#perfumehead
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look for the name CHEYANNE (requested by @dreamsofalife) | rosie evans super soft machine knit woollen playsuit w/ hand crocheted neckline, kapital japan button-up jacket in beige (c. 199o's), clyde "dia" wide brim woven seagrass sun hat w/ ties, perfumehead "cosmic cowboy" eau de parfum (cinnamon, galbanum, orris butter, angelica root, tobacco, whisky, amber, black musk, suede and white cocoa), r13 slouchy low rider cowboy boots
#cheyanne#name#request#outfit#dreamsofalife#hope you like !#beige#black#off-white#knit#rosie evans#playsuit#jacket#kapital#boots#footwear#leather#hat#woven#edp#perfume#perfumehead#headwear#clyde#r13#cowboy#old west#sand#queue
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back on my perfume bullshit there is one "basil" scented perfume that smellslike freshly cut grass that they have in basically every dm that im absolutely in love with for some reason.. and its cheap. but i fear it would cramp my style bc i just dont look like i should smell like ive been rolling around in grass 😔
#i mean. i would maybe get it as a perfumehead to just. have it for the times i want to smell like i just mowed the lawn or some shit#but as i said .... doesnt go w my wardrobe much#for an initial perfume investment i need something that will go w my clothes. so like. vampiric. fruity. tv static and old cassettes.#piksla.txt
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BOO (this is on fragrantica)
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its actually really funny how top/middle/base perfume notes is a really simple and easily explained concept but for the longest time i thought it was this esoteric mystery only real perfumeheads could comprehend
#.text#i might just be stupid but now that the mystery was unveiled i do want to get into perfume lmfao#next up is figure out whatever the fuck the is going on with foundation
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what would armand smell like?
im not a perfumehead but i know in dubai hes wearing something he picked to compliment louis’s fragrance so he’d be suffering in silence when louis changes scents without consulting him. for armand prob something marketed as Very Very Masculine For Men For Intellectual Men Who Do Things Patriarchally that costs like fourteen hundred bucks a bottle or whatever with the subtlest orange citrus note that “takes on personalized form” after eight hours (see: sours).
as for not literal perfume i mean im always wondering what the hell vampires smell like. do they have body odor…. ? there are strong implications that they are somehow …….. naturally cleaner? than humans? (HELLOOO alexandria’s genesis or whatever… purple eyes no anal hair 😍😍😍😍) …. but they also love burying themselves under the earth and like being murder machines so what the hell.
armand has probably smelled many different ways over hundreds of years and only half of them are good lol
i did pick the cologne i actually sometimes wear bc i went “i feel like this is what santiago smells like” though so make of that what u will
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After looking at and sampling perfumes with my sister, I've gotten into looking at perfume reviews on youtube to see if what I think lines up with what proper perfumeheads think, as well as learn a little more about perfume since I've always wanted to.
Glossier You Doux was one that my sister and I loved, although I couldn't really articulate why. It's a very warm, soft, and pretty fragrance! Androgynous, too. And perfumerism on youtube describes it perfectly, I think—it's like the smell of your best friend's house. And it reminds me so, so much of Kenma...heh. I feel like that intimate sort of warm, golden scent remniscent of gentle loving care is sooo indicative of him and his relationship with Kuroo. But then again, I make everything about them.
#🐰#I really am in love with the idea of Kenma wearing it...androgynous but slightly feminine...clings close to the skin and is intimate‚ warm#Sooo perfect for prelude lol. I love making small headcanons for prelude krkn they're practically my ocs at this point
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Perfumegirls please i dont know perfume notes or anything halp me
perfumeheads help me out what would be a smell similar to the mixture of perfumes i used to get complimented on Everywhere all the time constantly but i ran out of it. It was like a knockoff KKW crystal gardenia perfume oil rollerball thingy i got for like $3, oh lola by marc jacobs, a little bit of daisy by marc jacobs, a teeeeny bit of warm vanilla sugar bath and body works spray, and rose oil.
