The Story
Why it exists.
Jean Paul Gaultier has always loved a garden with an edge. The Paradise Garden first appeared in his A/W 2010-2011 fashion show, a vibrant, flamboyant oasis filled with unique creatures and blossoms, an Eden rich with unexpected delights. In 2024, the house translated that vision into scent. Perfumer Quentin Bisch worked with blue lotus, iris, and vanilla to capture the garden's lush intimacy. The lagoon-blue bottle, with its intricate floral necklace, echoes the garden's natural beauty and its evocative atmosphere.
If this were a song
Community picks
Crystalised
The xx
The Beginning
Jean Paul Gaultier has always loved a garden with an edge. The Paradise Garden first appeared in his A/W 2010-2011 fashion show, a vibrant, flamboyant oasis filled with unique creatures and blossoms, an Eden rich with unexpected delights. In 2024, the house translated that vision into scent. Perfumer Quentin Bisch worked with blue lotus, iris, and vanilla to capture the garden's lush intimacy. The lagoon-blue bottle, with its intricate floral necklace, echoes the garden's natural beauty and its evocative atmosphere.
Three notes sounds simple until you smell what Quentin Bisch built around them. Blue lotus is the unusual opener, not citrus, not green, something aquatic that floats rather than hits. Iris takes the powdery middle position, providing that violet-adjacent softness that offers quiet refinement. Then vanilla anchors everything, warm and creamy, pulling the composition down from its airy opening into something intimate and close to the skin.
The Evolution
The blue lotus opens, pure and cool, before the iris starts to assert itself. As time passes, the powdery quality emerges and the vanilla begins its slow rise. The composition shifts as the minutes progress, what was a floating, aquatic opening becomes a warm, close skin scent with iris and vanilla intertwined. The drydown is where this fragrance earns its reputation. Vanilla stays and stays, not loud but persistent, the kind of presence that someone leaning in close will encounter before they say anything. On fabric, it lingers until the next wash. On skin, you can expect a gradual evolution from cool to warm to intimate that unfolds over several hours.
Cultural Impact
The Paradise Garden fragrance line draws directly from the garden featured in Gaultier's A/W 2010-2011 fashion show. The lagoon-blue bottle captures the spirit of that original inspiration, offering a distinctive presence among fragrance offerings. It's a scent for someone drawn to memorable and unconventional floral compositions.
The House
France · Est. 1976
Jean Paul Gaultier fragrances are a shot of pure rebellion in a bottle, celebrating sensuality and subverting convention with every spray. Famous for its iconic torso-shaped flacons, the house creates bold, memorable scents that are anything but shy. It's the perfume equivalent of a wink and a knowing smile.
If this were a song
Community picks
A fragrance that shifts from cool to warm, from public to intimate. The blue lotus opening suggests something open and spacious, while the vanilla drydown pulls inward. This is music for the hour when the garden party thins out, when the garden keeps its best secrets for the people still there.
Crystalised
The xx
























