The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Daisy Sorbet arrived in 2015 as part of the Sorbet Edition flankers, limited releases tied to the Daisy and Daisy Eau So Fresh lines. The brand described it as a succulent blend of sheer florals with a hint of fruit, lush and playfully fresh. That framing tells you exactly what this was meant to be. Perfumer Richard Herpin built the composition around a bright citrus-pear-passion fruit opening that drops the temperature before the florals arrive. The overall impression is one of fruity brightness tempered by soft, clean florals that keep the scent from tipping into sweetness.
What makes the structure interesting is how it handles transition. The top notes hit with the kind of sharpness that reads as cold, pink grapefruit and passion fruit doing the heavy lifting. But rather than letting that energy escalate, the heart notes arrive to soften everything. Jasmine and lily of the valley don't overpower; they veil. Wisteria adds an almost powdered sweetness that keeps the whole thing from feeling too clean. The base is where restraint pays off. Cedar and violet wood give it structure without weight. Musk keeps it close.
The evolution
The opening is the whole story for the first twenty minutes. Pink grapefruit, pear, passion fruit, tart, juicy, immediate. It hits like biting into something frozen. Then the florals take over. Jasmine and lily of the valley arrive quietly, smoothing the edges. Wisteria adds a sweetness that feels almost powdered, not heavy. The hand-off is seamless, no gap, no crash. By hour two, the cedar and violet wood arrive. Not loud. Just present. Musk keeps it skin-close. The drydown is clean and short, 4-6 hours total, moderate sillage throughout. This isn't a fragrance that announces itself at hour four. It's a fragrance that lets you rediscover it when you lift your wrist.
Cultural impact
Daisy Sorbet arrived as part of the Sorbet Edition flankers, limited releases tied to the Daisy and Daisy Eau So Fresh lines. The brand positioned them as colorful, delicate, and fresh: seasonal companions rather than replacements. That framing made them collectible by design. Daisy Sorbet sits in the fruit-floral space that the Marc Jacobs line does well, accessible, youthful, and easy to wear. It's the fragrance equivalent of a summer afternoon: pleasant, uncomplicated, and easy to return to.

























