Luybov Brocard
At a glance
Is Luybov Brocard worth trying?
Luybov by Brocard is a Floral fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Casual, Office wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- floral, rose, powdery with Violet Leaf, Galbanum, Orange Blossom
The first impression
Luybov by Brocard is a Floral fragrance for women. Luybov was launched in 2016. The nose behind this fragrance is Pauline Barthale. Top notes are Violet Leaf, Galbanum and Orange Blossom; middle notes are Peony, Rose, Magnolia and Jasmine; base notes are Powdery Notes and Musk.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Pauline Barthale
Pauline Barthale is a perfumer known for her work with Brocard and CIEL Parfum. She created Luybov Brocard, a fragrance that reflects the brand's heritage. For CIEL Parfum, she composed Happy Essence Eden Ciel Parfum, a scent that captures a sense of joyful freshness.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Innocent Archetype: Portrait of Luybov Brocard
Essence
Luybov embodies the Innocent, a fragrance of unspoiled beauty. Its opening of violet leaf and orange blossom is dewy, like morning light through a garden. The powdery musk base suggests innocence not as naivety, but as a choice-to see the world with gentle wonder.
This scent is for those who find grace in simplicity. Like the Innocent, they trust in goodness, their spirit as fresh as Luybov’s green-citrus accord.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor flowing fabrics in soft pastels-chiffon, cotton, anything that catches the breeze. Their aesthetic is nostalgic yet timeless: pressed flowers in journals, pearl buttons, straw hats.
Spaces are airy and light-filled, with white curtains and mismatched china. Every corner feels like a still life, peaceful and deliberate.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in kindness as a radical act. The peony and rose heart of Luybov reflects their view-beauty should be tender, unarmed. They practice gratitude like a religion, finding joy in small things: a cup of chamomile tea, a handwritten letter.
For them, purity isn’t ignorance. It’s the courage to remain open in a jaded world.
Relationships
They draw people like a clearing in the woods-a place to rest. Friends confide in them; their empathy is a safe harbor. Romantic partners are drawn to their sincerity, though some mistake it for fragility.
Their love is steady, not fiery. More holding hands than grand gestures.
Lifestyle
Mornings might involve tending to potted herbs or baking bread. Work is meaningful but never ruthless-perhaps teaching, gardening, or crafting. Evenings are for porch swings and star-gazing.
Travel is pastoral: countryside inns, wildflower meadows. They collect moments, not souvenirs.
Shadow
Their shadow is avoidance. The ozonic green notes hint at a tendency to retreat when faced with conflict, to mistake silence for peace. They risk being overlooked, their quiet strength mistaken for passivity.
Sometimes, innocence must learn to say no.
Conclusion
Luybov is the Innocent’s sigh. It captures the quiet joy of a life unburdened by cynicism, the courage to stay soft. To wear it is to carry a reminder: the world is still worthy of wonder, and gentleness is its own kind of power.