The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Forbidden Rose belongs to Lancôme's Absolue Les Parfums collection, a line built for people who want the house's heritage of rose-forward perfumery pushed somewhere unexpected. The 2025 release tasked Fabrice Pellegrin with reimagining what a rose fragrance could be when it refuses to play by the usual rules. The name says it all: a rose that breaks its own boundaries.
What makes this work is the structural choice to let fig occupy both the opening and the heart. Rather than treating fig as a supporting act, the green freshness that lifts a rose and then disappears, it stays. The result is a rose that never quite settles into the sweetness you'd expect. Patchouli and amber in the base provide the warmth underneath, but the fig's earthiness keeps them from becoming syrupy. It's a composition that trusts the wearer to appreciate the paradox.
The evolution
The opening hits green and immediate, the smell of fig skin breaking under a thumbnail. Within minutes, the rose arrives, but it's not the powdery, romantic rose of a hundred other fragrances. It's fruity, almost jammy, held in check by the fig's vegetal edge. The heart lasts for hours, fig and rose intertwined, neither dominating. Then the patchouli emerges, earthy and grounding, followed by amber's warmth. By the end, you're left with a soft, skin-close warmth that lingers well past what you'd expect from the moderate sillage. On fabric, it softens further overnight into something you'll catch on your collar the next morning.
Cultural impact
Part of a broader movement in luxury perfumery toward fig as a serious, standalone note rather than a fleeting top accord. Forbidden Rose joins a small group of fig-forward fragrances that treat the material with the same complexity once reserved for oud or iris. Wearers tend to fall into two camps: those who find it unlike anything they've smelled, and those who need a full wearing to understand the appeal.
























