The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Sophia Grojsman created Lancôme Trésor in 1990 with a single ambition: to bottle the feeling of being loved. The name itself says everything. Trésor. Treasure. Not the kind you find in a vault, but the kind you carry with you. Grojsman, already renowned for her ability to translate emotion into raw materials, built this around warm florals and a powdery elegance that felt both intimate and enduring. It was a response to something she saw missing in 1990s perfumery, fragrance that didn't perform, but instead, embraced. She wanted something a woman would reach for the way she reaches for a letter she's kept for years. Not because it still surprises her, but because it still means something.
What sets this composition apart is the quiet audacity of its heart. Heliotrope and iris together create a powdery signature so distinct it became an industry reference point. Few fragrances dared to be this unabashedly soft in an era of boldorientals. The vanilla doesn't sweeten so much as warm, it turns the florals inward, making them feel personal rather than projecting. The result is a fragrance that doesn't announce itself. It stays. And on fabric, with that unusually high galaxolide concentration anchoring everything, it stays long after you've left the room.
The evolution
Apricot blossom arrives first, bright, immediate, with a slight crispness that reads more floral than fruity. The peach blossom adds a lushness beneath it, almost greedy in its sweetness. Rose leaf threads through with a green, dewy note that prevents it from becoming cloying. This opening announces itself clearly for the first fifteen to thirty minutes. Then the hand-off. Heliotrope and iris soften the brightness into something powdery-soft, almost almond-warm. Lily of the valley adds a clean floral transparency. Vanilla emerges slowly, not sweetening the composition so much as deepening its warmth. The drydown settles into sandalwood and musk, creamy, skin-close, intimate. The galaxolide is the real tell here. At 21.4%, it gives the drydown a staying power that's almost stubborn. On skin, eight to ten hours easily. On fabric, longer still.
Cultural impact
Trésor arrived in 1990 as an outlier, warm, soft, unabashedly romantic in a decade that was moving toward cooler, crisper compositions. Its staying power and loyal following made it a reference point for powdery florals. The Fragrance Foundation inducted it into their Hall of Fame in 2021, decades after its debut. That kind of endurance is rare. It speaks to something the fragrance got right at its core: the emotional resonance that makes someone keep reaching for the same bottle.











