The Story
Why it exists.
The Light Blue family has been the benchmark for Italian summer in a bottle since 2001. But what happens when you take that same Mediterranean spirit and strip it down to something wispier, more contemplative? That's the question Emilie Bevierre-Coppermann asked when she sat down with three notes and a directive from Dolce&Gabbana: capture Capri, but differently. The original Light Blue reached for lemons and cedar and the wide open coast. Capri In Love reaches inward. Jasmine tea, green apple, Longoza. That's it. Three materials, one idea. Not about the power of the island, about its quiet.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sun
Rhye
The Beginning
The Light Blue family has been the benchmark for Italian summer in a bottle since 2001. But what happens when you take that same Mediterranean spirit and strip it down to something wispier, more contemplative? That's the question Emilie Bevierre-Coppermann asked when she sat down with three notes and a directive from Dolce&Gabbana: capture Capri, but differently. The original Light Blue reached for lemons and cedar and the wide open coast. Capri In Love reaches inward. Jasmine tea, green apple, Longoza. That's it. Three materials, one idea. Not about the power of the island, about its quiet.
A three-note composition is a tightrope. No filler, no misdirection, every material has to pull its weight. Jasmine tea carries the opening, delicate, almost diaphanous, lifted by a whisper of aldehydes that prevent it from reading flat. The green apple doesn't arrive all at once: it builds as the tea begins to recede, a cool-yet-tart counterpoint that keeps the composition from going sterile. Then comes Longoza. Lesser-known than cardamom, warmer, with a creamier spice that sits quietly until everything else clears out. The art isn't in the volume, it's in the timing of the handoffs.
The Evolution
The opening is a transparent thing. Jasmine tea with aldehydes lifts it just enough to feel intentional, then a bright, clean green apple steps in. Not the crunch of a bitten apple, the colder clarity of a fruit sorbet eaten fast on a hot morning. This phase holds for 90 minutes to two hours before the green apple begins its slow fade. The jasmine tea hangs on, quieter now, more felt than heard. When the apple finally clears, Longoza makes its entrance. Spiced, warm, this is where the composition stops being a summer breeze and starts being skin-warm. It lingers for a couple hours after as a close, intimate presence, moderate sillage, never filling a room but refusing to disappear either, hovering in that range of 4 to 6 hours before yielding entirely to skin warmth.
Cultural Impact
Capri In Love sits at the lighter edge of the Light Blue lineage. It trades the original's bold cedars and Mediterranean punch for something more intimate, quieter sillage, closer projection, better suited to the office than the piazza. The jasmine tea and green apple combination reads as fresh, clean, and resort-adjacent. Spring and summer wear is where it lives, with performance that holds through 65°F into June before the heat starts to shorten its arc.
The House
Italy · Est. 1985
Dolce&Gabbana's fragrances are a full-throated celebration of Italian sensuality and glamour. They're not shy scents; they are bold, passionate statements that bottle the essence of 'la dolce vita'. Think sun-drenched Sicilian coasts, cinematic romance, and unapologetic luxury.
If this were a song
Community picks
Capri In Love opens like a warm afternoon with no agenda, bright, transparent, unhurried. That citrus-tea brightness in the top notes has a certain closeness to modern soul music: polished but intimate, effortless rather than produced. The green apple heart keeps things grounded and a little tart before the Longoza warmth settles in near the end, like a song that quietly finds its resolution.
Sun
Rhye



























