The Story
Why it exists.
Blond Redhead 16.11 began as a single image: a breathless moment in a Parisian bakery. Someone walks in. The air is already full, warm pastry cases, candied fruit, vanilla from somewhere in the back. They hold freesias. That was the entire story. Three perfumers, Maud Chabanis, Julia Rodríguez Pastor, and Bertrand Duchaufour, were given the task of translating this into something you could wear. Not recreate. Translate.
If this were a song
Community picks
Les Mots
Maître Gims
The Beginning
Blond Redhead 16.11 began as a single image: a breathless moment in a Parisian bakery. Someone walks in. The air is already full, warm pastry cases, candied fruit, vanilla from somewhere in the back. They hold freesias. That was the entire story. Three perfumers, Maud Chabanis, Julia Rodríguez Pastor, and Bertrand Duchaufour, were given the task of translating this into something you could wear. Not recreate. Translate.
What makes this composition interesting isn't any single note, it's the negotiation happening between them. Saffron and lime open sharp and metallic, almost astringent, before orange sweeps in to sweetness. Dates arrive in the heart with a sticky, honeyed weight that could easily tip into cloying. The freesia prevents it, floral but cool, almost clean against the fruit. Rose adds body, not delicacy.
The Evolution
The opening is the boldest part. Saffron-thick and metallic, with lime and orange zest arriving quickly, 90 seconds in, you're deep in a citrus-fruity tangle that could read harsh on skin already warm. But it doesn't. The rose-freesia-date heart arrives within 20 minutes and stays, sweet and weighty, for the next 3-4 hours. It's the dominant phase of this fragrance. The drydown is where it earns its name, vanilla and blond tobacco warm the skin rather than filling it, and the chocolate-myrrh base adds a faint bitter edge that stops everything from becoming dessert. On clothes, it lasts into the next day. On skin, plan for reapplication after hour six if you need it.
Cultural Impact
Blond Redhead 16.11 sits in the sweet Oriental niche that has dominated recent launches, but it earns its place. The saffron-lime opening cuts through the expected warmth that usually defines vanilla-tobacco compositions, giving it an edge that draws comparisons to Tobacco Vanille and Angels' Share without becoming either. Wearers describe it as the scent of someone who walks in after the performance has already ended, present but not announcing itself. The 2024 launch places it squarely in a generation that wants warmth without heaviness, sweetness without sweetness, and doesn't have patience for fragrances that take 40 minutes to become interesting.
The House
France
NEYDO is a French niche perfume house that frames each scent as an interpretation of a dream. The brand translates fleeting nocturnal images into bottle‑bound aromas, offering collectors a series of olfactory vignettes that range from warm musks to bright fruit accords. Its catalogue, launched in 2024, includes titles such as Fiery Fig, Blond Redhead and Cloud Essence, each presented with a clear narrative tied to a specific dream fragment. NEYDO positions itself as a laboratory for personal memory, inviting wearers to explore the boundary between subconscious vision and everyday scent.
If this were a song
Community picks
This fragrance sounds like a slow Sunday afternoon, warm light through a bakery window, the moment before something starts. The saffron opening is the high-hat and snare: sharp, percussive, already moving. The date-vanilla heart is bass and warmth, the thing that holds everything else in place. The drydown is like a fade-out you're not ready for.
Les Mots
Maître Gims




























