be entered under ARS approved exhibition names as
listed in any one of the following official ARS publications: Modern
Roses 12 (book and database), the Official List of Approved Exhibi-
tion Names for Judges & Exhibitors, the Hand-book for Selecting
Roses, or “Recent Registrations” on the ARS web-site. In cases
where a variety is not listed in any of the above ARS publications, a
listing in the Combined Rose List is acceptable. (Note: a rose name
with double quotation marks is not eligible to be shown). In the
event there is a conflict regarding name, class color, or other perti-
nent information between the CRL and the official ARS publications,
the latest ARS publication will prevail.

Wedges to position a specimen in the container are permitted and
should be provided by the exhibitor. All types of wedges, with the
exception of floral clay or extra stems, may be used. Rubber bands
placed around stems to help position roses in collections are consid-
ered a wedge and are not to be penalized if the material is inside the
vase. If wedging materials protrude above the lip of the vase, the
specimen may be penalized according to the degree of distraction.

Judging shall be done by American Rose Society (ARS. Accredited
Judges assisted by ARS Apprentice Judges. Reference material
showing ARS approved exhibition names will be available to the
Judges at the show site. The Show Schedule Chairman will rule on
any questions concerning the Rose Show Schedule. The decision of
the judges is final. Judges of the show and members of their imme-
diate family may not exhibit except in the Judges Class (Class 33).

First, second, third place, and Honorable Mention ribbons may be
awarded in each class. No exhibit or award may be removed from
the Show Area before the close of the show without special permis-
sion from the Show Chairman. Awards may be picked up at the
completion of the show. Awards not received in person will be
mailed if necessary. However, trophy winners that cannot be pre-
sent are requested to arrange for a representative to accept posses-
sion on their behalf.

The Rose Show will be open to the public from Noon until 4 pm,
Saturday, April 20, 2019. There is no charge for admission to the
show. Neither the Central Florida Rose Society, its members, any
member of the Show Committee, nor Harry P. Leu Gardens will
assume any responsibility for loss or damage to person or property.

For additional information please contact:
Jim Small, Show Chairman
321-662-1292, jsmalljr@cfl.rr.com
SCHEDULE OF EXHIBITS

                SECTION I: SPECIMEN CLASSES

   HYBRID TEAS, GRANDIFLORAS & THEIR CLIMBING SPORTS

CLASS 1. THE CHARLES “DOC” ALLCOTT HYBRID TEA QUEEN AWARD
         One bloom per stem hybrid tea or grandiflora, no side buds,
         at exhibition stage.
           Queen - Best blue ribbon winner
           King - Second best blue ribbon winner
           Princess - Third best blue ribbon winner
           Royal Court - Next three (3) best blue ribbons
           ARS Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal Certificates will be
           awarded to Queen, King and Princess.

CLASS 2. HYBRID TEA/GRANDIFLORA FULLY OPEN
         One bloom per stem, without side buds, Stamens must be
         easily visible. Single types are not eligible. ARS certificate
         awarded.

CLASS 3. HYBRID TEA/GRANDIFLORA SPRAY
         One stem with two or more blooms, ideally with each bloom
         at exhibition stage, but may show various stages of blooms
         and buds. Single types are not eligible. ARS certificate
         awarded.

CLASS 4. SMALL ROSE GARDEN
         25 or less Hybrid Tea or Grandiflora bushes. One bloom per
         stem Hybrid Tea or Grandiflora, without side buds, at exhibi-
         tion stage.
CHALLENGE CLASSES:

              HYBRID TEA AND GRANDIFLORA

CLASS 5. THE HUGO KUZE CYCLE OF BLOOM AWARD
         Three (3) Hybrid Teas or Grandifloras, same variety,
         showing three stages of development: one bud with
         sepals down and no more than the first row of petals
         beginning to unfurl; one bloom at exhibition stage;
         one bloom fully open with stamens showing. Exhibit-
         ed in separate containers with separate entry tags. To
         be placed by exhibitor. One entry per exhibitor.

CLASS 6. THE RON AND SHIRLEY KAST HYBRID TEA OR
         GRANDIFLORA AND MATCHING MINIATURE OR
         MINIFLORA AWARD
         One (1) Hybrid Tea or Grandiflora and One (1) match-
         ing Miniature or Miniflora. Both one bloom per stem
         without side buds at exhibition stage. Staged in sepa-
         rate vases with separate entry tags. Roses should be
         matching in color and form. The miniature or miniflora
         will be staged in front of the Hybrid Tea/Grandiflora
         entry. To be placed by exhibitor.
         One entry per exhibitor. ARS certificate awarded.

CLASS 7. THE CENTRAL FLORIDA ROSE SOCIETY PERPETUAL
         TROPHY
         Three (3) specimens, one-bloom-per-stem with no side
         buds, same or different varieties, exhibition stage. One
         container, one entry tag.

