The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Summer Peaches By The Tea Room is Prin Lomros translating a particular afternoon into liquid form. The name says it all: a shaded tea room, peaches in the garden outside. Lomros built the composition around the tension between cool green tea and warm stone fruit, letting honeysuckle and wisteria soften the gap between them. The result feels less like a fragrance brief and more like something worth remembering.
The peach note is the cleverest thing here. The blossom is ephemeral, floral, almost transparent. It never competes with the green tea; it orbits it. Wisteria and honeysuckle amplify this effect, adding nectar sweetness without weight. The result is a white floral built on cool, almost medicinal green tea, with cedar and orris root holding the whole thing in place. It's structurally sound in a way that lets the lightness breathe. Nothing is forced. Nothing shouts.
The evolution
The opening hits with green tea and bergamot, clean, bright, a flash of citrus that cuts through everything. The peach blossom arrives within minutes, but it's not a fruit-bomb. It's delicate, skin-close, the kind of peach that exists in perfume theory rather than in a bowl on a table. Honeysuckle and wisteria layer in as the heart develops, giving it a soft, almost dizzying sweetness. The green tea never fully disappears. It keeps everything cool and watery, preventing the florals from going cloying. As the composition progresses, it shifts toward cedar and musk. The florals recede. Orris root adds a quiet powderiness. The drydown is clean, intimate, barely there, fading into a soft musky warmth that clings to your sleeves long after the main show is over.
Cultural impact
Summer Peaches By The Tea Room stands apart from louder summer releases. Its appeal is quieter: a clean, soapy approach to fruit and florals that avoids tropical sweetness. The peach-blossom-and-green-tea combination reads as almost lyrical, both specific and universally appealing. It sits comfortably among the more experimental work in the Strangers catalog without demanding attention.