it smelled sort of purple? What notes does this have…. Roses… vanilla… what else
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being a perfumehead sounds so fun but i can nawt let myself get a hobby that requires spending money
#i already count myself lucky that my toku special interest didn't come with the toy collecting bug#i guess i could afford it i just get really ocd (<- i'm allowed to say this) about spending money plus i'm trying to save up to move out
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Gen-Z’s preferences have shaped the beauty industry in recent years, from acne stickers to faux freckles. But the fragrance category has especially felt Gen-Z’s influence.As maturing Gen-Z customers began to discover and experiment with scent, fragrance has emerged as a consistent bright spot for the beauty industry since 2021. That growing interest provided something of a cushion to the overall sector throughout the past year as it dealt with slowing sales; a study from consulting firm McKinsey noted that while fragrance is the smallest category in beauty, it was 2024’s fastest-growing. But the heavy reliance on the category has tested its resiliency. Gen-Z is still buying fragrance, but their preferences are shifting. Driven by PerfumeTok, today, these shoppers build up perfume collections, chase trends (like gourmand scents) and layer multiple fragrances at once, rather than sticking with a signature scent. But because they want to try so many scents, they’re also embracing more low-cost ways to do so. These behaviours are changing the category: In 2024, sales of prestige perfumes and colognes, the largest segment in fragrance, grew 14 percent year-over-year. But more consumers went for less expensive options when purchasing prestige — the largest fragrance segment — perfumes and colognes, with growth among 18 to 24-year-old shoppers predominantly driven by mini or travel sizes, according to market research firm Circana. Meanwhile, the mass channel has continued to face slowing sales between 2022 and 2024, growing just 2 percent year-over-year by September 2024.Fragrance is well positioned heading into 2025, but to keep the hot streak going, brands and companies will need to find ways not only to connect with Gen-Z, but convince them to trade up to full-size prestige and luxury fragrances. Doing so largely depends on brands releasing innovative products in unique packaging and finding entertaining avenues to reach customers amid a looming TikTok ban. But they also must address the Gen-Z — and increasingly, Gen Alpha — desire for less expensive scents in the form of body sprays, hair perfume, perfume solids and minis without getting them too used to shopping for the least expensive item. Whether Gen-Zers will find these attempts appealing could prove extremely consequential for the future of fragrance.“There’s an opportunity to continue to drive this business through younger shoppers, at least for some time,” said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of insights firm WSL Strategic Retail.The Innovation RaceGen-Z wants more out of fragrance innovation than just perfumes and candles.That desire has boosted the popularity of products like hair perfume and body mists, and now is giving way to a slate of other iterations of fragrance. Indie brand Perfumehead, for example, is leaning on fragrance oils, which are alcohol-free and said to last longer. Meanwhile, Glossier, Fenty Beauty and Byredo have all turned to solid fragrances, offering travel friendly options in visually friendly packaging. Separately, Jo Loves, the second brainchild of Jo Malone, sells fragrance paintbrushes for $58 which contain a perfumed gel to swipe across the skin. Mood-boosting fragrances are also on the rise. When Puig-owned Charlotte Tilbury launched fragrances space in April, its collection of six was designed with “mood-boosting” properties in mind. And in September, Coty partnered with Adidas to launch six scents based on “vibes” that elicited positive emotions. “Packaging and presentation are important, because fragrance can be a status symbol,” said Liebmann. “As are promotions that drive exclusivity, like [product] drops that are new or limited edition; and all those [other] ways to make it [popular] digitally and physically and drive demand.” For example, the team behind British Gen-Z makeup brand Lottie London launched fragrance through a partnership with Netflix’s show “Outer Banks,” dropping two limited-edition direct-to-consumer eau de parfums. The 50 millilitre and 100 millilitre sizes retail for $35 and $49, respectively.“It was an easier route for us to play in by [working with] a massively engaged audience, and that allowed us to test it with our community and the fans,” said Lyndon Robertson, brand director for Lottie London. “People also crave out-of-screen moments with [television] shows, so this felt like the right first step into fragrance.”Lottie London plans to roll out body spray with its retail partners, which include CVS and Walmart, in early 2025, and perfumes are planned for the second half of 2025. Body sprays and mists have gained significant traction among Gen-Zers, with Circana reporting that these products have average prices under $25, and have more than doubled in sales revenue since the first half of 2023. “Every [retailer] is looking for the next Sol de Janeiro,” Robertson said, referring to the L’Occitane Group-owned brand, whose beachy scents have become a Gen-Z and Gen Alpha favourite. Last year, Sol de Janeiro was Sephora’s top-selling brand.Communicating On and OfflineAccording to Circana’s most recent consumer fragrance study, 73 percent of Gen-Zers wear fragrance at least three times per week. And oftentimes, social media spurs those purchases: TikTok ranked No. 1 for Gen-Z in influencing fragrance purchases at 66 percent, while Instagram came in second at 64 percent, followed by YouTube at 41 percent.