The Story
Why it exists.
One Umbrella for Two arrives in Floraïku's collection as a study in contrast dressed as simplicity. The title promises togetherness, but the scent underneath is more nuanced, bright fruit meeting something savory, something you don't often find in mainstream fragrance. The haiku naming convention that defines Floraïku's house identity gives this fragrance its character from the start: a moment captured, not a concept explained. Alienor Massenet worked with the Molloys to build something that earns its name through sensation, not description, the experience of sheltering together, the way two people occupy the same small space without needing to fill it with words.
If this were a song
Community picks
Ariel
The Lancasters
The Beginning
One Umbrella for Two arrives in Floraïku's collection as a study in contrast dressed as simplicity. The title promises togetherness, but the scent underneath is more nuanced, bright fruit meeting something savory, something you don't often find in mainstream fragrance. The haiku naming convention that defines Floraïku's house identity gives this fragrance its character from the start: a moment captured, not a concept explained. Alienor Massenet worked with the Molloys to build something that earns its name through sensation, not description, the experience of sheltering together, the way two people occupy the same small space without needing to fill it with words.
The combination of blackcurrant absolute with genmaicha tea extract is the decision that sets this fragrance apart. Blackcurrant brings its characteristic tart-fruity brightness, a known quantity in perfumery, reliable in its appeal. Genmaicha does something else entirely. That toasted rice note lurking in the tea's structure introduces something savory, almost nutty, that most fruity fragrances deliberately avoid. Cedarwood oil then does what cedar always does: it dries everything down into something clean, quiet, and surprisingly durable. White musk finishes the composition with softness rather than strength, keeping the sillage intimate and the wear close to skin.
The Evolution
The blackcurrant opens bright and juicy, not aggressively so, but present and assured. Within the first fifteen minutes the cyclamen adds a soft floral undertone, keeping the fruit from feeling too sharp. Then the handoff arrives. The genmaicha note surfaces gradually, bringing its toasted rice character with it. This is the surprise of the fragrance: sweetness doesn't disappear, it gets replaced by something savory. The rice warmth settles in and the composition shifts from fruity to something more contemplative. Cedar arrives around the hour mark and the composition dries into something clean and woody. White musk keeps everything close. On fabric, the scent lingers into the next morning, faint, warm, and quiet. On skin, expect four to six hours with moderate sillage throughout.
Cultural Impact
Floraïku occupies a distinctive position in the niche fragrance landscape, the haiku naming convention gives each fragrance an immediate identity before the scent itself is even experienced. One Umbrella for Two performs a specific function in the house's catalog: it introduces the tension between bright fruit and savory warmth that distinguishes the brand's more unusual compositions. Wearers consistently describe it as divisive, the genmaicha and rice combination either appeals immediately or registers as strange, which is precisely what makes it memorable in a collection built around poetic concepts rather than safe crowd-pleasers.
The House
France · Est. 2017
Floraïku Paris is a niche fragrance house founded in 2017 by Clara and John Molloy, the Irish-French couple behind Memo Paris. The brand draws its name from the fusion of two words: Flora, honoring the plant world and natural beauty, and Haïku, referencing the traditional three-line Japanese poetic form. Each fragrance arrives named after a haiku poem and organized into collections that pay tribute to Japanese ceremonies. The first launch in July 2017 introduced eleven fragrances. Working with perfumers including Alienor Massenet, Miroslav Petkov, Philippe Paparella-Paris, Yann Vasnier, Sarah Burri, and Sophie Labbe, the house has built a library that spans multiple collections. The Shadowing™ collection offers companion fragrances designed to layer with existing scents. The Forbidden Incense collection draws inspiration from the Kōdō ceremony, the Japanese art of appreciating incense. Initial retail distribution included an exclusive launch at Harrods in London.
If this were a song
Community picks
Quiet, close, atmospheric. Rain against glass and a warm drink cooling in your hands. The opening track holds space without filling it, like the fragrance itself.
Ariel
The Lancasters

