CLASS 8. ENGLISH BOX
         Six (6) Hybrid Teas or Grandifloras, exhibition stage.
         No more than two specimens of one variety.
         No foliage permitted. One entry per exhibitor.
         ARS certificate awarded.
CLASS 9. HYBRID TEA/GRANDIFLORA BOWL
         One (1) specimen at exhibition stage, floated in a bowl,
         no stem or foliage permitted. Only CFRS bowls may be
         used. One entry per exhibitor. ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 10. PRETTY AS A PICTURE
          One (1) Hybrid Tea or Grandiflora at exhibition stage,
          displayed in a picture frame, no stem or foliage permitted.
          Only CFRS picture frames may be used.
          One entry per exhibitor.

                      CHALLENGE CLASSES:

                FLORIBUNDAS AND POLYANTHAS

CLASS 11.    FLORIBUNDA / POLYANTHA SPRAY
             (Prince of Show)
             One stem with two or more blooms.
             May have single type, decorative, or exhibition form.
             ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 12.    FLORIBUNDA, ONE BLOOM PER STEM
             Shown without side buds, at its most perfect
             phase of beauty. ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 13.    ARTIST'S PALETTE
             Five (5) Floribunda blooms each a different variety
             At their most perfect phase of possible beauty.
             Preference given to the widest possible range of color.
             No foliage or single type floribundas permitted.
             One entry per exhibitor.
CLIMBERS & HYBRID WICHURANAS

CLASS 14.   Large flowered Climber (LCl), Climbing HT (Cl HT),
            Hybrid Gigantea (HG), or Hybrid Wichurana (H Wich)
            May be exhibited as one bloom per stem and be disbud-
            ded, or as a spray. Those varieties that have a bush
            counterpart (HT, FL, Mini) must be exhibited in the same
            class as their bush counterparts. Examples of Climbing
            Hybrid Teas that have no bush counterpart are Aloha
            and High Noon. ARS Certificate awarded.

                       CHALLENGE CLASSES:

                SHRUBS and OLD GARDEN ROSES

CLASS 15.   CLASSIC SHRUB
            Only those Shrubs with the subdivision of Hybrid Kodesii,
            Hybrid Moyesii, Hybrid Musk, and Hybrid Rugosa, one
            specimen, one or more blooms. Unwanted side growth
            may be removed subject to penalization.
            ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 16.   MODERN SHRUB
            Shrubs identified with the generic classification of Shrub
            (S). One specimen, one or more blooms. Unwanted side
            growth may be removed subject to penalization.
            ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 17.   DOWAGER QUEEN
            One specimen, one or more blooms, of an Old Garden
            Rose introduced prior to 1867, including those with un-
            known dates of origin, but known to have existed prior
            to 1867. (**) precedes name in the ARS Handbook for
            Selecting Roses. ARS Certificate awarded.
SHRUBS and OLD GARDEN ROSES, Continued

CLASS 18.    THE EARLINE CROSSLEY VICTORIAN AWARD
             One specimen, one or more blooms, of an Old Garden
             Rose introduced in 1867 or later, and those of unknown
             dates of introduction after 1867. ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 19.    OLD-FASHIONED BOUQUET
             Consisting of at least three varieties of Old Garden Rose
             and/or Shrub roses. Exhibited in a container provided by
             the exhibitor. May use oasis. Only roses may be used in
             the bouquet; no other plant or decorative material
             allowed. Exhibitor may place bouquet under supervision
             of Placement Committee. All varieties to be listed on one
             entry tag. One entry per exhibitor.

CLASS 20.    ROSES ON WATER
             From five (5) to seven (7) blooms of any old garden roses
             and/or shrub roses, no foliage, any combination of
             varieties, staged in a bowl, floating on water.
             One entry per exhibitor.
SPECIMEN CLASSES:

                 MINIATURES AND MINIFLORAS

CLASS 21. THE ADA ALLCOTT MINIATURE QUEEN AWARD
          One bloom per stem miniature, no side buds, at exhibition
          stage.

           Mini Queen - Best blue ribbon winner
           Mini King - Second best blue ribbon winner
           Mini Princess - Third best blue ribbon winner

           ARS Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal Certificates will be
           awarded to Mini Queen, King and Princess.

CLASS 22   MINIFLORAS
           One bloom per stem miniflora, no side buds, at exhibition
           stage.

           Miniflora Queen - Best blue ribbon winner
           Miniflora King - Second best blue ribbon
           Miniflora Princess Third best blue ribbon

           ARS Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal Certificates will be
           awarded to Miniflora Queen, King and Princess.

CLASS 23. MINI / MINIFLORA SPRAY
          One miniature or miniflora stem with two or more blooms.
          May have single type, decorative, or exhibition form.
          ARS Certificate awarded.