“Fragrance had historically been behind the other categories in social, and more and more, it’s finding space to grow because there’s more of a passion and the community is driving it,” said Malena Higuera, general manager of Noyz, a Gen-Z-centric brand from incubator Beach House Group. “People are excited to share their personal cocktail of what they feel like that day, and as a result, what they want to evoke and emote and smell like.”Noyz is about “raw emotion” and not taking yourself too seriously, she said, as demonstrated with the names of its initial fragrances,“Shitty Day” and “Unmute.” Noyz launched nationally in Ulta Beauty when the brand debuted in June. It offers four fragrances for 50 millilitres at $85 each, plus a sample discovery set for $22, and individual 15-millilitre sprays for $35 each. “Storytelling in fragrance is aspirational but fantastical to the point that it doesn’t reflect how you truly feel,” she said. “We want to be there where we’re ready to get [emotionally] raw.”Higuera said that keeping Gen-Z engaged in fragrances requires more than just product innovation, particularly around aligning with their values. For World Mental Health Day last fall the brand created a voicemail box for its customers, meant to encourage unfiltered emotional expression; fans could call and “leave a message” with their thoughts and concerns.Feeding into online communities is a key sales and brand equity driver in a social media age. Unlike the splashy and highly-sexed perfume ads from fashion brands and celebrities that have long dominated, digitally native fragrance brands aim for conversations with customers, not aspirational dictations. Glossier first teased its two latest fragrances, Rêve and Doux, in Sept. 2024 on Instagram, and sent locked boxes with the scents inside to a number of influencers who, on the day of their release, received a code to open them.However, while Gen-Z is significantly more likely to be influenced by social media than other generations, online reviews and recommendations from friends and family also play a big role with this cohort, according to Circana. And they’re still making impulse purchases in-store. Higuera said she anticipates more experiential opportunities in 2025, especially in the face of a TikTok ban, and Noyz already plans to partake in offline marketing. Lottie London invested in offline events with Netflix to promote its “Outer Banks” scents, with plans for more in 2025.“The sensory side of beauty is so important to [Gen-Z] and taking it off a screen to interact in-real-life is key to build even stronger consumer-brand connections,” said Robertson. “[But] events do need to have a pull beyond products — they need to be made into a ‘day out’ with multifaceted events that invite consumers to be fully immersed into the brand world.” Source link
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Gen-Z’s preferences have shaped the beauty industry in recent years, from acne stickers to faux freckles. But the fragrance category has especially felt Gen-Z’s influence.As maturing Gen-Z customers began to discover and experiment with scent, fragrance has emerged as a consistent bright spot for the beauty industry since 2021. That growing interest provided something of a cushion to the overall sector throughout the past year as it dealt with slowing sales; a study from consulting firm McKinsey noted that while fragrance is the smallest category in beauty, it was 2024’s fastest-growing. But the heavy reliance on the category has tested its resiliency. Gen-Z is still buying fragrance, but their preferences are shifting. Driven by PerfumeTok, today, these shoppers build up perfume collections, chase trends (like gourmand scents) and layer multiple fragrances at once, rather than sticking with a signature scent. But because they want to try so many scents, they’re also embracing more low-cost ways to do so. These behaviours are changing the category: In 2024, sales of prestige perfumes and colognes, the largest segment in fragrance, grew 14 percent year-over-year. But more consumers went for less expensive options when purchasing prestige — the largest fragrance segment — perfumes and colognes, with growth among 18 to 24-year-old shoppers predominantly driven by mini or travel sizes, according to market research firm Circana. Meanwhile, the mass channel has continued to face slowing sales between 2022 and 2024, growing just 2 percent year-over-year by September 2024.Fragrance is well positioned heading into 2025, but to keep the hot streak going, brands and companies will need to find ways not only to connect with Gen-Z, but convince them to trade up to full-size prestige and luxury fragrances. Doing so largely depends on brands releasing innovative products in unique packaging and finding entertaining avenues to reach customers amid a looming TikTok ban. But they also must address the Gen-Z — and increasingly, Gen Alpha — desire for less expensive scents in the form of body sprays, hair perfume, perfume solids and minis without getting them too used to shopping for the least expensive item. Whether Gen-Zers will find these attempts appealing could prove extremely consequential for the future of fragrance.