Stradivarius
Inditex's young women's fashion line, with a fragrance sideline.
Stradivarius was developed in Barcelona in 1994 by the Triquell family as a young women's fashion concept, and was acquired by Inditex — the parent of Zara — in 1999. Today it operates more than nine hundred stores across some sixty countries, sitting within the Inditex group as a youth-oriented fast-fashion sister to Zara and Pull&Bear. The perfume line is a side product of the clothing business: a rotating set of inexpensive body sprays and eaux fraîches sold alongside the apparel rather than through prestige distribution. The original logo's treble clef — a nod to the Stradivarius violin makers — remains the brand's visual anchor. Fragrance here functions as an extension of the store identity, not as a perfumery house in its own right.
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.






















































