La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee Lancôme

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2016
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee by Lancôme is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women. La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee was launched in 2016. La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee was created by Christophe Raynaud and Amandine Clerc-Marie. Top notes are Tangerine, Pear and Bergamot; middle notes are Strawberry, Passionfruit, Orchid and Black Rose; base notes are Praline, Vanilla, Caramel, Licorice, Coffee, Coumarin, Incense, Litchi and Papyrus.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
vanilla 85%
fruity 70%
balsamic 60%
caramel 50%
warm spicy 40%
soft spicy 35%
coffee 30%
woody 25%

About the Perfumer

Amandine Clerc-Marie

Amandine Clerc-Marie

Amandine Clerc-Marie is a French perfumer who trained at Givaudan and now works as a senior perfumer at Symrise. Her style often balances fresh, transparent accords with soft floral or citrus notes, creating versatile and wearable compositions. She is known for developing Angel Schlesser Pour Elle and its flankers, as well as the fruity-floral Scent Of Kiss My Heart for Armand Basi.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Tangerine Tangerine
Pear Pear
Bergamot Bergamot

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Strawberry Strawberry
Passionfruit Passionfruit
Orchid Orchid
Black Rose Black Rose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Praline Praline
Vanilla Vanilla
Caramel Caramel
Licorice Licorice
Coffee Coffee
Coumarin Coumarin
Incense Incense
Litchi Litchi
Papyrus Papyrus
Unique Character

La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee Lancôme by Lancôme offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee Lancôme embodies the distinctive style of Lancôme while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Enchantress Archetype: Portrait of La Nuit Tresor Edition Limitee Lancôme

Essence

This person is most closely defined by the Siren archetype-an embodiment of allure, mystery, and seduction, not merely in the carnal sense but in the magnetic pull of their presence. The Siren does not simply attract; they enchant, drawing others into their world with an intoxicating blend of warmth and enigma. La Nuit Trésor Édition Limitée, with its deep vanilla, rose, and blackcurrant liqueur, is a fragrance of contrasts-sweet yet dark, playful yet profound-much like the woman who wears it.

She is not one to be easily deciphered. Her charm is deliberate but never forced, her sensuality effortless but never vulgar. The Siren thrives on the tension between revelation and concealment, knowing that true fascination lies in what remains unsaid.

Style & Aesthetic

Her tastes are decadent but refined-dark velvet, antique gold, the flicker of candlelight against aged books. She surrounds herself with objects that whisper of history, romance, and a touch of melancholy. A well-worn leather journal sits beside a bottle of ink, its pages filled with half-finished poems and sketches. She collects vintage perfume bottles not for their rarity, but for the ghosts of past wearers they seem to hold.

Philosophically, she is drawn to the idea that life is a grand, fleeting performance-beautiful precisely because it is ephemeral. She does not fear impermanence; she embraces it, understanding that intensity is heightened by the knowledge of its end. Her values are rooted in authenticity, but not the kind that demands full transparency. To her, authenticity means being unapologetically herself, even if that self is layered, contradictory, and ever-shifting.

Her wardrobe is a carefully curated paradox-structured blazers with silk slips beneath, lace gloves paired with sharp stilettos. She favors deep reds, midnight blues, and blacks that shimmer under dim lighting. Jewelry is never excessive but always meaningful: a single pearl earring, a signet ring inherited from a grandmother who "lived scandalously."

She applies fragrance as part of a ritual, never a routine. A spritz on the collarbone, another at the wrist-just enough to leave a trace, never enough to overwhelm. She knows scent is memory, and she intends to be remembered.

She thrives in dimly lit jazz clubs, late-night conversations in hidden bars, and solitary walks through empty streets after midnight. Her career, if conventional at all, is one that allows for creativity-perhaps a writer, a curator, a perfumer herself. She is not driven by ambition in the traditional sense, but by the pursuit of beauty, depth, and fleeting moments of transcendence.

Her home is a sanctuary, a place where time moves differently. Records spin on a vintage turntable, the scent of incense lingers in the air, and every object tells a story. She is both the heroine and the narrator of her own tale.

Relationships

She is neither cold nor overly sentimental, but she guards her vulnerability with quiet precision. Romantic partners are drawn to her like moths to a flame, sensing both warmth and danger. She is capable of deep affection, but her love is never simple-it is laced with independence, a refusal to be possessed.

Friendships are fewer but fiercely loyal. She prefers those who understand silences, who do not mistake her occasional solitude for aloofness. She listens intently, offering advice wrapped in poetic ambiguity rather than blunt directives.

Shadow

Yet, the Siren’s strength is also her flaw. Her love of mystery can slip into manipulation, her detachment into emotional unavailability. She may toy with affections not out of malice, but because she enjoys the dance-the power of being desired without fully committing. At her worst, she risks becoming a specter rather than a person, so wrapped in allure that she forgets to be rather than to seem.

There is also a quiet melancholy beneath the glamour. The Siren knows that enchantment fades, that even the most intoxicating perfumes evaporate. She fears being truly known, for to be known is to risk being discarded when the spell wears off.

Conclusion

She is neither saint nor seductress, but something infinitely more complex-a woman who understands that life’s richest experiences lie in the interplay of light and shadow. La Nuit Trésor Édition Limitée is not just her fragrance; it is her essence-sweet yet dark, fleeting yet unforgettable.

The Siren does not seek to be loved by all. She seeks only to be remembered by those who truly see her. And in that, she succeeds.