“There’s an opportunity to continue to drive this business through younger shoppers, at least for some time,” said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of insights firm WSL Strategic Retail.The Innovation RaceGen-Z wants more out of fragrance innovation than just perfumes and candles.That desire has boosted the popularity of products like hair perfume and body mists, and now is giving way to a slate of other iterations of fragrance. Indie brand Perfumehead, for example, is leaning on fragrance oils, which are alcohol-free and said to last longer. Meanwhile, Glossier, Fenty Beauty and Byredo have all turned to solid fragrances, offering travel friendly options in visually friendly packaging. Separately, Jo Loves, the second brainchild of Jo Malone, sells fragrance paintbrushes for $58 which contain a perfumed gel to swipe across the skin. Mood-boosting fragrances are also on the rise. When Puig-owned Charlotte Tilbury launched fragrances space in April, its collection of six was designed with “mood-boosting” properties in mind. And in September, Coty partnered with Adidas to launch six scents based on “vibes” that elicited positive emotions. “Packaging and presentation are important, because fragrance can be a status symbol,” said Liebmann. “As are promotions that drive exclusivity, like [product] drops that are new or limited edition; and all those [other] ways to make it [popular] digitally and physically and drive demand.” For example, the team behind British Gen-Z makeup brand Lottie London launched fragrance through a partnership with Netflix’s show “Outer Banks,” dropping two limited-edition direct-to-consumer eau de parfums. The 50 millilitre and 100 millilitre sizes retail for $35 and $49, respectively.“It was an easier route for us to play in by [working with] a massively engaged audience, and that allowed us to test it with our community and the fans,” said Lyndon Robertson, brand director for Lottie London. “People also crave out-of-screen moments with [television] shows, so this felt like the right first step into fragrance.”Lottie London plans to roll out body spray with its retail partners, which include CVS and Walmart, in early 2025, and perfumes are planned for the second half of 2025. Body sprays and mists have gained significant traction among Gen-Zers, with Circana reporting that these products have average prices under $25, and have more than doubled in sales revenue since the first half of 2023. “Every [retailer] is looking for the next Sol de Janeiro,” Robertson said, referring to the L’Occitane Group-owned brand, whose beachy scents have become a Gen-Z and Gen Alpha favourite. Last year, Sol de Janeiro was Sephora’s top-selling brand.Communicating On and OfflineAccording to Circana’s most recent consumer fragrance study, 73 percent of Gen-Zers wear fragrance at least three times per week. And oftentimes, social media spurs those purchases: TikTok ranked No. 1 for Gen-Z in influencing fragrance purchases at 66 percent, while Instagram came in second at 64 percent, followed by YouTube at 41 percent.“Fragrance had historically been behind the other categories in social, and more and more, it’s finding space to grow because there’s more of a passion and the community is driving it,” said Malena Higuera, general manager of Noyz, a Gen-Z-centric brand from incubator Beach House Group. “People are excited to share their personal cocktail of what they feel like that day, and as a result, what they want to evoke and emote and smell like.”Noyz is about “raw emotion” and not taking yourself too seriously, she said, as demonstrated with the names of its initial fragrances,“Shitty Day” and “Unmute.” Noyz launched nationally in Ulta Beauty when the brand debuted in June. It offers four fragrances for 50 millilitres at $85 each, plus a sample discovery set for $22, and individual 15-millilitre sprays for $35 each. “Storytelling in fragrance is aspirational but fantastical to the point that it doesn’t reflect how you truly feel,” she said. “We want to be there where we’re ready to get [emotionally] raw.”Higuera said that keeping Gen-Z engaged in fragrances requires more than just product innovation, particularly around aligning with their values. For World Mental Health Day last fall the brand created a voicemail box for its customers, meant to encourage unfiltered emotional expression; fans could call and “leave a message” with their thoughts and concerns.Feeding into online communities is a key sales and brand equity driver in a social media age. Unlike the splashy and highly-sexed perfume ads from fashion brands and celebrities that have long dominated, digitally native fragrance brands aim for conversations with customers, not aspirational dictations. Glossier first teased its two latest fragrances, Rêve and Doux, in Sept. 2024 on Instagram, and sent locked boxes with the scents inside to a number of influencers who, on the day of their release, received a code to open them.However, while Gen-Z is significantly more likely to be influenced by social media than other generations, online reviews and recommendations from friends and family also play a big role with this cohort, according to Circana. And they’re still making impulse purchases in-store. Higuera said she anticipates more experiential opportunities in 2025, especially in the face of a TikTok ban, and Noyz already plans to partake in offline marketing. Lottie London invested in offline events with Netflix to promote its “Outer Banks” scents, with plans for more in 2025.“The sensory side of beauty is so important to [Gen-Z] and taking it off a screen to interact in-real-life is key to build even stronger consumer-brand connections,” said Robertson. “[But] events do need to have a pull beyond products — they need to be made into a ‘day out’ with multifaceted events that invite consumers to be fully immersed into the brand world.” Source link
