The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Sikkim arrived in 1971, named for the legendary kingdom nestled in the Himalayas, a place of dramatic altitudes, palace gardens, and a princess said to dream amid ylang-ylang and jasmine. Perfumer Robert Gonnon built this composition around that imagery: an oriental floral that translates mountain air and moonlit gardens into something you can wear. The timing placed it in the early years of Lancôme's own legendary decade, as the house was cementing its place in French perfumery with work that could stand alongside anything from the era's great noses.
What makes Sikkim unusual is the aldehydic structure applied to a green chypre base. Aldehydes typically soften and round a composition, here, Gonnon used them to amplify everything. The galbanum doesn't just open; it detonates. The carnation and iris in the heart aren't shy background players; they cut through the green and spice with real edge. The result is a fragrance that moves fast and stays close, built for presence rather than projection. The coconut in the base adds a subtle warmth that keeps the leather and oakmoss from going too austere, a balance that sounds simple but rarely lands this well.
The evolution
The opening is the event. Within seconds, galbanum and aldehydes create a cloud so immediate it feels like the first spray is also the second. Bergamot and caraway keep it bright for maybe fifteen minutes before the gardenia and spice take over. The heart develops over the next two to three hours: carnation's peppery warmth, jasmine's richness, the quiet elegance of iris all layered together. By hour four, the drydown asserts itself, oakmoss and leather grounded by vetiver, with patchouli adding an earthy depth that stays close to the skin. On most people, Sikkim holds for eight to ten hours. The sillage is moderate from the start, never filling a room, but you'll catch traces on your wrist the next morning.
Cultural impact
Sikkim earned a devoted following and strong ratings, 8.1 for scent, 8.3 for longevity, that have held for decades. Discontinued and now hard to find, it trades at a premium among collectors who appreciate its boldness. It's the kind of fragrance people seek out specifically because it doesn't try to please everyone. Lancôme later included it in La Collection Fragrances, a curated archive celebrating the house's perfumery heritage, which tells you something about where Sikkim sits in the brand's own history.























