The Story
Why it exists.
Viktor&Rolf begins every fragrance with the name itself as a creative brief, a word that must evoke its own smell, unlocking the start of an olfactory adventure. Flowerbomb literally detonates on skin. Four perfumers, Olivier Polge, Carlos Benaïm, Domitille Michalon-Bertier, and Dominique Ropion, translated that explosive concept into a bouquet of jasmine, rose, orchid, and freesia blooming simultaneously in an unusually dense heart. The result sits in the distinctive grenade-shaped bottle designed by Fabien Baron, fashion and fragrance as a single gesture. The interplay between these florals creates a rich, enveloping sweetness that feels both bold and surprisingly cohesive, a multi-layered floral explosion that commands attention.
If this were a song
Community picks
Beautiful
Sia
The Beginning
Viktor&Rolf begins every fragrance with the name itself as a creative brief, a word that must evoke its own smell, unlocking the start of an olfactory adventure. Flowerbomb literally detonates on skin. Four perfumers, Olivier Polge, Carlos Benaïm, Domitille Michalon-Bertier, and Dominique Ropion, translated that explosive concept into a bouquet of jasmine, rose, orchid, and freesia blooming simultaneously in an unusually dense heart. The result sits in the distinctive grenade-shaped bottle designed by Fabien Baron, fashion and fragrance as a single gesture. The interplay between these florals creates a rich, enveloping sweetness that feels both bold and surprisingly cohesive, a multi-layered floral explosion that commands attention.
What makes Flowerbomb's structure notable is the layering of five different floral families in the heart rather than one dominant note. Rose, jasmine, orchid, freesia, African orange flower build a dense, simultaneous bloom, not sequential, not competitive, just concentrated. Most floral fragrances aspire to this kind of fullness. Flowerbomb achieves it and makes it the point. The tea note in the opening is often overlooked in discussions of this scent, but it's doing quiet structural work, osmanthus adds a bruised-apricot sweetness alongside it that distinguishes the top from a standard citrus bergamot opening. Without it, the floral detonation would lack its unusual cool-floral edge.
The Evolution
The opening hits like a spark. Bergamot and osmanthus arrive crisp, almost medicinal in their brightness, before the florals detonate in earnest. That cool-tea edge lasts maybe fifteen minutes, then jasmine and rose take over, and the sweetness turns lush and relentless. The heart is where Flowerbomb earns its name. Jasmine sambac brings its indolic depth alongside the cleaner freesia and African orange flower, rose and orchid layering in for maximum sweetness. It smells like several flowers at once, which is the point. The density here is what people mean when they call this a signature scent, it's almost impossible to smell this heart and mistake it for anything else. The drydown is patchouli and vanilla, but the vanilla does the heavy lifting. It softens the patchouli's earthiness into something creamy and warm, keeping the fragrance close rather than projecting. The floral sweetness lingers longest on warm skin, fading quietly over several hours rather than announcing its departure.
Cultural Impact
Flowerbomb changed what a floral fragrance could be. Its sweet, rich scent sits at the intersection of gourmand and floral, offering notes that smell like floral sweetness infused with deeper, warmer undertones. The combination creates something that feels simultaneously comforting and provocative, drawing you in with approachable sweetness before revealing unexpected complexity. Iconic and polarizing in equal measure, this fragrance challenged conventions and sparked conversation.
The House
Netherlands · Est. 1993
Viktor&Rolf is a Dutch avant-garde fashion house founded in 1993 by designers Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren. The duo, both born in 1969, trained together at the Arnhem Academy of Art and Design before relocating to Paris, where they built a reputation for conceptual fashion that blurs boundaries between art and commerce. Their fragrance line, launched in partnership with L'Oréal, translates their theatrical design philosophy into wearable form. Flowerbomb remains their signature scent, housed in the now-iconic grenade bottle they designed themselves. The brand operates from Amsterdam, maintaining the provocative sensibility that has defined their work across fashion, fragrance, and installation art for three decades.
If this were a song
Community picks
A concentrated floral burst that settles into sweet powder and skin-warm vanilla. The kind of fragrance that rewrites a room's atmosphere, lush, confident, and impossible to misread. The playlist matches that energy: bold white florals, warm vanilla, and the feeling of being noticed.
Beautiful
Sia


























