The Story
Why it exists.
Soleil means sun. Lalique built the entire Soleil range around that idea, capturing light, warmth, and the feeling of golden hours. Created by Alexandra Monet and launched in 2019, this particular Soleil translates the concept into something you can wear: bright citrus at the top, a gourmand heart, and a base that settles warm and close. The perfumer wanted you to smell like morning sunshine, that specific moment when everything feels possible.
If this were a song
Community picks
Summertime
Billie Holiday
The Beginning
Soleil means sun. Lalique built the entire Soleil range around that idea, capturing light, warmth, and the feeling of golden hours. Created by Alexandra Monet and launched in 2019, this particular Soleil translates the concept into something you can wear: bright citrus at the top, a gourmand heart, and a base that settles warm and close. The perfumer wanted you to smell like morning sunshine, that specific moment when everything feels possible.
The structure here is deliberate contradiction. Mandarin and cardamom bring crispness, a nod to actual morning, the air before it warms. But bitter almond adds a quiet edge, and the heart surrenders entirely to caramel, milk coffee, and praline. It's sweet without being naive. The lactonic quality, that creamy, almost dairy warmth, keeps it from tipping into synthetic territory. What makes this interesting is how the base holds: sandalwood and white musk create something skin-close and lasting, not a cloud, not a statement. Just warmth that stays.
The Evolution
The opening hits fast. Mandarin orange arrives bright and citrus-forward, then retreats within minutes, a quick curtain-raiser before the main act. Bitter almond and cardamom take over, adding depth and a quiet spiced quality. Twenty minutes in, the gourmand heart announces itself. Pear sorbet and candied almond blend with milk coffee and caramel, sweetness that's warm, not sharp. Jasmine floats in the background, not leading, just lifting. The drydown is where this fragrance earns its reputation. Sandalwood grounds everything. White musk keeps it intimate. Praline lingers as a soft sweetness that stays close to the skin for hours, not projecting, not demanding. On fabric, expect the full 6-8 hour arc. On skin, it softens earlier but never disappears.
Cultural Impact
Soleil lands in a crowded space, fruity-gourmand scents are familiar territory for the modern fragrance market. What sets it apart is its French elegance: Lalique's crystal heritage and the restraint in how the sweetness is composed. The bottle, as always with Lalique, is part of the appeal. Launched in 2019, the fragrance has built a loyal following among those who appreciate warm, approachable sweetness without the intensity of louder oriental compositions.
The House
France · Est. 1888
Lalique is where the art of French crystal meets the soul of fine fragrance. Born from the genius of Art Nouveau master René Lalique, the house translates its legacy as a 'sculptor of light' into perfumes that are as elegant and timeless as their iconic bottles.
If this were a song
Community picks
Golden light through crystal. Warm praline and coffee against an unhurried morning. This is the scent of a slow sunrise, not rushing, not demanding, just warm and present. Music that matches: unhurried warmth, soft sweetness, golden hour energy.
Summertime
Billie Holiday






















