The Story
Why it exists.
The name says 1962, and it means it. Sol de Janeiro reached back to the golden era of Brazilian beach culture, that specific decade when Ipanema was becoming the world it still is today. Beauty was unguarded, the sun did what it wanted and everyone let it. Cheirosa '62 translates that energy into something you wear. Not nostalgia. Translation. The golden hour light, the salt in the air, the warmth that settled into everything, all of it made tangible through scent. The fragrance captures what made those beach days feel endless, distilling that unhurried, sun-drenched spirit into a portable form that carries the essence of those legendary days into the present.
If this were a song
Community picks
The Girl from Ipanema
Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto
The Beginning
The name says 1962, and it means it. Sol de Janeiro reached back to the golden era of Brazilian beach culture, that specific decade when Ipanema was becoming the world it still is today. Beauty was unguarded, the sun did what it wanted and everyone let it. Cheirosa '62 translates that energy into something you wear. Not nostalgia. Translation. The golden hour light, the salt in the air, the warmth that settled into everything, all of it made tangible through scent. The fragrance captures what made those beach days feel endless, distilling that unhurried, sun-drenched spirit into a portable form that carries the essence of those legendary days into the present.
What makes this composition work is the salt. Salted caramel is everywhere in fragrance, but the way it threads through here, cutting the sweetness just enough to keep it from cloying, is what separates it from the pack. Pistachio and almond open together, a creamy nuttiness that reads almost edible, almost like skin. The heliotrope adds a powdery floral dimension that prevents the heart from going completely sweet, and jasmine holds the center without overpowering it. Then the base: vanilla and caramel anchor the wear, sandalwood adds warmth and staying power, and salt ties the whole thing to the beach. It's a beach composition that doesn't smell like sunscreen or coconut. That distinction matters.
The Evolution
The opening hits immediately, pistachio cream and almond, rich and nutty, with the salted caramel already present in the background. Within the first twenty minutes, the jasmine and heliotrope arrive, softening the edible quality into something more floral without losing the warmth. This is the heart phase, and it's where most fragrances find their identity. Here, it's less identity and more atmosphere, warm, slightly powdery, undeniably sweet. The drydown is where it earns its reputation. Vanilla and sandalwood come forward, the salt becomes more mineral, and the composition settles into something that lingers close to the skin for hours. On some, it lasts into the next day as a quiet skin-note warmth. On others, it fades faster. That's the nature of a sweet, warm fragrance in a warm world.
Cultural Impact
Sol de Janeiro expanded beyond body cream into concentrated fragrance, bringing its Brazilian beach culture identity into a more potent format. The Cheirosa fragrance line became the brand's signature, with the EDP concentration translating the tropical ethos into something designed to linger. The fragrance occupies a specific niche in the sweet, warm category, more edible than many, with the salt note providing a beach reference that keeps it from reading as purely dessert.
The House
United States · Est. 2015
Sol de Janeiro is a fragrance and body care brand founded in 2015 that draws its identity from Brazilian beach culture and the concept of joyful self-acceptance. The company rose to prominence through its Cheirosa fragrance line, building a loyal following around scents inspired by Brazilian ingredients like pistachio, vanilla, orchid, and sandalwood. Sol de Janeiro entered Sephora shelves in 2017 and experienced significant growth through its perfume mist category, which became a cultural phenomenon particularly among younger consumers. The brand achieved reported sales exceeding $1 billion by 2024, driven by viral popularity of mists like Cheirosa 62 and Cheirosa 68. By 2025, the company had expanded into full fine fragrance with edp formats while maintaining its positioning as a lifestyle brand centered on sensory experience and body positivity.
If this were a song
Community picks
This fragrance sounds like late afternoon on a warm beach, the point when the light turns golden and everything slows down. Bossa nova rhythms, warm acoustic textures, and a slight salt-air openness run through the track selection. The playlist moves between the dreamy and the grounded, matching how Cheirosa '62 shifts from an edible, attention-getting opening to a quiet, intimate skin-note warmth that lingers.
The Girl from Ipanema
Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto






















