Highgrove Bouquet
Highgrove Bouquet is a three-note watercolor of the King's garden.
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The scent fingerprint
Weighted by intensity across 4 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.
- Tuberose55
- Lavender35
- Honey25
- Ozonic
The note pyramid
- Linden Blossom
- Mimosa
- Cedar
- Tuberose
- Lavender
- Jasmine
- Mimosa
- Musk
By the editors · 2 min readHighgrove Bouquet is a three-note watercolor of the King's garden. Linden blossom opens cool and slightly honeyed — that particular wax-paper sweetness of the lime tree in bloom — with a faint green tea quality underneath.
Mimosa takes the middle and softens the linden into something more powdered than honeyed. The whole composition stays transparent: there's no fruit, no spice, no insistence. By design it reads as filtered light through pale flowers, an English summer mid-morning before the sun gets serious. Pluchet uses very few materials and trusts each to do its work.
Cedar grounds the base with a dry pencil-shaving steadiness, and that's the entire third act. Three to five hours of close presence, projection small. The structure is intentionally minimal — a soliflore in two voices over a wood — not undercooked.
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.