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look for the name: MAHIRA
@catharticlove
brandon maxwell "daria" wool-blend peplum top
miu miu cuffed knee-length shorts in grey
dries van noten leather penny loafers in tan
perfumehead "moonflower" extrait de parfum
christian dior silk l'étoile mitzah neck/ponytail scarf
alighieri "the etruscan reminder" hoop earrings in 24kt gold plate
hermès "kelly cut" black leather clutch purse
#mahira#name#request#for having a lot of indicidual ideas i think this came together well#anyway#hope you like !#Hermès#bag#vintage#brandon maxwell#miu miu#dries van noten#footwear#perfumehead#perfume#christian dior#scarf#alighieri#gold#grey#camel#jewellry#ring#queue
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Gen-Z’s preferences have shaped the beauty industry in recent years, from acne stickers to faux freckles. But the fragrance category has especially felt Gen-Z’s influence.As maturing Gen-Z customers began to discover and experiment with scent, fragrance has emerged as a consistent bright spot for the beauty industry since 2021. That growing interest provided something of a cushion to the overall sector throughout the past year as it dealt with slowing sales; a study from consulting firm McKinsey noted that while fragrance is the smallest category in beauty, it was 2024’s fastest-growing. But the heavy reliance on the category has tested its resiliency. Gen-Z is still buying fragrance, but their preferences are shifting. Driven by PerfumeTok, today, these shoppers build up perfume collections, chase trends (like gourmand scents) and layer multiple fragrances at once, rather than sticking with a signature scent. But because they want to try so many scents, they’re also embracing more low-cost ways to do so. These behaviours are changing the category: In 2024, sales of prestige perfumes and colognes, the largest segment in fragrance, grew 14 percent year-over-year. But more consumers went for less expensive options when purchasing prestige — the largest fragrance segment — perfumes and colognes, with growth among 18 to 24-year-old shoppers predominantly driven by mini or travel sizes, according to market research firm Circana. Meanwhile, the mass channel has continued to face slowing sales between 2022 and 2024, growing just 2 percent year-over-year by September 2024.Fragrance is well positioned heading into 2025, but to keep the hot streak going, brands and companies will need to find ways not only to connect with Gen-Z, but convince them to trade up to full-size prestige and luxury fragrances. Doing so largely depends on brands releasing innovative products in unique packaging and finding entertaining avenues to reach customers amid a looming TikTok ban. But they also must address the Gen-Z — and increasingly, Gen Alpha — desire for less expensive scents in the form of body sprays, hair perfume, perfume solids and minis without getting them too used to shopping for the least expensive item. Whether Gen-Zers will find these attempts appealing could prove extremely consequential for the future of fragrance.“There’s an opportunity to continue to drive this business through younger shoppers, at least for some time,” said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of insights firm WSL Strategic Retail.The Innovation RaceGen-Z wants more out of fragrance innovation than just perfumes and candles.That desire has boosted the popularity of products like hair perfume and body mists, and now is giving way to a slate of other iterations of fragrance. Indie brand Perfumehead, for example, is leaning on fragrance oils, which are alcohol-free and said to last longer. Meanwhile, Glossier, Fenty Beauty and Byredo have all turned to solid fragrances, offering travel friendly options in visually friendly packaging. Separately, Jo Loves, the second brainchild of Jo Malone, sells fragrance paintbrushes for $58 which contain a perfumed gel to swipe across the skin. Mood-boosting fragrances are also on the rise. When Puig-owned Charlotte Tilbury launched fragrances space in April, its collection of six was designed with “mood-boosting” properties in mind. And in September, Coty partnered with Adidas to launch six scents based on “vibes” that elicited positive emotions. “Packaging and presentation are important, because fragrance can be a status symbol,” said Liebmann. “As are promotions that drive exclusivity, like [product] drops that are new or limited edition; and all those [other] ways to make it [popular] digitally and physically and drive demand.” For example, the team behind British Gen-Z makeup brand Lottie London launched fragrance through a partnership with Netflix’s show “Outer Banks,” dropping two limited-edition direct-to-consumer eau de parfums. The 50 millilitre and 100 millilitre sizes retail for $35 and $49, respectively.