Sillage.art
Stella Mccartney · Est. 2016

Pop

Stella McCartney's Pop opens with a bright, green snap—violet leaf and tomato leaf collide in a vegetal burst that feels like crushing fresh stems between your fingers.

ConcentrationFragrance
Forunisex
Released2016
Perfumerunknown
Statusenriched
2016 · Fragrance
tub·mus·san·gra
Rating
3.7
0.9k reviews
Fig. 01

The scent fingerprint

Visualization — constellation
basehearttopcitrusfloralfruitygourmandpowderyamberywoodysmokychyprearomaticgreenaquaticspicy

Weighted by intensity across 7 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.

  • Tuberose
    40
  • Musk
    40
  • Sandalwood
    35
  • Green
    35
  • Cedar
    30

By the editors · 2 min readStella McCartney's Pop opens with a bright, green snap—violet leaf and tomato leaf collide in a vegetal burst that feels like crushing fresh stems between your fingers. It's sharp and slightly herbaceous, closer to garden soil than bouquet, but never harsh. The tuberose arrives quickly, though it's tempered here, less indolic than usual, playing off the green notes rather than drowning them.

As it settles, violet softens the whole composition into something unexpectedly wearable. The base is a clean, woody musk—sandalwood and cedar provide just enough structure to keep it from floating away entirely.

This is tuberose for people who think they don't like tuberose. Young, undeniably modern, built for daylight rather than drama. It wears light and dissipates relatively quickly, but that seems intentional—pop culture, not perfume collection.

Filed: Stella MccartneySillage · vol. I
Fig. 02

Scent twins

Computed via accord overlap