The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
The name gives it away. Lumineuse means luminous, and that's exactly what Dominique Ropion intended when composing this 2013 flank to Lancôme's legendary 1990 Trésor. The original, created by Sophia Grojsman, became one of the defining women's fragrances of the 1990s: bold, rosy, unapologetically sweet. The challenge for Ropion wasn't to recreate it, it was to translate its spirit into something that glows without burning.
Praline does the heavy lifting in the opening. Not pistachio, not caramel, actual praline, the nutty-hazelnut paste that smells like confectionery warmth. It's gourmand without being foodie, sweet without being childish. The Damask rose that anchors the heart is the same rose that made the original famous, but here it's been handled with a lighter touch, the violet leaf absolute adding an ozonic freshness that keeps the floral from becoming heavy. The result is a rose that reads as modern rather than nostalgic, wearable rather than wielded.
The evolution
The first minutes are praline all the way, sweet, nutty, almost creamy. No sharp top notes, no citrus to cut it. Then around the fifteen-minute mark, the rose begins to assert itself, and with it comes the violet leaf, that slight green, ozonic lift that keeps the sweetness from cloying. By the second hour, the two are intertwined, rose and praline becoming one impression rather than separate notes. The base is where patience pays off. Vanilla and sandalwood arrive slowly, building a warmth that feels earned rather than announced. By hour four, you're left with something close to skin, a soft, creamy, barely-there presence that lingers into evening. On some skin types, it lasts through the night. On others, it's gone by dinner. But when it stays, it stays beautifully.
Cultural impact
Trésor's legacy is long and loud, the original 1990 fragrance became one of the defining scents of its decade, a benchmark for sweet rose compositions. Lumineuse arrives as an answer to a different moment: one where fragrance wearers want intimacy over impact, warmth over performance. It won't start conversations across a room. But it might be the one someone leans in to ask about.






