“It was an easier route for us to play in by [working with] a massively engaged audience, and that allowed us to test it with our community and the fans,” said Lyndon Robertson, brand director for Lottie London. “People also crave out-of-screen moments with [television] shows, so this felt like the right first step into fragrance.”Lottie London plans to roll out body spray with its retail partners, which include CVS and Walmart, in early 2025, and perfumes are planned for the second half of 2025. Body sprays and mists have gained significant traction among Gen-Zers, with Circana reporting that these products have average prices under $25, and have more than doubled in sales revenue since the first half of 2023. “Every [retailer] is looking for the next Sol de Janeiro,” Robertson said, referring to the L’Occitane Group-owned brand, whose beachy scents have become a Gen-Z and Gen Alpha favourite. Last year, Sol de Janeiro was Sephora’s top-selling brand.Communicating On and OfflineAccording to Circana’s most recent consumer fragrance study, 73 percent of Gen-Zers wear fragrance at least three times per week. And oftentimes, social media spurs those purchases: TikTok ranked No. 1 for Gen-Z in influencing fragrance purchases at 66 percent, while Instagram came in second at 64 percent, followed by YouTube at 41 percent.“Fragrance had historically been behind the other categories in social, and more and more, it’s finding space to grow because there’s more of a passion and the community is driving it,” said Malena Higuera, general manager of Noyz, a Gen-Z-centric brand from incubator Beach House Group. “People are excited to share their personal cocktail of what they feel like that day, and as a result, what they want to evoke and emote and smell like.”Noyz is about “raw emotion” and not taking yourself too seriously, she said, as demonstrated with the names of its initial fragrances,“Shitty Day” and “Unmute.” Noyz launched nationally in Ulta Beauty when the brand debuted in June. It offers four fragrances for 50 millilitres at $85 each, plus a sample discovery set for $22, and individual 15-millilitre sprays for $35 each. “Storytelling in fragrance is aspirational but fantastical to the point that it doesn’t reflect how you truly feel,” she said. “We want to be there where we’re ready to get [emotionally] raw.”Higuera said that keeping Gen-Z engaged in fragrances requires more than just product innovation, particularly around aligning with their values. For World Mental Health Day last fall the brand created a voicemail box for its customers, meant to encourage unfiltered emotional expression; fans could call and “leave a message” with their thoughts and concerns.Feeding into online communities is a key sales and brand equity driver in a social media age. Unlike the splashy and highly-sexed perfume ads from fashion brands and celebrities that have long dominated, digitally native fragrance brands aim for conversations with customers, not aspirational dictations. Glossier first teased its two latest fragrances, Rêve and Doux, in Sept. 2024 on Instagram, and sent locked boxes with the scents inside to a number of influencers who, on the day of their release, received a code to open them.However, while Gen-Z is significantly more likely to be influenced by social media than other generations, online reviews and recommendations from friends and family also play a big role with this cohort, according to Circana. And they’re still making impulse purchases in-store. Higuera said she anticipates more experiential opportunities in 2025, especially in the face of a TikTok ban, and Noyz already plans to partake in offline marketing. Lottie London invested in offline events with Netflix to promote its “Outer Banks” scents, with plans for more in 2025.“The sensory side of beauty is so important to [Gen-Z] and taking it off a screen to interact in-real-life is key to build even stronger consumer-brand connections,” said Robertson. “[But] events do need to have a pull beyond products — they need to be made into a ‘day out’ with multifaceted events that invite consumers to be fully immersed into the brand world.” Source link
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Gen-Z’s preferences have shaped the beauty industry in recent years, from acne stickers to faux freckles. But the fragrance category has especially felt Gen-Z’s influence.As maturing Gen-Z customers began to discover and experiment with scent, fragrance has emerged as a consistent bright spot for the beauty industry since 2021. That growing interest provided something of a cushion to the overall sector throughout the past year as it dealt with slowing sales; a study from consulting firm McKinsey noted that while fragrance is the smallest category in beauty, it was 2024’s fastest-growing. But the heavy reliance on the category has tested its resiliency. Gen-Z is still buying fragrance, but their preferences are shifting. Driven by PerfumeTok, today, these shoppers build up perfume collections, chase trends (like gourmand scents) and layer multiple fragrances at once, rather than sticking with a signature scent. But because they want to try so many scents, they’re also embracing more low-cost ways to do so. These behaviours are changing the category: In 2024, sales of prestige perfumes and colognes, the largest segment in fragrance, grew 14 percent year-over-year. But more consumers went for less expensive options when purchasing prestige — the largest fragrance segment — perfumes and colognes, with growth among 18 to 24-year-old