The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Lancôme released Climat in 1967 as an aldehydic floral that smelled like a certain kind of Parisian confidence, powdery, assured, impossible to mistake for anything else. When the brand marked its 40th anniversary in the Russian market in 2015, it chose to celebrate by reimagining that original. The result is Climat L'Edition Mythique, a limited run of 3,000 bottles sold exclusively in Moscow. Not a replacement. An honoring.
The perfumer worked within the original's architecture, the aldehydic top, the white floral heart, the mossy-woody base, but intensified the heart notes until they almost glow. Jasmine and tuberose expand outward, lifting the composition's center of gravity. The aldehydes remain, but they've been joined by green notes and violet that keep the opening from feeling like a museum piece. Peach was likely not in the original; it reads as a deliberate move toward approachability.
The evolution
The aldehydes hit first, sharp, sparkling, almost metallic for a moment before the florals arrive. Violet and green notes arrive mid-top, giving the opening a powdery, slightly herbaceous quality that keeps it grounded. Within twenty minutes, the white florals take over entirely. Jasmine, ylang-ylang, tuberose, they layer into something rich and slightly sweet. The aldehydes amplify the florals, making them feel luminous and waxy at once, like the bloom itself has texture. Then the base arrives: sandalwood and amber emerging through the florals, moss and vetiver grounding everything underneath. The drydown is warm and powdery, the musk holding everything together for hours.
Cultural impact
The 2015 launch of Climat L'Edition Mythique marked a significant milestone for Lancôme, celebrating 40 years of the brand's presence in the Russian market. This limited reissue arrived during a period of renewed interest in classic aldehydic florals, positioning the house as a curator of heritage rather than merely a fragrance producer. The 3,000-bottle run tapped into collector culture, transforming a scent into a cultural artifact. Its aldehydic character connects to the glamour of 1960s Parisian perfumery, when such compositions defined luxury and sophistication. The Russian market focus reflected Lancôme's strategic investment in emerging markets while leveraging nostalgia as a marketing tool.





