CLASS 24. FULLY OPEN
          One miniature or miniflora, one bloom per stem, with no
          side buds, fully open, stamens must be showing. Single
          types not eligible. ARS Certificate awarded.
CHALLENGE CLASSES:

                MINIATURE AND MINIFLORA ROSES

(Miniature and Miniflora specimens may not be mixed in the same
class. Exhibitor has the option of carrying their entry to the exhibiting
table).

CLASS 25.      THREE, ONE BLOOM PER STEM
               Miniature or miniflora, same or different varieties, with-
               out side buds, at exhibition stage. One container, one
               entry tag.

 CLASS 26.      ENGLISH BOX
                Six (6) miniature or miniflora blooms at exhibition
                stage, no more than two specimens of one variety.
                No foliage or single type varieties permitted.
                One entry per exhibitor. ARS Certificate Awarded.

CLASS 27.       PAINTER'S PALETTE
                Seven (7) miniature or miniflora blooms at exhibition
                stage, at least five different varieties, preference given
                to the widest possible range of color. No foliage or
                single type varieties permitted. One entry per exhibitor.

CLASS 28.       MINIATURE / MINIFLORA BOWL
                One miniature or miniflora at exhibition stage, floating
                in a bowl. No stem or foliage permitted. Only C.F.R.S.
                bowls may be used. One entry per exhibitor.
                ARS Certificate Awarded.

CLASS 29.       CYCLE OF BLOOM
                Three miniatures or minifloras, same variety, showing
                three stages of development: one bud with sepals
                down and no more than the first row of petals begin-
                ning to unfurl; one bloom at exhibition stage; one
                bloom fully open with stamens showing. Exhibited in
                separate containers with separate entry tags. To be
                placed by exhibitor. One entry per exhibitor.
CLASS 30.      PRETTY AS A PICTURE
               One (1) miniature or miniflora at exhibition stage,
               displayed in a picture frame, no stem or foliage
               permitted. Only C.F.R.S. picture frames may be used.
               One entry per exhibitor.

                            NOVICE CLASS

This section is restricted to those exhibitors who have never won an
award in an ARS Rose Show (not including ribbons or youth class
awards). Novice exhibitors may also enter other sections.

CLASS 31.   Any rose, any variety, any classification, any number of
            entries, as long as there are no duplicates.
            ARS Certificate awarded.

                       MOST FRAGRANT ROSE

CLASS 32.   Any variety, sprays allowed. One entry per exhibitor.
            To be judged by the general public; Winner selected
            At 3 p.m., Saturday, November 12, 2016.

                            JUDGES CLASS

        Open only to those Judges who are judging this show

CLASS 33.   Any rose, any variety, any classification, any number of
            entries, as long as there are no duplicates. ARS Judges
            Certificate and award will be given for best overall exhibit.
Section II: Rose Photography
                     Rules and Information

1. The show will be governed by the standard rules, regulations and
   guidelines of the American Rose Society. All roses shown in
   photography entries must have been grown in an outdoor garden.

2. Exhibitors, may enter no more than (2) photographs in any one
   class, and no more than a total of (12) photographs in this
   Division. A photograph may not be entered more than once.

3. Photographs will be accepted for entry on Saturday, April 20, 2019
   between 7:00 am and 10:00 am. Entries should be given to the
   photography placement committee in the Rose Room at Harry P.
   Leu Gardens.

4. Photographs are to be mounted (that is with a backing board of
   art board or foam board) and matted (the art board “frame” that
   goes on top of the photograph). Outside dimensions of the mat
   are to be 11” x 14”. The orientation of the photo may be
   landscape or portrait.

5. Photographs may be no smaller than 5” x 7” and no larger than 8”
   x 10”. Nonstandard shapes to the mat opening (oval, diamond,
   triangle, etc.) are welcome as long as it conforms to the size of the
   photo and the size requirements of the mat. The color of the mat
   is at the discretion of the exhibitor.

6. Each exhibit shall have a horticulture entry tag completed with
   class number, rose name, photographer’s name, address, on top
   and bottom of the tag. If the photographed roses were grown by
   the exhibitor, “EG” ( Exhibitor Grown) should be written in the
   upper right hand corner of the entry tag. ARS Queen, King,
   Princess of Photography Rosettes may be awarded to photogra-
   phers using Exhibitor grown and/or arranged roses.
7.   Attach your entry tag to the upper left corner of the matted
     photograph, securely folded, with a paperclip. Proper placement
     of the entry tag will determine proper orientation of each
     photograph for judging. The exhibitor may place nothing
     identifying the photographer on the front of the photograph.

8. Rose varieties photographed must be entered under ARS approved
   exhibition names as listed in any one of the following official ARS
   publications: Modern Roses 12 (book and database), the Official
   List of Approved Exhibition Names for Judges & Exhibitors, the
   Handbook for Selecting Roses, or “Recent Registrations” on the
   ARS website. In cases where a variety is not listed in any of the
   above ARS publications, a listing in the Combined Rose List is
   acceptable.