shoppers predominantly driven by mini or travel sizes, according to market research firm Circana. Meanwhile, the mass channel has continued to face slowing sales between 2022 and 2024, growing just 2 percent year-over-year by September 2024.Fragrance is well positioned heading into 2025, but to keep the hot streak going, brands and companies will need to find ways not only to connect with Gen-Z, but convince them to trade up to full-size prestige and luxury fragrances. Doing so largely depends on brands releasing innovative products in unique packaging and finding entertaining avenues to reach customers amid a looming TikTok ban. But they also must address the Gen-Z — and increasingly, Gen Alpha — desire for less expensive scents in the form of body sprays, hair perfume, perfume solids and minis without getting them too used to shopping for the least expensive item. Whether Gen-Zers will find these attempts appealing could prove extremely consequential for the future of fragrance.“There’s an opportunity to continue to drive this business through younger shoppers, at least for some time,” said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of insights firm WSL Strategic Retail.The Innovation RaceGen-Z wants more out of fragrance innovation than just perfumes and candles.That desire has boosted the popularity of products like hair perfume and body mists, and now is giving way to a slate of other iterations of fragrance. Indie brand Perfumehead, for example, is leaning on fragrance oils, which are alcohol-free and said to last longer. Meanwhile, Glossier, Fenty Beauty and Byredo have all turned to solid fragrances, offering travel friendly options in visually friendly packaging. Separately, Jo Loves, the second brainchild of Jo Malone, sells fragrance paintbrushes for $58 which contain a perfumed gel to swipe across the skin. Mood-boosting fragrances are also on the rise. When Puig-owned Charlotte Tilbury launched fragrances space in April, its collection of six was designed with “mood-boosting” properties in mind. And in September, Coty partnered with Adidas to launch six scents based on “vibes” that elicited positive emotions. “Packaging and presentation are important, because fragrance can be a status symbol,” said Liebmann. “As are promotions that drive exclusivity, like [product] drops that are new or limited edition; and all those [other] ways to make it [popular] digitally and physically and drive demand.” For example, the team behind British Gen-Z makeup brand Lottie London launched fragrance through a partnership with Netflix’s show “Outer Banks,” dropping two limited-edition direct-to-consumer eau de parfums. The 50 millilitre and 100 millilitre sizes retail for $35 and $49, respectively.“It was an easier route for us to play in by [working with] a massively engaged audience, and that allowed us to test it with our community and the fans,” said Lyndon Robertson, brand director for Lottie London. “People also crave out-of-screen moments with [television] shows, so this felt like the right first step into fragrance.”Lottie London plans to roll out body spray with its retail partners, which include CVS and Walmart, in early 2025, and perfumes are planned for the second half of 2025. Body sprays and mists have gained significant traction among Gen-Zers, with Circana reporting that these products have average prices under $25, and have more than doubled in sales revenue since the first half of 2023. “Every [retailer] is looking for the next Sol de Janeiro,” Robertson said, referring to the L’Occitane Group-owned brand, whose beachy scents have become a Gen-Z and Gen Alpha favourite. Last year, Sol de Janeiro was Sephora’s top-selling brand.Communicating On and OfflineAccording to Circana’s most recent consumer fragrance study, 73 percent of Gen-Zers wear fragrance at least three times per week. And oftentimes, social media spurs those purchases: TikTok ranked No. 1 for Gen-Z in influencing fragrance purchases at 66 percent, while Instagram came in second at 64 percent, followed by YouTube at 41 percent.“Fragrance had historically been behind the other categories in social, and more and more, it’s finding space to grow because there’s more of a passion and the community is driving it,” said Malena Higuera, general manager of Noyz, a Gen-Z-centric brand from incubator Beach House Group. “People are excited to share their personal cocktail of what they feel like that day, and as a result, what they want to evoke and emote and smell like.”Noyz is about “raw emotion” and not taking yourself too seriously, she said, as demonstrated with the names of its initial fragrances,“Shitty Day” and “Unmute.” Noyz launched nationally in Ulta Beauty when the brand debuted in June. It offers four fragrances for 50 millilitres at $85 each, plus a sample discovery set for $22, and individual 15-millilitre sprays for $35 each. “Storytelling in fragrance is aspirational but fantastical to the point that it doesn’t reflect how you truly feel,” she said. “We want to be there where we’re ready to get [emotionally] raw.”Higuera said that keeping Gen-Z engaged in fragrances requires more than just product innovation, particularly around aligning with their values. For World Mental Health Day last fall the brand created a voicemail box for its customers, meant to encourage unfiltered emotional expression; fans could call and “leave a message” with their thoughts and concerns.Feeding into online communities is a key sales and brand