Lucy Folk Fleur De Sel Perdrisât

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023

At a glance

Is Lucy Folk Fleur De Sel Perdrisât worth trying?

Lucy Folk Fleur de Sel by PERDRISÂT is a Floral fragrance for women.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
rose, floral, fruity with Turkish Rose, Raspberry, Sea Salt

The first impression

Lucy Folk Fleur de Sel by PERDRISÂT is a Floral fragrance for women. This is a new fragrance. Lucy Folk Fleur de Sel was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Callum Rory Mitchell.

What shapes the scent

rose 100%
floral 85%
fruity 70%
fresh 60%
salty 50%
sweet 40%
marine 35%

The perfumer behind it

Callum Rory Mitchell

Callum Rory Mitchell

Callum Rory Mitchell is a perfumer known for his work with PERDRISÂT and Gabe Gordon. His fragrances, such as Bully and Coquette, often explore bold, provocative themes. He is recognized for blending modern, edgy accords with classic perfumery structures.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Turkish Rose Turkish Rose
Raspberry Raspberry
Sea Salt Sea Salt
Peony Peony

The mood it creates

The Innocent Archetype: Portrait of Lucy Folk Fleur De Sel Perdrisât

Essence

Lucy Folk Fleur de Sel is the Innocent distilled-a creature of sunlit shores and unfiltered joy. Turkish rose and peony speak to their open heart, while sea salt and raspberry add a playful, windswept charm. The fragrance is lightness itself, for those who believe the world is fundamentally kind.

They move through life with the grace of someone who’s never been truly hurt, or has chosen to heal rather than harden. The marine accord in their scent suggests an endless horizon, their optimism as vast as the sea.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a love letter to summer-linen dresses that ripple in the breeze, straw hats with slightly crooked brims. They favor jewelry made from seashells or tarnished silver, as if each piece has a story whispered by the tide.

Their home is airy and bright, with windows always open to let in the scent of blooming things. Whitewashed walls serve as a canvas for their collections: sea glass in mason jars, postcards from places they’ve loved.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the goodness of people, even when evidence suggests otherwise. The sweetness of their fragrance isn’t naive-it’s a conscious choice, like the raspberry note that persists despite the salt. They see beauty as a duty, a way to honor the world that’s given them so much.

Their values are simple but profound: kindness, curiosity, and the courage to remain soft in a hard world.

Relationships

They attract people like moths to a flame-some who want to bask in their light, others who want to possess it. Romantic partners are drawn to their effortless joy, though not all can match its intensity. Love, for them, is as natural as breathing, though just as essential.

Friendships are easy and abundant, built on shared laughter and impromptu picnics. They remember birthdays with handwritten notes and sprigs of lavender pressed between the pages.

Lifestyle

Their days are unstructured but purposeful-morning swims, afternoons spent sketching in the shade, evenings sharing wine with whoever happens by. Work is something that fits around life, not the other way around. They might be a florist, a painter, or a teacher who lets class out early on perfect spring days.

They travel lightly, always returning with pockets full of shells and a new recipe for whatever fruit was in season.

Shadow

Their brightness can blind them to darker truths, mistaking avoidance for peace. The salt in their fragrance carries this warning-even the clearest waters have depths they refuse to acknowledge. At worst, they risk becoming fragile, their optimism a glass bubble that shatters at the first real storm.

Conclusion

Lucy Folk Fleur de Sel is the scent of unguarded happiness, of rose petals scattered on wet sand. It’s for those who choose wonder over weariness, who see the world as something to be marveled at rather than feared. To wear it is to hold out a hand to beauty, trusting it will take hold.