The Story
Why it exists.
Nathalie Lorson created Weekend for Women in 1997. She built the composition around notes that feel inherently comfortable: mandarin that brightens without demanding attention, peach blossom that suggests softness, powdery iris that feels familiar rather than fashionable. The combination of citrus brightness, soft florals, and powdery warmth creates a fragrance that feels like it belongs to you rather than announcing itself. Cedar and sandalwood arrive in the drydown, bringing a warm woodiness that settles quietly against the skin, and the overall effect is clean and close, reminiscent of fabric dried in open air.
If this were a song
Community picks
No Surprises
Radiohead
The Beginning
Nathalie Lorson created Weekend for Women in 1997. She built the composition around notes that feel inherently comfortable: mandarin that brightens without demanding attention, peach blossom that suggests softness, powdery iris that feels familiar rather than fashionable. The combination of citrus brightness, soft florals, and powdery warmth creates a fragrance that feels like it belongs to you rather than announcing itself. Cedar and sandalwood arrive in the drydown, bringing a warm woodiness that settles quietly against the skin, and the overall effect is clean and close, reminiscent of fabric dried in open air.
The heart of Weekend has six materials: blue hyacinth, peach blossom, rose hip, iris, red cyclamen, and violet root. They remain present throughout the wear rather than disappearing quickly. The powdery iris is the most persistent element, carrying its character from the heart into the drydown and establishing the fragrance's signature feel. The mignonette in the top adds an unusual green, floral quality that provides a botanical contrast to the brighter citrus notes. Cedar and sandalwood form the base, adding warmth and a slightly dry woody character that balances the florals.
The Evolution
The mandarin opens clean and zesty, quickly followed by sage's grassy snap. The florals then arrive, blue hyacinth first, cool and slightly green, then peach blossom softening everything, then iris putting its powdery thumbprint on the whole composition. Rose hip and cyclamen add a layered complexity that sits beneath the surface. As the fragrance develops, the base begins to emerge alongside the lingering heart notes, cedar and sandalwood bringing warmth while musk adds a skin-close quality. Eventually the fragrance settles into a clean, quiet presence, something warm and close, like fabric dried in open air. The scent knows when to stay rather than push.
Cultural Impact
Weekend arrived in 1997. It features powdery florals and a composition that feels timeless rather than tied to a particular moment. The fragrance has remained in continuous production for nearly three decades, a sign of its resonance with a loyal audience who find it consistently appropriate.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1856
Burberry fragrances are the olfactory equivalent of their iconic trench coat: quintessentially British, effortlessly elegant, and unexpectedly rebellious. The house translates its rich fashion heritage into scents that feel both timeless and perfectly modern. It's the smell of London—a city of classic architecture and defiant street style.
If this were a song
Community picks
Weekend has the feeling of a slow Sunday morning, unhurried, comfortable, warm. The powdery iris and soft peach blossom suggest something soft playing in the background, something that doesn't demand attention but fills the space quietly. It smells like the hour between waking and leaving the house, when the light is still gentle and the day hasn't started yet. Music that matches: acoustic, gentle, slightly melancholic without being sad, the kind of song that feels like home.
No Surprises
Radiohead
























