Loveme Tous
At a glance
Is Loveme Tous worth trying?
LoveMe by Tous is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- floral, rose, fresh with Pink Grapefruit, Pink Litchi, Pink Pepper
The first impression
LoveMe by Tous is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men. LoveMe was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Olivier Cresp. Top notes are Pink Grapefruit, Pink Litchi and Pink Pepper; middle notes are Peony, Damask Rose and Jasmine; base notes are Cedar, Moss and Cashmere Wood.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Olivier Cresp
Olivier Cresp is a renowned French perfumer and a master at Grasse, best known for co-founding the fragrance house Akro. His style balances rich gourmand notes with elegant floral compositions, often highlighting unexpected contrasts. Representative works include the cocoa-infused Rose Cocoa Aerin and the vibrant, sunlit Tuberose Le Jour Aerin, as well as Akro’s Bake, which captures the scent of a lemon tart. Cresp’s influence is widely felt through his pioneering use of edible accords in fine fragrance.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Loveme Tous
Essence
Loveme Tous embodies the Lover archetype, a celebration of affection and sensory delight. The playful pink grapefruit and litchi open like a flirtatious smile, while the heart of peony and Damask rose whispers romantic devotion. This fragrance captures the Lover's joy in connection, their ability to find beauty in both the tender and the spirited.
The Lover thrives on emotional richness, and here it unfolds through jasmine's languid warmth and cashmere wood's comforting embrace. Moss and cedar add depth, suggesting the Lover's capacity for both lightness and enduring commitment.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor effortless elegance with a touch of whimsy-flowy linens in blush tones, delicate jewelry, and sun-kissed skin. Their aesthetic balances freshness (citrus) with softness (cashmere wood), mirroring the fragrance's duality. A straw tote might carry a vintage novel and a sprig of peonies plucked from a morning market.
Their spaces are airy but intimate: white walls with rose-colored throws, a bowl of litchis on the coffee table. They gravitate toward art that captures fleeting moments-impressionist strokes of light on water.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in love as an active verb, a daily choice to cherish and be present. The pink pepper's spark reflects their conviction that passion requires courage. The floral heart speaks to their faith in vulnerability as strength.
For them, beauty is not passive; it's the moss grounding the cedar, the way grapefruit zest enlivens sweetness. They value authenticity-hence the unisex appeal-rejecting rigid roles in favor of fluid self-expression.
Relationships
They draw people in with their infectious warmth (litchi's juiciness) but sustain connections through depth (cedar's longevity). Romantic partners receive handwritten notes tucked into coat pockets, each scented faintly with this perfume.
Friends cherish their ability to listen-jasmine's quiet intensity-and their talent for curating gatherings where Damask rose's refinement meets pink pepper's playful edge. They avoid transactional bonds, seeking kinship that, like moss, grows slowly over time.
Lifestyle
Mornings begin with grapefruit sliced atop yogurt, eaten on a balcony draped in climbing jasmine. They frequent flower markets, touching petals as if memorizing their textures. Evenings might find them dancing barefoot on a friend's terrace, the scent of peonies mingling with salt air.
They journal in cafes, savoring how bergamot from a neighbor's tea complements their own sillage. Travel is essential; they return with vials of local florals, blending them into their signature scent like a personal cartography.
Shadow
Their hunger for connection can tip into people-pleasing-the pink pepper's bite dulled by too much sugar. When unbalanced, they might cling to fading relationships (moss overtaking the cedar) or mistake infatuation for love (litchi's fleeting rush).
The challenge is to temper rose's idealism with grapefruit's clarity, to love without losing oneself. They learn that cashmere wood's softness need not mean fragility.
Conclusion
Loveme Tous is a love letter to the self as much as to others. It captures the Lover's journey from flirtation (top notes) through devotion (heart) to quiet maturity (base). Like sunlight through petals, it reminds us that to love is to be both tender and unafraid.