The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
In 2018, Lancôme quietly added a new chapter to its Maison collection. Oranges Bigarades arrived without fanfare, built around a simple premise: what if you took the bitter orange, the kind that puckers rather than sweetens, and let it sit across from black tea? Christophe Raynaud was the nose behind the concept. The name is French and literal, bigarade is the bitter orange used in marmalades and perfumery alike. Nothing hidden. Nothing decorative. Just the fruit, the flower, and the leaf. The citrus opens with a sharp, almost astringent quality that immediately sets it apart from sweeter interpretations. As it settles, the black tea emerges, adding a smooth, slightly smoky undertone that tempers the initial bite.
What makes Oranges Bigarades distinctive is the structural choice to anchor a citrus fragrance in black tea. Tea is forgiving and complex. It bridges the gap between the sharp, almost astringent opening and the warm, slightly sweet drydown that follows. The hedione amplifies the orange blossom without making it bubblegum-sweet. The black pepper adds just enough spice to keep the florals from floating away entirely. The tea itself carries a slightly smoky, slightly bitter quality that becomes more pronounced as the fragrance settles on the skin.
The evolution
The opening hits bright and tart, bitter orange with enough bergamot to keep it from being one-dimensional. Twenty minutes in, the orange blossom softens the edges, but the real shift comes with the black tea. Suddenly the fragrance turns from sharp to smooth, like the difference between biting into a citrus fruit and drinking it steeped. The jasmine does not announce itself, it is more of a background warmth that stops the tea from going too austere. By the third hour, the vanilla and sandalwood have settled close to the skin. The benzoin adds a faint resinous sweetness, barely perceptible but present enough to keep the drydown from going flat. On fabric, the fragrance lingers for hours after you have left the room. The opening citrus burst gives way to something more textured as the black tea takes center stage.
Cultural impact
Oranges Bigarades arrived in 2018 as part of Lancôme's Maison collection. The fragrance reflects a broader shift in French perfumery where traditional houses began exploring new combinations of familiar materials. The use of black tea alongside bitter orange offers something different from the commercially safe fragrances the house had become known for. The Maison Lancôme line represented a step toward compositions that appeal to fragrance lovers seeking something beyond the ordinary. The collection has found an audience among those who appreciate the house's heritage but want something with more creative ambition.