9. All rights to the submitted photographs are retained by the owners
   of the photographs. However, by submitting a photograph to the
   contest, the exhibitor (1) warrants that he or she owns the
   copyright of the submitted photograph and is not legally
   prohibited from submitting it to the contest, and (2) agrees to
   allow the Central Florida Rose Society to display the photo at the
   Annual Rose Show, and publish the photograph in the Wind
   Chimes, the Central Florida Rose Society newsletter. The Show
   Committee will exercise due caution in protecting all exhibits, but
   neither the Central Florida Rose Society, the American Rose
   Society, or the City of Orlando will assume any liability in loss or
   damage to property.

10. Photographs taken with film or digital equipment are equally
    welcome. The use of photo editing software should be kept to a
    minimum. Editing is limited to cropping, rotation, lightening,
    darkening, minor clean up corrections for camera sensor dirt, or
    sharpening of the image. Overuse can be cause for point
    deduction, but alone is not a disqualification.

11. First, Second, Third, and Fourth Place ribbons, may be given in
    each class. Multiple First through Fourth Place ribbons may be
    awarded in each class at the discretion of the judges. There will be
    a Photography Queen, King, and Princess chosen from the blue
    ribbon winners.
12. Reasons for disqualification include misnamed roses, improperly
    named roses (must use ARS approved exhibition name), unlabeled
    or mislabeled entries, exhibitor’s name visible, previously exhibited
    photographs, roses not outdoor grown, or violation of these show
    rules.

            Scorecard for the Prime Elements of Judging

        CONFORMANCE.....................................................              5
        SPECIFIC SECTION................................................... 50
        COMPOSITION........................................................ 15
        TECHNIQUE............................................................. 15
        DISTINCTION........................................................... 15
        TOTAL...................................................................... 100

CONFORMANCE – 5 Points

This section is for following the rules of the written schedule and the
rules of the classes in which the photograph has been entered.

SPECIFIC SECTION — 50 Points

The Rose – When judging a photograph of a horticultural specimen,
many of the rules that are used in the ARS Guidelines & Rules for
Judging Roses would be utilized.

The Rose Arrangement – When judging a photograph of a rose
arrangement, the rules that are used in the ARS Guidelines for Judging
Rose Arrangements would be utilized.

The Rose Garden – Public gardens MUST be named. Roses should
dominate within the photograph, and the fact that the flowers are
roses should be obvious. The presence of sculptures or buildings within
either type of garden (formal or casual) should not draw the eye, but
should be a blended part of the photograph and lend to the beauty of
the photo.
Macro - Photographs should be extreme close-up photo of any part of
the rose or rose plant. Color, Black & White, Sepia, or combinations of
these are permitted in this class.

COMPOSITION — 15 points

This area includes the point of interest, simplicity, color quality,
contrast, balance, framing of the subject, viewpoint, direction of
movement and diagonals where applicable. The point of interest in
this case should be the rose.

TECHNIQUE — 15 points

This area includes correct exposure, depth of field, lighting and other
relevant effect that makes the viewer feel that he or she can reach out
and touch this "real thing" in the photograph.

DISTINCTION —15 Points

Distinction indicates that everything about the photograph is well
done, but in addition, there is something about this photograph that
sets it apart from others in its class. Something that at first may be
intangible – something we may call the "wow" factor.
SECTION II: ROSE PHOTOGRAPHY - SHOW CLASSES

CLASS 1. One Bloom
One bloom, no side buds, of Hybrid Tea, Grandiflora, Miniature,
Miniflora, or Floribunda classifications of roses. Roses designated as
“single” (e.g. Single HT, etc.) must be entered in the Fully-Open Bloom
class.

CLASS 2. One Spray
Two or more blooms, any type of rose. This class does NOT include
collections.

CLASS 3. Fully Open Bloom
One bloom, fully open, no side buds, stamens must show. Roses
classified by the ARS as “singles” ARE permitted in this class.

CLASS 4.    Old Garden Roses, Shrub, Species, Polyantha, or Large-
Flowered Climbers
One bloom, with or without side buds, or spray of two (2) or more
blooms, of an Old Garden Rose, Species, Shrub, Polyantha, or Large-
flowered Climber.

CLASS 5. Rose Arrangement, Traditional, Modern, Arrangements in
the Oriental Manner
A photo of an arrangement following the American Rose Society
Guidelines for Judging Rose Arrangements. Arranger’s name MUST be
indicated.

CLASS 6. Macro Photography
Photographs should be extreme close-up photo of any part of the rose
or rose plant. Color, Black & White, Sepia, or combinations of these are
permitted in this class.
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