The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Let's Party arrived in 2025 from Hilde Soliani, the creator who treats everyday ingredients like found objects waiting for their stage moment. This one wanted to bottle something specific: the fizzy, chaotic, joyful energy of a gathering where the rules temporarily stop applying. The composition brings together unexpected elements in a way that feels both surprising and intentional, capturing the particular chemistry that emerges when people come together without pretense. There's a brightness to it, an immediacy that suggests someone has just walked through the door with laughter already building.
What makes this composition unusual isn't just the ingredients, it's the fact that they work. Green bell pepper brings an herbal, almost savory edge that adds an unexpected twist to the overall sweetness without making the whole thing smell like a salad. Potato adds body, a starchy warmth that grounds the florals instead of competing with them. Narcissus does what narcissus does: it adds a honeyed, slightly green floral note that bridges the gap between the vegetables and the florals.
The evolution
The opening hits like someone cracking open a cold drink next to you. Bright, carbonated, immediately attention-grabbing. That initial accord carries through the first phase, sweet and fizzy and just slightly synthetic in the best possible way. Then the bell pepper arrives, not aggressive but present, adding a vegetable crispness that keeps everything honest. Narcissus follows, softening the edges, turning the composition toward something more floral and honeyed. The meadow flowers fill in the spaces, creating depth and complexity. The potato quietly lingers in the drydown, a warm starchy base that remains present throughout the later stages. Even as the initial brightness fades, there's still something sweet and green and slightly unusual that clings close, evolving rather than simply disappearing.
Cultural impact
Let's Party occupies a space in the fragrance world that refuses to fit neatly into any category. It's a green, floral, slightly surreal composition that challenges expectations. Those who encounter it tend to find themselves asking what exactly they're smelling, drawn in by its unconventional structure and the way it plays with assumptions about what ingredients can do together. The composition takes elements that shouldn't logically combine and arranges them in ways that somehow work, creating something memorable precisely because it doesn't follow the expected rules.



















