The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
The Cyclades: Greek islands scattered across the Aegean, white houses stacked against deep blue sky, the smell of salt and blossoms on coastal wind. Lancôme's Voyage collection sent wearers to imaginary destinations, and Cyclades, the third in the series after Benghal and Tropiques, was Greece rendered in scent. The brief was clear: translate that specific Mediterranean light, the dense flora, the architectural simplicity into something you could carry on your skin. Neroli and bergamot opened like coastal breeze. Jasmine and oleander captured the islands' flowering abundance. Vanilla and white musk finished warm, close, personal, the lingering heat of sun on stone after the crowd has gone.
What makes Cyclades interesting is its tension between brightness and warmth. Neroli, bitter orange blossom, carries both: the sharp citrus of the fruit and the heady floral of the bloom. Here it's the anchor, appearing in the top notes and threading through the heart alongside jasmine. Oleander adds a slightly green, almost medicinal edge that keeps the floral from becoming merely sweet. Vanilla in the base isn't a dessert note, it's warmth, the memory of heat held in skin and stone. White musk doesn't project; it holds everything close, replicating that intimate quality of scent in still Mediterranean air, where fragrance doesn't need to travel because the person wearing it is enough.
The evolution
The opening hits immediately. Bergamot and neroli arrive together, bergamot sharp and sparkling, neroli honeyed beneath it. For the first twenty minutes, the composition is all citrus-blossom brightness, clean and direct, the smell of afternoon light on whitewashed walls. Then jasmine takes over. The shift isn't abrupt, jasmine rises while the citrus fades, a gradual bloom rather than a hand-off. Oleander's green edge keeps jasmine from becoming cloying. The heart stays warm and floral, present but not intrusive, lingering as the citrus recedes fully into the background. The drydown belongs to vanilla and white musk. Jasmine retreats to a whisper. Vanilla wraps around the remaining floral, adding sweetness without weight. Musk keeps everything close to skin. What remains is a soft, skin-warm presence that doesn't announce itself but leaves an impression.
Cultural impact
Cyclades sits quietly in the Voyage collection, less celebrated than some siblings, but no less committed to the line's promise of escapist scent. Cyclades earns its place through restraint rather than spectacle. It appeals to someone who wants Mediterranean warmth without the overt projections common to many island-inspired fragrances. The fragrance offers honest florals, moderate sillage, and a wear that feels personal rather than performative. What distinguishes Cyclades is its refusal to shout. Where other florals might announce themselves across a room, this one stays close, an intimate companion rather than a statement piece.

























