Lightly Bloom
The first spray is deceptively simple: a whisper of white petals that feels more like touching cool linen than standing in a garden.
The scent fingerprint
Weighted by intensity across 10 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.
- Musky70
- Fresh50
- Aquatic50
- Sweet
The note pyramid
- Peony
- Musk
By the editors · 2 min readThe first spray is deceptively simple: a whisper of white petals that feels more like touching cool linen than standing in a garden. Peony appears not as a full floral declaration but as something half-remembered, the idea of a flower rather than its scent captured at peak bloom. The effect is clean without being soapy, soft without veering into sweetness.
As it settles, musk provides a barely-there foundation that keeps everything close to the skin. This isn't the kind of fragrance that announces itself across a room. It's meant for intimate distance, the sort of thing you notice on someone when they lean in to speak. The whole composition has an almost transparent quality, like gauze or watercolor.
Best suited to those who want fragrance as punctuation rather than exclamation—something present but never insistent, appropriate for environments where restraint is valued over projection.
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.




