The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
La Vie Est Belle arrived in 2012 with its crystal smile bottle and its declaration: life is beautiful. Three years later, in 2015, Dominique Ropion and Anne Flipo returned to that brief with a single instruction, go deeper. The result is L'Eau de Parfum Intense, a denser, richer expression of the original's floral-gourmand world. The brief was simple on paper: more tuberose, more sweetness, more of everything that made the first one beloved. But Ropion and Flipo are not simple perfumers, and what they delivered is anything but a blunt flank. It is an argument about what happens when you stop holding back.
The unusual move here is letting the sweetness win without apology. Where many intensified versions add darkness or sharpness to balance richness, this one leans into gourmand warmth. The whipped cream and hazelnut base is not a whisper, it is the point. The iris that crowns the heart provides the counterweight: powdery, slightly bitter, with a violet-like waxy quality that keeps the florals from tipping into pure sugar. The result is a fragrance that smells indulgent but never collapses under its own weight. That is harder to achieve than it sounds.
The evolution
The opening is bright. Pear, blackcurrant, a quick flash of bergamot, fruity and tart, with pink pepper lifting the whole thing. It does not linger long. Within minutes the florals take over: iris first, powdery and assertive, then tuberose arriving like a statement. This is not a delicate garden. The heart is big, creamy white, slightly waxy. The transition is not a softening, it is a switch in mood, from playful to confident. The drydown arrives around the two-hour mark. Whipped cream and hazelnut, warm and sweet, with the iris still faintly present underneath. Patchouli keeps everything grounded. This is where the fragrance lives for the next eight hours: close to the skin, warm, addictive. Strong sillage in the first hour. After that, intimate but never absent.
Cultural impact
La Vie Est Belle has been one of Lancôme's defining modern fragrances since its 2012 debut. The 2015 intenseness carved out its own space within that franchise, sweeter, more overtly gourmand, with a floral heart that leans into powdery iris rather than Fruity Floral territory. Julia Roberts has been the face throughout, anchoring the brand's vision of confident, joyful femininity.



















