Lilaia Bvlgari
At a glance
Is Lilaia Bvlgari worth trying?
Lilaia by Bvlgari is a Aromatic Fruity fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Casual, Office wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- aromatic, green, fresh spicy with Mastic or Lentisque, Mate, Mint
The first impression
Lilaia by Bvlgari is a Aromatic Fruity fragrance for women. Lilaia was launched in 2014. The nose behind this fragrance is Daniela Andrier.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Daniela Andrier
Daniela Andrier is a perfumer known for her work with Bottega Veneta, creating the Knot line and Parco Palladiano series. She also developed fragrances for Bvlgari, including Amarena and Ashlemah, and for 27 87 with #hashtag. Her style often blends floral, fruity, and woody notes with refined elegance.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Lilaia Bvlgari
Essence
Lilaia embodies the Sage-a seeker of clarity through nature's whispers. Mastic and mate notes evoke ancient herbal wisdom, while mint and orange lend a modern, meditative freshness. This is a fragrance for those who distill truth from simplicity.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is monastic minimalism: unlined linen, raw silk, and muted greens. The scent's aromatic-green accord mirrors their aesthetic-clean, intentional, with hidden depths like the lentisque's resinous glow.
Philosophy & Values
They value stillness as the root of understanding. The fragrance's balsamic undertones reflect their belief: wisdom accumulates like tree sap-slow, sticky, and infinitely precious.
Relationships
They listen more than they speak, offering insights as precise as the scent's citrus top notes. Their friendships are libraries-quiet spaces where meaning unfolds without demand.
Lifestyle
Dawn meditation, herb gardens, ink-stained journals. The moderate sillage suits their ethos: influence without imposition, presence without intrusion.
Shadow
Their detachment can become emotional austerity. The terpenic sharpness hints at this-a tendency to intellectualize feelings rather than embody them.
Conclusion
Lilaia is the Sage's olfactory manifesto: a call to find infinity in a blade of grass, enlightenment in the crush of mint leaves.