Little Black Dress Weekend Avon

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Any
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Little Black Dress Weekend by Avon is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women. Little Black Dress Weekend was launched in 2018. Little Black Dress Weekend was created by Adriana Medina-Baez and Rodrigo Flores-Roux. Top notes are Lemon, Brazilian Orange and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Orange Blossom, Osmanthus and Pink Pepper; base notes are Musk, Patchouli and Amber.

Composition Profile

citrus 100%
musky 85%
white floral 70%
sweet 60%
patchouli 50%

About the Perfumer

Adriana Medina-Baez

Adriana Medina-Baez

Adriana Medina-Baez is a perfumer known for her work with major brands like Bath & Body Works and Avon. Her style often blends fresh florals with warm, inviting accords, as seen in creations such as Poppy and A Thousand Wishes. She has also crafted distinctive scents for Anthropologie and Christian Audigier, showcasing her versatility across commercial and niche markets.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Lemon Lemon
Brazilian Orange Brazilian Orange
Mandarin Orange Mandarin Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Osmanthus Osmanthus
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Patchouli Patchouli
Amber Amber

Character Profile

The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of Little Black Dress Weekend Avon

Essence

She is the kind of person who understands the subtle power of scent-not as a weapon, but as a whispered suggestion, an unspoken declaration. Little Black Dress Weekend by Avon is her choice, and it suits her perfectly: a fragrance that balances sophistication with ease, elegance with spontaneity. It is neither too heavy nor too fleeting, neither overly sweet nor austerely sharp. Like her, it exists in the space between extremes, where life is most interesting.

She is, at her core, an Enchantress-a woman who understands the alchemy of presence. The Enchantress does not merely exist; she transforms the space around her. She is not a seductress in the crude sense, nor a manipulator, but rather someone who knows how to draw people in, to make them feel seen, to make the ordinary feel extraordinary. She does this effortlessly, not because she schemes, but because she understands-human nature, moods, the unspoken currents of interaction.

Her fragrance reflects this. Little Black Dress Weekend is versatile-appropriate for both a candlelit dinner and a casual afternoon with friends. It does not scream for attention, but it lingers, leaving an impression. So does she.

Style & Aesthetic

She believes in the art of living well, not in the decadent sense, but in the deliberate one. Her home is curated-not sterile, not cluttered, but considered. A well-worn book left open on the armrest, a single bold painting on the wall, a vase of fresh flowers that she changes weekly. She does not chase trends, but she is not stuck in the past either. She selects what resonates, what feels true.

Her style is polished but never stiff. She might wear a sleek black dress with unexpected earrings, or jeans with a blazer that looks like it was tailored just for her. She knows that confidence is not about perfection, but about intention.

Philosophically, she leans toward existentialism-not the bleak kind, but the kind that finds meaning in small, beautiful moments. She does not believe in fate, but she does believe in atmosphere, in the way a room, a conversation, or a scent can shape an experience.

Relationships

People are drawn to her, but few truly know her. She is warm, engaging, even magnetic-yet there is always a part of her that remains just out of reach. This is not deception, but self-preservation. The Enchantress must maintain her mystery, not as a game, but because to reveal everything would be to lose herself.

Her friendships are deep but few. She prefers quality over quantity, and she has little patience for superficial bonds. In love, she is passionate but guarded. She will give herself fully, but only to someone who understands that love is not possession, but recognition.

Shadow

Every archetype has its dark counterpart, and for the Enchantress, it is the Illusionist-the version of herself that slips too far into performance, into crafting an image rather than living a truth. There are moments when she wonders: Am I enchanting, or merely playing the part?

Her greatest flaw is her ability to adapt too well. She can mirror moods, blend into expectations, and sometimes, she loses herself in the act. The fear beneath it all is simple: If I stop enchanting, will I still be seen?

She must remind herself that true power does not come from being admired, but from being real.

She is neither saint nor sinner, neither wholly free nor entirely bound. She is a woman who wears Little Black Dress Weekend because it suits her-not because it defines her. She knows that identity is fluid, that we are all a collection of roles we play, scents we wear, masks we try on.

But beneath it all, she seeks one thing: authenticity. Not the raw, unfiltered kind that spills messily into the world, but the kind that is chosen, refined, and true.

She is the Enchantress, but she is also simply herself. And that is the most captivating thing of all.