The Story
Why it exists.
Very Sexy Night arrived in 2013 from perfumer Lucas Sieuzac as Victoria's Secret extended its popular Very Sexy line into evening territory. The original Very Sexy had established itself as a fruity-floral with attitude. Night pushed further, darker, more complex, built for hours that start after the sun goes down. Sieuzac structured the composition around a specific tension: tart, electric plum opening against powdery, sophisticated iris. The suede base anchors both, keeping the whole thing grounded in warmth rather than brightness. It's a night fragrance built for someone who wants to feel put-together without announcing it.
If this were a song
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After Hours
The FIFTIES
The Beginning
Very Sexy Night arrived in 2013 from perfumer Lucas Sieuzac as Victoria's Secret extended its popular Very Sexy line into evening territory. The original Very Sexy had established itself as a fruity-floral with attitude. Night pushed further, darker, more complex, built for hours that start after the sun goes down. Sieuzac structured the composition around a specific tension: tart, electric plum opening against powdery, sophisticated iris. The suede base anchors both, keeping the whole thing grounded in warmth rather than brightness. It's a night fragrance built for someone who wants to feel put-together without announcing it.
What makes this work is the suede. Not leather, not wood, suede. It's the difference between a firm handshake and a touch. The material absorbs the plum's sharpness without softening it entirely, letting the iris show through as something refined rather than dusty. Woods provide the structural warmth underneath, the kind that lingers close to skin. This isn't about complexity or depth, it's about a specific mood, executed cleanly. Plum and iris. Suede and wood. The evening, distilled.
The Evolution
The black plum arrives first, tart, dark, like fruit left out past midnight. That initial brightness doesn't last. Within thirty minutes, the iris takes over, powdery and slow, holding the composition through the middle hours. The suede appears quietly, wrapping around the florals without overwhelming them. Woods arrive last, warming everything from below. On most skin, expect 4-6 hours of wear with a moderate sillage that stays close rather than projecting across a room. The next morning, there might be a faint trace, something warm and intimate on skin that didn't wash away entirely.
Cultural Impact
Very Sexy Night sits comfortably in Victoria's Secret's tradition of translating fantasy into accessible fragrance. Since entering the fragrance market in 1989, the brand has maintained a position of approachable luxury, sophisticated concepts at prices that don't require compromise. Night fits that pattern: the night-out concept, captured without the intimidation factor of niche pricing. This is the fragrance someone reaches for when they want to feel polished without overthinking it.
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
The opening hits like a pulse of light against darkness, bright, electric, alive. Then the iris arrives slow and deliberate, the way a silhouette moves through a crowded room. Finally, suede and warm woods settle close, intimate, the exhale after hours that don't need to be explained.
After Hours
The FIFTIES




















