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Sillage/Library/Kenzo/Flower in the Air
Kenzo · Est. 2013

Flower in the Air

The raspberry and pink pepper open with a clean, almost effervescent brightness—less jammy fruit than a crisp, peppery lift that feels deliberate and modern.

ConcentrationFragrance
Forunisex
Released2013
Statusenriched
Flower in the Air — Kenzo
2013 · Fragrance
mus·ros·bla·ozo
Rating
3.9
1.0k reviews
Fig. 01

The scent fingerprint

Visualization — constellation
basehearttopcitrusfloralfruitygourmandpowderyamberywoodysmokychyprearomaticgreenaquaticspicy

Weighted by intensity across 6 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.

  • Musk
    65
  • Rose
    35
  • Black Pepper
    25
  • Ozonic
    15
  • Peach
    15

By the editors · 2 min readThe raspberry and pink pepper open with a clean, almost effervescent brightness—less jammy fruit than a crisp, peppery lift that feels deliberate and modern. This lightness carries through as the heart emerges, where gardenia and magnolia bloom without the heaviness or indolic depth those flowers can bring. The rose stays quiet, providing structure rather than dominating.

What settles is a white musk foundation that feels scrubbed and transparent, holding the florals in suspension rather than grounding them. The effect is weightless, almost literal to the name—petals caught mid-air before they touch earth. It's composed for someone who wants floral without density, fragrance without announcement.

Kenzo's aesthetic here leans toward minimalism and negative space, a perfume that prioritizes absence of heaviness over presence of drama. Best suited to warm weather and environments where subtlety carries further than projection.

Filed: KenzoSillage · vol. I
Fig. 02

Scent twins

Computed via accord overlap