Soprano
Soprano opens with lychee and freesia—genuinely tropical in its first impression, the lychee's sweetness held in check by bergamot pulling it back toward the familiar.
The scent fingerprint
Weighted by intensity across 11 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.
- Rose70
- Leather55
- Soft Spicy50
- Woody
The note pyramid
- Fruits
- Calabrian Bergamot
- Freesia
- Lychee
- Bulgarian Rose
- Jasmine
- Milk
By the editors · 2 min readSoprano opens with lychee and freesia—genuinely tropical in its first impression, the lychee's sweetness held in check by bergamot pulling it back toward the familiar. Bulgarian rose anchors the heart, osmanthus adding an apricot quality that rhymes with the lychee above it; milk softens both into something gauzy and luminous. The base reverses the register entirely: agarwood and leather arriving with a firmness the earlier lightness did not predict, patchouli threading between them as connective tissue. Soprano is a fragrance built on deliberate contrast—it opens soft and closes with authority, changing its character so completely across the drydown that early and late impressions belong to different conversations.
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.




