The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Andrea Fender created Glittertrash for Sucreabeille in 2020. The notes read like a love letter to the morning after: Watermelon Blow-Pops, baby powder, fistfuls of sticky white cake, last night's champagne and coconut cream. It's not elegant. It's not refined. It's better than that, it's specific. A 2am moment, frozen in a bottle. Sucreabeille built this fragrance around the part of the party nobody photographs, the part that smells like sugar and skin and something vaguely alcoholic and somehow that becomes the whole point.
The watermelon-baby powder pairing is unusual. Watermelon brings a synthetic, almost plastic candy note that most perfumers soften or bury. Sucreabeille lets it sit right on top. Baby powder adds warmth without tipping into full cosplay of Clean Girl, it's the powder on a dresser, not on skin. Together, they create a sweet-yet-physical quality that feels genuinely youthful without smelling childish. The champagne note is doing real work here, too, it keeps the composition from settling into pure confection by introducing a boozy, slightly oxidized edge that reads as memory, not sweetness.
The evolution
Watermelon opens sharp and immediate, the kind of synthetic candy sweetness that announces itself without asking permission. It lasts maybe 20 minutes before the powder arrives. Baby powder takes over, warm and physical, blending with coconut cream until the whole thing smells like a memory of sunscreen and skin. The heart shifts into sticky bakery: cupcake and whipped cream don't behave, they lean into each other, sweet and soft and a little bit messy. Then the drydown. Champagne and coconut cream settle together, sweet and boozy and clean all at once, the way skin smells the morning after someone who knows how to have a good time. The final note is powder and ghost. Baby powder, coconut cream, and the memory of champagne that refuses to fully leave.
Cultural impact
Glittertrash occupies a specific corner of the Sucreabeille catalog, sweet, playful, and unapologetically youthful without being one-note. It lands in the indie fragrance world as a crowd-pleaser for people who want something fun and approachable rather than serious or refined. In a market where fruity florals often play it safe, the watermelon-baby powder pairing earns attention precisely because it's unexpected. The kind of fragrance that converts someone who thought they didn't like indie perfume.
























