The Story
Why it exists.
Rouge emerged from Emmanuel Levain’s Geneva workshop, where the former financial journalist‑turned‑perfumer translates a collector’s fascination with rare botanicals into scent. After establishing the house in 2012, Levain sought a composition that would marry the crisp purity of lily of the valley with the comforting depth of amber and vanilla. The result is a unisex ode that reflects the brand’s ethos of personal discovery, balancing classic structure with an unexpected powdery finish.
If this were a song
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Bloom
The Paper Kites
The Beginning
Rouge emerged from Emmanuel Levain’s Geneva workshop, where the former financial journalist‑turned‑perfumer translates a collector’s fascination with rare botanicals into scent. After establishing the house in 2012, Levain sought a composition that would marry the crisp purity of lily of the valley with the comforting depth of amber and vanilla. The result is a unisex ode that reflects the brand’s ethos of personal discovery, balancing classic structure with an unexpected powdery finish.
Choosing lily of the valley as the sole top note gives Rouge an immediate, cinematic freshness that few modern scents dare to lead with. Amber and vanilla anchor the heart, creating a warm, slightly sweet core that softens the green opening. Jasmine adds a whisper of white floral elegance, while tonka bean and white musk provide a lingering, powdery drydown that feels both nostalgic and contemporary.
The Evolution
At the first spray, Lily of the Valley bursts forward, a crisp green ribbon that feels like a garden waking at dawn. This bright opening holds for about ten minutes before the amber-vanilla accord slides in, wrapping the wearer in a warm glow that deepens over the next half hour. Jasmine weaves through, adding a subtle white-floral sheen that smooths the transition. As the heart settles, the base of Tonka Bean and White Musk emerges around the thirty-minute mark, lingering as a powdery veil that clings gently to skin. By the two-hour point, the scent has mellowed into a comforting aura that remains noticeable but unobtrusive, lasting roughly five hours before fading into a faint, clean trace.
Cultural Impact
Rouge emerged in the mid‑2010s as a subtle counterpoint to the era’s trend toward bold, heavy compositions, reflecting a cultural shift toward understated elegance in personal expression. Its blend of orange and plum notes resonated with a generation seeking nuanced, gender‑fluid scents that could transition from daytime professionalism to evening intimacy. By emphasizing a balanced amber‑vanilla heart, the fragrance subtly echoed the growing desire for comfort and familiarity in a fast‑moving digital age, while still offering a distinctive identity that encouraged wearers to embrace personal confidence without overt statements.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 2016
Intimacy is a fragrance house that builds its catalogue around personal connection and subtle storytelling. Since the debut of Intimacy Sheer in 2016, the brand has released a series of scents that balance modern sensibility with classic structure. Each bottle invites the wearer to explore a quiet moment, whether that is the airy freshness of Intimacy Nude or the deep resonance of Intimacy Noir. The line’s continuity lies in its focus on approachable elegance rather than overt spectacle, making it a quiet staple for those who value nuance in their scent wardrobe.
If this were a song
Community picks
Wearing Rouge feels like strolling through a quiet garden at sunrise, then slipping into a cozy lounge with warm amber light. The music mirrors that transition, pairing delicate floral notes with mellow, comforting tones.
Bloom
The Paper Kites














