The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Mille et Une Roses was composed for Maison Lancôme, the house's dedicated ultra-luxury collection, by perfumer Louise Turner in 2022. Turner approached the brief with a specific question: what does a thousand roses smell like when you strip away everything heavy and old-fashioned? The answer was this fragrance, built around May rose absolute from Grasse, the premier rose harvest of the year, harvested at peak freshness and processed immediately. Lancôme has used the rose as its central emblem since founder Armand Petitjean adopted the blooms near the castle ruins that gave the house its name in 1935. Turner translated that heritage into something that wears like memory rather than costume, roses as lived experience, not costume jewelry.
May rose absolute is the star that justifies the name. Unlike rose absolute derived from dried petals, May rose is processed immediately after harvest, capturing compounds that degrade rapidly. The result is a fuller, greener, more nuanced rose profile, one that carries both the romantic sweetness and a faint mineral clarity that dried extracts lose. Paired with a single amber base and three citrus-fruity top notes, the composition keeps that rose in constant motion. It never sits still long enough to feel predictable.
The evolution
The opening arrives bright and immediate, bergamot, mandarin, and pear conspiring to give you the sense of biting into something crisp. The citrus sparkles for perhaps 20 minutes before the rose begins to assert itself, taking over the center stage as the fruit retreats. The transition isn't dramatic. The pear softens rather than disappears, merging with the May rose to create a rounder, warmer heart that reads as fuller than the note list alone would suggest. By hour three, the amber base arrives, not heavy, not animalic, simply warm and close, a skin-warm quality that makes the fragrance feel less applied and more inhabited. Six to eight hours in, what's left is a quiet rose-and-amber murmur, present enough to notice, intimate enough that only the people standing very close will catch it.
Cultural impact
Part of Lancôme's Maison collection, the house's ultra-luxury tier, Mille et Une Roses arrives in a crowded rose fragrance market with a specific proposition: accessibility without dilution. The citrus-fruity opening makes it an easier entry point than heritage rose compositions, while the May rose absolute ensures it earns its place in the collection. Wearers who expected a traditional, heavy rose find something lighter and more contemporary, and that surprise is becoming part of the fragrance's identity.





























