The Story
Why it exists.
Elizabeth Taylor treated fragrance as part of her overall style, not a licensing afterthought, but a personal statement. When she launched her first scent in 1987, she reportedly insisted on deep involvement in the creative process. By 1991, she was ready for something that captured her own vision. White Diamonds was designed to let her presence linger in a room even when she wasn't in it, built from aldehydes, white florals, and a warm powdery drydown that holds close to the skin for hours.
If this were a song
Community picks
At Last
Etta James
The Beginning
Elizabeth Taylor treated fragrance as part of her overall style, not a licensing afterthought, but a personal statement. When she launched her first scent in 1987, she reportedly insisted on deep involvement in the creative process. By 1991, she was ready for something that captured her own vision. White Diamonds was designed to let her presence linger in a room even when she wasn't in it, built from aldehydes, white florals, and a warm powdery drydown that holds close to the skin for hours.
The composition draws from classic perfumery traditions with a contemporary sensibility. Aldehydes give that immediate sparkle and lift, a signature move borrowed from Chanel No. 5 but reinterpreted for a new era. The heart brings together Egyptian tuberose, jasmine, and ylang-ylang, creating a rich floral bouquet that doesn't shy away from complexity. Carnation and a touch of cinnamon add warmth and edge, while the base, sandalwood, oakmoss, patchouli, and musk, grounds everything in a drydown that's intimate rather than projecting.
The Evolution
The aldehydes hit first: bright, almost metallic, a burst of sparkle that announces itself immediately. Within minutes, the florals take over, tuberose rising to the surface, jasmine adding sweetness, the ylang-ylang giving it body. The carnation and cinnamon warm everything up. Three hours in, the drydown settles: powdery, close to the skin, the musk and sandalwood doing the quiet work the aldehydes started. Eight hours later, what remains is a soft, warm trail, still recognizable as White Diamonds, still holding that aldehydic memory underneath the flowers.
Cultural Impact
White Diamonds transcended the celebrity fragrance category to become a recognized classic. Inducted into the Fragrance Foundation Hall of Fame in 2009, it stands as one of the defining aldehydic white floral compositions, a reference point for how bold florals and aldehydes can work together to create something that stays with you.
The House
United States · Est. 1987
Elizabeth Taylor built one of the most successful celebrity fragrance empires in history, launching her first scent, Passion, in 1987. She reportedly became the first actress to establish her own fragrance line, setting a template that countless other celebrities would follow in decades to come. White Diamonds, released in 1991, became the cornerstone of her collection, achieving extraordinary commercial success with reported lifetime sales exceeding $1.5 billion. The House of Taylor remains the official steward of her fragrance legacy, carrying forward the glamour and theatrical sensibility that defined her cinematic career. Taylor personally supervised the development of her perfumes, bringing the same exacting standards to fragrance creation that she applied to her performances on screen.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent sounds like golden hour in a candlelit room, strings swelling, a woman's voice landing each note with intention. That metallic aldehydic sparkle in the opening is a trumpet blare, then the tuberoses arrive like a slow cello, rich and warm. The drydown is piano, soft pedal down, the kind of playing that fills the silence after. Old Hollywood glamour, powdery and warm, cinematic and assured.
At Last
Etta James



























