The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Somewhere between awake and asleep. That's where this lives. Dream In The Sky is named for that threshold, the moment when consciousness loosens its grip and the world turns soft. Launched in 2019, it captures what happens right before sleep arrives, the warmth of blankets, the last trace of daylight, the quiet certainty that tomorrow exists.
The name says it all. This fragrance lives in the upper registers, airy, sweet, impossibly soft. Lavender leads, but it's sugared lavender, stripped of any sharpness and wrapped in honey butter and vanilla. The effect is less perfume, more atmosphere. Like the sky turning lavender and pink at dusk, just before the stars take over. It's comfort without weight, sweetness without cloying. Bath & Body Works built its identity on making luxury feel casual, and this is that philosophy at its most transparent, a scent for the everyday ritual, the quiet moment, the space between obligations.
The evolution
The opening hits cool and clear. Lavender arrives first, slightly herbal, almost medicinal in its cleanliness, but sugared, so the edges are softened immediately. Sugar lifts the whole thing, bright and crystalline, like the sweetest exhale before sleep arrives. Within minutes, honey butter slides in. Creamy. Warm. The richness builds quietly, and vanilla begins its slow settle, holding court close to the skin. By the heart, it's all warmth and sweetness, drowsy and intimate. The drydown is vanilla's domain. Long and close, barely there except to the person wearing it, a whisper of sugar threaded through warmth that refuses to fully leave. The butter note keeps everything soft, round, dreamlike. It's the scent of having just fallen asleep.
Cultural impact
Part of the Fine Fragrance Mist line that redefined what mass-market fragrance could be. Dream In The Sky sits comfortably in the sweet-lavender corner of BBW's archive, cozy, approachable, universally likeable. The Fine Fragrance Mist line democratized sophisticated, layered blends at accessible prices, making complex scent profiles mainstream rather than luxury-exclusive.


























