Jasmine in the Sun
Jasmine in the Sun
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Late afternoon in the South of France. White linen moving through open windows. Sunlight against pale stone. Jasmine carried through the air almost accidentally.
Jasmine in the Sun is created around this atmosphere of warmth and stillness. Bergamot and soft florals dissolve gradually into amber, woods and traces of vanilla, creating a fragrance that feels sunlit rather than overtly floral. The jasmine remains blurred at the edges, less a flower than the memory of one.
Close to the skin and quietly persistent, the extrait wears like heat lingering on fabric after sunset.
Jasmine in the Sun settles most beautifully where warmth lingers naturally — at the base of the neck, along the wrists, beneath fabric still holding the softness of skin and light. As the hours pass, jasmine, amber and pale woods become quieter, warmer and more intimate against the body.
A final touch beneath the hair or along the inside of a jacket allows the fragrance to remain softly suspended through movement, leaving behind traces that feel familiar long after the wearer has gone.
Balanced between light, warmth and soft woody depth, Jasmine in the Sun layers naturally with florals, musks, ambered compositions and pale woods. The extrait concentration preserves the texture and atmosphere of the fragrance while allowing subtle variations to emerge through skin and movement.
A radiant composition shaped by jasmine, citrus, warm amber and the textured softness of woods beneath the Mediterranean sun.
Jasmine
Textured by sunlight and warmth, jasmine remains luminous throughout the composition, balancing floral softness with remarkable presence.
Orange Blossom
Often used as a heart note, orange blossom blends harmoniously with other florals, citrus, and green accords, creating a bright and invigorating scent profile.
Cedarwood
Pale, dry woods that linger softly beneath the composition like heat settling into stone after sunset.
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Late afternoon in the South of France. White linen moving through open windows. Sunlight against pale stone. Jasmine carried through the air almost accidentally.
Jasmine in the Sun is created around this atmosphere of warmth and stillness. Bergamot and soft florals dissolve gradually into amber, woods and traces of vanilla, creating a fragrance that feels sunlit rather than overtly floral. The jasmine remains blurred at the edges, less a flower than the memory of one.
Close to the skin and quietly persistent, the extrait wears like heat lingering on fabric after sunset.
Jasmine in the Sun settles most beautifully where warmth lingers naturally — at the base of the neck, along the wrists, beneath fabric still holding the softness of skin and light. As the hours pass, jasmine, amber and pale woods become quieter, warmer and more intimate against the body.
A final touch beneath the hair or along the inside of a jacket allows the fragrance to remain softly suspended through movement, leaving behind traces that feel familiar long after the wearer has gone.
Balanced between light, warmth and soft woody depth, Jasmine in the Sun layers naturally with florals, musks, ambered compositions and pale woods. The extrait concentration preserves the texture and atmosphere of the fragrance while allowing subtle variations to emerge through skin and movement.
The memory of sunlight through jasmine petals
Warmth resting softly against skin, linen and open air. Jasmine in the Sun was imagined through light that feels luminous yet quiet — never sharp, only softened gradually by the warmth of the day.
Jasmine, amber, spice and pale woods unfold with a texture that feels fluid and closely layered against the skin, where warmth and softness remain in constant balance throughout wear.
Certain fragrances fade with the day. Others remain within fabric, movement and familiar spaces long after they were first worn. Jasmine in the Sun was created to linger in exactly this way.
Jasmine in the Sun
Because Jasmine in the Sun never feels separate from the wearer. The florals, woods and amber settle so naturally into skin and fabric that the fragrance becomes less something worn than something lived with.