The Story
Why it exists.
Lancôme's high perfumery collection treats fragrances like grand cru wines, assembled from the finest raw materials with exacting standards. Jasmins Marzipane was composed with this philosophy in mind: a fragrance that takes its name seriously. Jasmine and almond, named and present, neither buried nor subtle. The opening announces itself boldly, with jasmine sambac delivering its signature indolic richness and the almond note arriving with a creamy, edible warmth that feels luxurious rather than cloying. It exists because sometimes the obvious name is the right one, and when both star notes are given room to breathe, the result is a composition that communicates clearly from first spray to final fade.
If this were a song
Community picks
La Vie en Rose
Édith Piaf
The Beginning
Lancôme's high perfumery collection treats fragrances like grand cru wines, assembled from the finest raw materials with exacting standards. Jasmins Marzipane was composed with this philosophy in mind: a fragrance that takes its name seriously. Jasmine and almond, named and present, neither buried nor subtle. The opening announces itself boldly, with jasmine sambac delivering its signature indolic richness and the almond note arriving with a creamy, edible warmth that feels luxurious rather than cloying. It exists because sometimes the obvious name is the right one, and when both star notes are given room to breathe, the result is a composition that communicates clearly from first spray to final fade.
The perfumer's task was to balance two bold materials, jasmine sambac, rich and almost indolic in its fullness, against almond wood, which delivers marzipane's sweetness without any food-like trick. These aren't subtle ingredients. They demand space. The composition was built around them with cashmere wood and sandalwood to keep the scent grounded rather than让它漂浮。 The result is a fragrance that reads clearly, jasmine up top, marzipane throughout, and a woody-musky base that earns the wearer's trust by lasting.
The Evolution
The opening announces jasmine with full-bodied confidence, not the green radiance of hedione-led florals, but something rounder, sweeter, with a slight indolic twang that makes it feel alive. Almond wood enters quickly, cutting the sweetness just enough so the composition doesn't tip into gourmand territory. For the first hour, this is a warm floral, confident and immediate. Then cashmere wood softens everything, pushing the jasmine toward a quieter register, the sweetness deepening into something more intimate. The heart phase holds longest, jasmine still visible, almond now woven into the florals rather than arriving separately. Sandalwood anchors everything from below, creamy and warm, making the transition feel inevitable rather than abrupt. The drydown is where the fragrance earns its reputation. Jasmine fades. Bourbon vanilla and musk take over, warm, musky, and lasting. Eight hours later on skin, there's still something there. On fabric, it lingers into the next morning.
Cultural Impact
Jasmins Marzipane occupies a distinctive space in the Lancôme lineup, neither a mass-market floral nor a niche collector piece. It's the kind of fragrance people return to when they want something that smells expensive without performing expensive. The Maison Lancôme framing elevates it within the brand's collection, while the straightforward note naming (jasmine, marzipane) makes it approachable. The fragrance has earned a following among those who appreciate bold, unapologetic compositions, the kind of scent that announces itself confidently and holds attention without needing to shout.
The House
France · Est. 1935
Lancôme is the quintessential French luxury beauty house, celebrated for its sophisticated perfumes and skincare that embody Parisian elegance. For nearly a century, it has defined accessible glamour, creating iconic fragrances that capture a spirit of joyful, confident femininity.
If this were a song
Community picks
A warm afternoon in the South of France, jasmine on a sun-warmed terrace, marzipane from somewhere nearby. The composition moves slowly, like light through half-closed shutters. Not ambient music; something with presence and a slight sweetness, like the fragrance itself. French jazz-pop fits the mood: gentle but assured, never trying too hard.
La Vie en Rose
Édith Piaf


































