The Story
Why it exists.
Named for the tranquil waters of a Mediterranean lagoon, Laguna captures the painter’s love of vivid colour and fluid motion. In 1991 Mark Buxton answered Dalí’s brief to translate a sun‑drenched seascape into scent, layering bright tropical fruit with a soft floral heart. The fragrance sits within the Dalí house’s tradition of turning visual paradox into olfactory art, echoing the brand’s 1983 mission to make each bottle a miniature canvas.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sunset Lover
Petit Biscuit
The Beginning
Named for the tranquil waters of a Mediterranean lagoon, Laguna captures the painter’s love of vivid colour and fluid motion. In 1991 Mark Buxton answered Dalí’s brief to translate a sun‑drenched seascape into scent, layering bright tropical fruit with a soft floral heart. The fragrance sits within the Dalí house’s tradition of turning visual paradox into olfactory art, echoing the brand’s 1983 mission to make each bottle a miniature canvas.
The opening trio of pineapple, mandarin orange and Italian lemon was chosen for its ability to evoke the sparkling surface of clear water, while plum adds a hint of sun‑warmed depth. In the heart, La Réunion vanilla softens Egyptian rose, lily of the valley and iris, creating a garden that feels both lush and airy. The base of musk, Madagascan sandalwood and amber grounds the composition, giving it a lingering warmth reminiscent of a twilight shore.
The Evolution
At first spray, Laguna bursts with a vivid splash of pineapple and mandarin, the citrus zing cutting through the sweet plum like a wave crashing on bright sand. Within ten minutes the heart emerges; vanilla drapes the rose and iris in a creamy veil, while lily of the valley adds a crisp green lift, turning the scent into a sun‑lit garden. As the fragrance settles after thirty minutes, the base reveals itself: musk’s subtle animalic whisper, sandalwood’s smooth amber‑tinged wood, and amber’s golden resin create a warm, lingering trail that clings to skin for six to eight hours. The drydown never turns heavy; instead it softens into a comforting, slightly powdery finish that feels like the calm after a summer tide recedes.
Cultural Impact
Since its 1991 debut, Laguna has become a cult favourite among fans of bright, fruit‑forward femininity. Collectors often cite its playful opening and smooth vanilla heart as a nostalgic nod to early‑90s French perfumery. Though never a mainstream bestseller, it regularly appears in niche forums as the go‑to summer scent that balances surrealist flair with everyday wearability, earning steady compliments for its sunny personality.
The House
France · Est. 1983
Salvador Dalí fragrances translate the Spanish surrealist’s visual imagination into scent. The line began in 1983 with a perfume that honored his wife Gala, and it has grown to include men’s, women’s, and limited‑edition collections that echo the artist’s bold colors, dream‑like narratives, and love of theatrical presentation. Each bottle bears a design touch from Dalí himself, turning a daily ritual into a small work of art that invites the wearer to linger in a world of paradox and wonder.
If this were a song
Community picks
Laguna feels like a sun‑lit seaside lounge: bright, breezy, with a warm amber glow at dusk. The playlist captures that relaxed, tropical elegance.
Sunset Lover
Petit Biscuit




























