The Story
Why it exists.
The original Her was adventurous. This Elixir pushes past cautious. Strawberry and blackberry arrive with immediacy, a bright, jammy sweetness that fills the space without hesitation. The berries feel ripe, almost sun-warmed, with a natural sweetness that skirts the edge of confection without tipping into it. Jasmine arrives to bridge what comes next, its floral character softening the fruity intensity just enough to keep everything feeling composed rather than chaotic. Vanilla and amber anchor what came before them. The vanilla's creaminess and the amber's resinous warmth intertwine, creating a base that feels both sensual and velvety.
If this were a song
Community picks
Nightcall
Kavinsky
The Beginning
The original Her was adventurous. This Elixir pushes past cautious. Strawberry and blackberry arrive with immediacy, a bright, jammy sweetness that fills the space without hesitation. The berries feel ripe, almost sun-warmed, with a natural sweetness that skirts the edge of confection without tipping into it. Jasmine arrives to bridge what comes next, its floral character softening the fruity intensity just enough to keep everything feeling composed rather than chaotic. Vanilla and amber anchor what came before them. The vanilla's creaminess and the amber's resinous warmth intertwine, creating a base that feels both sensual and velvety.
What's interesting here is the collision. Strawberry and blackberry shouldn't coexist without some kind of referee, they're both fruity, both vibrant, both fighting for space. The jasmine doesn't separate them. It merges them. Then the base does something unexpected: vanilla and amber don't just sweeten the deal. They transform the berries from fresh to warm. From bright morning to something after the sun goes down. The sandalwood keeps it grounded, prevents it from floating off into pure dessert territory. It's a compositional tightrope, and Di Marino and Lernout walk it cleanly.
The Evolution
The opening hits fast, strawberry and blackberry arriving together, the kind of fruity burst that announces itself without apology. There's no subtlety in those first minutes. Thirty minutes in, the jasmine appears, softening the edges, making the berries feel less raw and more rounded. By the second hour, the vanilla has joined the conversation. The scent shifts from bright to warm, the way late afternoon light changes a room. The amber and sandalwood take over the final act, a creamy, woody drydown that lingers close to the skin. On most skin types, expect four to six hours before it settles into quiet. The next morning, there's a trace of vanilla on the wrist. That's the ghost this one leaves behind.
Cultural Impact
The Her Elixir de Parfum builds on what came before it, introducing a richer, more opulent interpretation of Burberry's signature approach. Its composition suggests a move toward evening rather than afternoon, the warm base providing depth that goes beyond surface-level sweetness. This is the line's answer for someone who wants what comes next, a fragrance that deepens into something more atmospheric without losing the playful confidence at its core. The Burberry Her line has become the house's response to modern feminine fragrance, fruity, assured, and rooted in a distinctly London sensibility.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1856
Burberry fragrances are the olfactory equivalent of their iconic trench coat: quintessentially British, effortlessly elegant, and unexpectedly rebellious. The house translates its rich fashion heritage into scents that feel both timeless and perfectly modern. It's the smell of London—a city of classic architecture and defiant street style.
If this were a song
Community picks
This fragrance sounds like the moment between evening and night, bright berries giving way to something warmer, intimate, close. A playlist that starts with energy and settles into warmth. Think late cab ride home, city lights through rain-streaked glass, no need to rush.
Nightcall
Kavinsky





















