Releases
DNA over time
Each column is an era. Each colored band shows that family’s share of accord weight across every perfume the house released in that window. Bigger band = the house leaned harder on that family.
All fragrances
Pink Sugar Hair Mist
Pink Sugar Luxury Extract
Pink Sugar Body Mist
Luna Park
Latte di Mandorla
Succo di Lampone
Pink Sugar Berry Blast
A neon-bright cousin to Aquolina's cult Pink Sugar, this opens with a blast of blackberry syrup and tangy citrus that feels halfway between candy store and juice bar.
Chocolovers
Chocolovers opens with a bright citrus trio that feels almost like a misdirection, the bergamot and orange cutting through air before the fragrance settles into its true character.
Pink Sugar Lollipink
Black Sugar
Black Sugar opens with a rush of caramelized sweetness that borders on burnt—like the crust of crème brûlée just before it tips into bitterness.
Gold Sugar
Gold Sugar opens with neroli and orange — bright, slightly soapy, the neroli adding a Mediterranean quality to what would otherwise be straightforward citrus.
Vaniglia
Pink Sugar Sparks
Pink Flower
Blue Sugar
The opening is bright citrus tempered immediately by a soft licorice sweetness—star anise makes itself known early, weaving through the bergamot like smoke.
Pink Sugar Red Velvet
The opening is a flash of strawberry syrup—tart, candied, backed by a whisper of bergamot that does little to temper the sweetness.
Sweet Me
Sweet-Me opens with a bright slap of raspberry—juicy, unapologetic, and sweeter than expected.
Simply Pink by Pink Sugar
Steel Sugar
Pink Sugar Sensual
A darker, more grown-up departure from Aquolina's candy-coated original, this flanker opens with a tart blackcurrant-bergamot twist that briefly cuts through the sweetness before jasmine and vanilla take over.
Pink Sugar
The opening is a bright sugar rush—candied berries and citrus zest meeting a faint green twinge of fig leaf, sweet but not quite cloying yet.
Zucchero a Velo
Cocco
Pink Sugar Creamy Sunshine
The opening is a burst of citrus clarity—orange and bergamot cut through with unexpected sharpness before the sweeter elements arrive.