Brightest Bloom
Brightest Bloom opens on carnation — green, peppery-sweet, more like cut-stem than candy — and stays unusually clean for the BBW shelf, with no fruit framing at all.
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The scent fingerprint
Weighted by intensity across 9 accords.
Every perfume in Sillage is represented as a distribution across canonical accord slugs — a lingua franca for scent. Two fragrances with overlapping fingerprints are scent-twins, even if they share no literal note.
- Fresh50
- Aromatic50
- Warm Spicy50
- White Floral
The note pyramid
- Carnation
- Jasmine Sambac
- Lily of the Valley
- Cedar
- Lily of the Valley
By the editors · 2 min readBrightest Bloom opens on carnation — green, peppery-sweet, more like cut-stem than candy — and stays unusually clean for the BBW shelf, with no fruit framing at all.
Lily of the valley arrives in the heart, dewy and slightly soapy, alongside jasmine sambac which adds a faint creaminess without tipping the composition toward the indolic. The base is dry cedar, holding the floral bouquet in a thin, spring-green frame; there's no vanilla or musk softening, which keeps the whole thing aromatic rather than cozy.
An unfussy daytime floral. Closer to a well-mannered department-store fragrance than a body mist; works best in spring.
Scent twins
Factual metadata (name, house, year, notes) is seeded from public datasets. The editorial reading and scent fingerprint are written by Claude against our house style — none of it is scraped prose. Read our methodology.



