The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Lancôme's love affair with the rose goes back to 1935. When founder Armand Petitjean chose the name Lancôme after a romantic ruined castle in France, he adopted the roses growing nearby as the house's emblem. That floral obsession never left. In 2021, a trio of in-house perfumers, Alexis Grugeon, Amandine Clerc-Marie, and Honorine Blanc, returned to that heritage with a limited edition: La Nuit Trésor Dentelle de Roses. Rose Lace. The name alone tells you where this fragrance lives. Not in the daylight. In the hour after you've already dressed, when the mirror catches something softer, more deliberate. The brief was clear: take the rose the house has always loved and make it something you want to keep to yourself.
What makes this composition stand out is the base. Velvet and suede are unusual choices, not the woods, musks, or ambers you expect to find anchoring a rose fragrance. They read as texture instead of scent. The drydown isn't about smell; it's about touch. Raspberry syrup is the other unusual element. It pushes the heart into gourmand territory without going full dessert. Sweetness with an edge. The result is a fragrance that sits between fruity and floral, romantic and modern, accessible and just specific enough to feel personal.
The evolution
The opening hits bright, mandarin and rose petals, a clean citrus-bloom burst that lasts maybe twenty minutes. Then the heart takes over: raspberry syrup unfolds, sweet and syrupy, carrying the rose deeper into the composition. This is the phase that earns the name. Lace-like. Delicate, intricate, present. After the first hour, the base arrives. Velvet and suede warm everything up, softening the sweetness into something close and intimate. The raspberry doesn't disappear, it deepens, becoming a quiet sweetness that stays through the drydown. Eight to ten hours on most skin. The next morning, something warm and powdery remains, soft against the skin, easy to miss until you catch it again.
Cultural impact
La Nuit Trésor Dentelle de Roses arrived in 2021 as a limited expression within Lancôme's iconic Trésor line, created by Alexis Grugeon, Amandine Clerc-Marie, and Honorine Blanc. The fragrance quickly found its audience among wearers who wanted the house's signature rose elevated into something more personal, sweet-fruity without being mainstream, romantic without being predictable. Community ratings reflect that: strong longevity, solid sillage, and a bottle score that suggests people are keeping it.
































