The Story
Why it exists.
Bombshell landed in 2010 from perfumers Adriana Medina-Baez and Mark Knitowski. Their brief: a fruity-floral that captured the Victoria's Secret woman, confident, feminine, unapologetic. Purple passion fruit anchored the top notes, a nod to the brand's tropical ambitions. Peony and vanilla orchid held the heart. The name said everything. This was a fragrance made to be noticed, not to blend in.
If this were a song
Community picks
Run the World (Girls)
Beyoncé
The Beginning
Bombshell landed in 2010 from perfumers Adriana Medina-Baez and Mark Knitowski. Their brief: a fruity-floral that captured the Victoria's Secret woman, confident, feminine, unapologetic. Purple passion fruit anchored the top notes, a nod to the brand's tropical ambitions. Peony and vanilla orchid held the heart. The name said everything. This was a fragrance made to be noticed, not to blend in.
What makes Bombshell distinctive is the top note arrangement. Five fruity elements, passion fruit, grapefruit, pineapple, mandarin, strawberry, layer together to create something that reads as a single impression: vivid, bright, unapologetically sweet. It's not a linear progression through each fruit. It's a collective effect. The peony in the heart adds structure and a garden-floral quality that prevents the whole composition from collapsing into pure sugar. Vanilla orchid bridges the heart to the base, where musk and oakmoss add a quiet warmth that keeps the fragrance grounded long after the tropical opening fades.
The Evolution
The opening hits fast, bright tropical fruit that makes an impression in the first spray. Passion fruit and strawberry dominate, with grapefruit cutting through to keep things from going flat. This phase lasts maybe fifteen minutes before the floral heart takes over. Peony rises to meet jasmine and lily of the valley. The sweetness shifts from fruit-forward to floral-warm. Red berries add a tartness that keeps it interesting. This is the heart's longest act, two to three hours where Bombshell reads as polished and feminine. The drydown arrives quietly. Musk and woody notes settle close to the skin, carrying the peony's warmth into the final hours. The oakmoss keeps it grounded. This is where Bombshell earns its reputation for longevity, what started loud becomes something intimate and personal, lingering for hours.
Cultural Impact
Since its 2010 debut, Bombshell has become one of the most recognized fruity-florals on the mass market, a fragrance that crossed over from dedicated perfume wearers to anyone who wanted a signature scent that announced itself. Its consistent presence in bestseller rankings and the brand's aggressive distribution through body mists and multiple formats extended its reach beyond traditional fragrance consumers. It's the fragrance people recommend when someone asks what to try.
The House
United States · Est. 1977
Victoria's Secret began as a San Francisco lingerie company founded in 1977 by Stanford graduate student Roy Raymond and his wife Gaye. The brand entered fragrance in 1989, launching its first perfume Victoria as part of a national magazine campaign. By the early 1990s, the company had grown to 350 stores nationwide with estimated sales of $1 billion. The beauty division grew substantially enough to generate nearly $1 billion in sales by 2006. Victoria's Secret fragrances are developed through Givaudan's Paris laboratory, the same fragrance house behind perfumes for Tom Ford, Prada, and Louis Vuitton. The brand works with a rotating roster of over 30 perfumers rather than a single in-house nose, creating scents for its Dream Angels, Very Sexy, Body, and Pink collections. Popular fragrances include Bombshell, Love Spell, Tease, and Heavenly, which ranked as the top-selling fragrance in the United States by both revenue and volume from 2005 to 2010. Victoria's Secret has won 20 Fragrance Foundation awards since 2001. The company offers fragrances alongside perfumed body care products including body mists, body lotions, and eau de parfum in various formats.
If this were a song
Community picks
Tropical confidence. The kind that turns heads without trying too hard. Pop with purpose, white florals in the bass, a peony hook that won't let go. Wear it loud or wear it close, the track changes, the energy stays.
Run the World (Girls)
Beyoncé



































