The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Eurico Mazzini designed Glamour Myriad in 2015 as part of O Boticário's Glamour collection, a lineup that aimed to translate everyday elegance into something wearable and layered. Rather than chasing a single trend, the brief was to build a fragrance that felt like a mood: comfortable luxury, warmth you could live in. The Brazilian heritage runs through the composition in the way it balances brightness with creaminess, fruit and florals anchored by something warmer, something that feels personal rather than performative.
The architecture is the point. Rather than leading with one dominant note, Glamour Myriad stacks fresh fruit against warm spice and vanilla, each layer doing something different, none of them fighting. The cinnamon and jasmine pairing is the move that keeps it from tipping into pure sweetness. White florals and powdery notes soften the warmth without diluting it, which is why the drydown feels complete rather than simple. It's the kind of layering that rewards attention, not a fragrance that announces itself, but one that reveals itself slowly.
The evolution
The opening announces stone fruit and citrus, plum's sweetness and mandarin's brightness setting up the first twenty minutes. Then the mandarin softens and the florals step forward, but so does something spicier. Cinnamon moves in alongside jasmine, giving the heart a warmth that feels intentional rather than accidental. The drydown is where this fragrance earns its reputation. Sandalwood and vanilla blend into something close, something that stays with you through the afternoon and into the evening. Musk adds staying power without pushing the sillage outward. The entire arc reads as warm, not hot, not cold, but consistently, comfortably warm from start to finish.
Cultural impact
Glamour Myriad sits comfortably in O Boticário's feminine collection, a warm, powdery floral-gourmand that appeals to the wearer who wants something layered without being challenging. The fragrance has held steady since 2015, a sign that it found its audience and kept them. Seasonal data suggests it works best in cooler months, which aligns with the warm amber and vanilla that anchor the drydown. The kind of fragrance people reach for when they want to feel put-together without smelling like they tried.























