The Story
Why it exists.
Paradiso arrived in February 2015 as Roberto Cavalli's new pillar fragrance, developed under Coty's direction and created by perfumer Louise Turner. The brief was simple: capture happiness. Not the showy kind that demands attention, the quiet kind that arrives when you stop checking the time. Cavalli himself described it as the feeling of a moment where you feel totally at ease. The bottle, designed by Eva Maria Duringer, draws from the geometry of a diamond, multiple facets, multiple sides of a personality. Editorial model Edita Vilkeviciute, photographed by Mario Sorrenti, represented modern Eve in the Garden of Eden. The campaign imagery makes the reference literal: paradise as a state of mind, not a place.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sun
Khruangbin
The Beginning
Paradiso arrived in February 2015 as Roberto Cavalli's new pillar fragrance, developed under Coty's direction and created by perfumer Louise Turner. The brief was simple: capture happiness. Not the showy kind that demands attention, the quiet kind that arrives when you stop checking the time. Cavalli himself described it as the feeling of a moment where you feel totally at ease. The bottle, designed by Eva Maria Duringer, draws from the geometry of a diamond, multiple facets, multiple sides of a personality. Editorial model Edita Vilkeviciute, photographed by Mario Sorrenti, represented modern Eve in the Garden of Eden. The campaign imagery makes the reference literal: paradise as a state of mind, not a place.
What makes the structure interesting is how deliberately it resists complexity. Just jasmine in the heart. No daring accord, no unexpected pairing. Just citrus, jasmine, and warm woods doing exactly what they should. The restraint is the statement. Many fragrances of this era chased layering as a virtue, the more moving parts, the more impressive. Paradiso goes the other direction. Louise Turner built a fragrance where every note arrives on time, does its job, and gets out of the way of the next one.
The Evolution
The opening arrives clean and immediate, citrus brightness that doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is. Sharp, clear, direct. Then the jasmine arrives, not as a transition but as a landing. The heart doesn't battle the top notes; it simply arrives when they're ready to leave. This is where the fragrance earns its reputation for calm. The base notes, cypress, stone pine, and pine tree, ground everything into a Mediterranean warmth that reads as either woody or floral depending on your nose. On some skin, the pine dominates. On others, the jasmine carries through to the end. The drydown settles into something close to skin-warm, a quiet fade that makes you wonder where the time went. No projection drama. No surprise transformations. Just a slow, steady presence that stays close without ever disappearing.
Cultural Impact
Paradiso occupies a specific corner of the market: the daytime floral-woody that doesn't try to be anything else. Released in 2015, it landed in a category crowded with contenders. What set it apart was its refusal of complexity. Paradiso kept its pyramid simple, choosing clarity over convolution. The strategy behind this approach is clear in the final result: a fragrance that trusts its materials enough to let them breathe. It remains a reliable warm-weather option, often mentioned alongside Victoria's Secret Bombshell Paris as a more refined alternative.
The House
Italy · Est. 1975
Roberto Cavalli translates the designer's flamboyant runway energy into a line of fragrances that balance daring accords with refined structure. Launched in 2002 under the stewardship of Interparfums, the collection offers both core scents and an ultra‑premium Gold series. Each bottle carries the brand’s signature flair, inviting wearers to experience a scent narrative that mirrors the house’s reputation for bold style and Italian craftsmanship.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent sounds like late afternoon light, unhurried, warm, Mediterranean. Citrus that catches in guitar strings. Jasmine that breathes. Woods that echo like a courtyard after the crowd has left.
Sun
Khruangbin