equity driver in a social media age. Unlike the splashy and highly-sexed perfume ads from fashion brands and celebrities that have long dominated, digitally native fragrance brands aim for conversations with customers, not aspirational dictations. Glossier first teased its two latest fragrances, Rêve and Doux, in Sept. 2024 on Instagram, and sent locked boxes with the scents inside to a number of influencers who, on the day of their release, received a code to open them.However, while Gen-Z is significantly more likely to be influenced by social media than other generations, online reviews and recommendations from friends and family also play a big role with this cohort, according to Circana. And they’re still making impulse purchases in-store. Higuera said she anticipates more experiential opportunities in 2025, especially in the face of a TikTok ban, and Noyz already plans to partake in offline marketing. Lottie London invested in offline events with Netflix to promote its “Outer Banks” scents, with plans for more in 2025.“The sensory side of beauty is so important to [Gen-Z] and taking it off a screen to interact in-real-life is key to build even stronger consumer-brand connections,” said Robertson. “[But] events do need to have a pull beyond products — they need to be made into a ‘day out’ with multifaceted events that invite consumers to be fully immersed into the brand world.” Source link
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Gen-Z’s preferences have shaped the beauty industry in recent years, from acne stickers to faux freckles. But the fragrance category has especially felt Gen-Z’s influence.As maturing Gen-Z customers began to discover and experiment with scent, fragrance has emerged as a consistent bright spot for the beauty industry since 2021. That growing interest provided something of a cushion to the overall sector throughout the past year as it dealt with slowing sales; a study from consulting firm McKinsey noted that while fragrance is the smallest category in beauty, it was 2024’s fastest-growing. But the heavy reliance on the category has tested its resiliency. Gen-Z is still buying fragrance, but their preferences are shifting. Driven by PerfumeTok, today, these shoppers build up perfume collections, chase trends (like gourmand scents) and layer multiple fragrances at once, rather than sticking with a signature scent. But because they want to try so many scents, they’re also embracing more low-cost ways to do so. These behaviours are changing the category: In 2024, sales of prestige perfumes and colognes, the largest segment in fragrance, grew 14 percent year-over-year. But more consumers went for less expensive options when purchasing prestige — the largest fragrance segment — perfumes and colognes, with growth among 18 to 24-year-old shoppers predominantly driven by mini or travel sizes, according to market research firm Circana. Meanwhile, the mass channel has continued to face slowing sales between 2022 and 2024, growing just 2 percent year-over-year by September 2024.Fragrance is well positioned heading into 2025, but to keep the hot streak going, brands and companies will need to find ways not only to connect with Gen-Z, but convince them to trade up to full-size prestige and luxury fragrances. Doing so largely depends on brands releasing innovative products in unique packaging and finding entertaining avenues to reach customers amid a looming TikTok ban. But they also must address the Gen-Z — and increasingly, Gen Alpha — desire for less expensive scents in the form of body sprays, hair perfume, perfume solids and minis without getting them too used to shopping for the least expensive item. Whether Gen-Zers will find these attempts appealing could prove extremely consequential for the future of fragrance.“There’s an opportunity to continue to drive this business through younger shoppers, at least for some time,” said Wendy Liebmann, CEO of insights firm WSL Strategic Retail.The Innovation RaceGen-Z wants more out of fragrance innovation than just perfumes and candles.That desire has boosted the popularity of products like hair perfume and body mists, and now is giving way to a slate of other iterations of fragrance. Indie brand Perfumehead, for example, is leaning on fragrance oils, which are alcohol-free and said to last longer. Meanwhile, Glossier, Fenty Beauty and Byredo have all turned to solid fragrances, offering travel friendly options in visually friendly packaging. Separately, Jo Loves, the second brainchild of Jo Malone, sells fragrance paintbrushes for $58 which contain a perfumed gel to swipe across the skin. Mood-boosting fragrances are also on the rise. When Puig-owned Charlotte Tilbury launched fragrances space in April, its collection of six was designed with “mood-boosting” properties in mind. And in September, Coty partnered with Adidas to launch six scents based on “vibes” that elicited positive emotions. “Packaging and presentation are important, because fragrance can be a status symbol,” said Liebmann. “As are promotions that drive exclusivity, like [product] drops that are new or limited edition; and all those [other] ways to make it [popular] digitally and physically and drive demand.” For example, the team behind British Gen-Z makeup brand Lottie London launched fragrance through a partnership with Netflix’s show “Outer Banks,” dropping two limited-edition direct-to-consumer eau de parfums. The 50 millilitre and 100 millilitre sizes retail for $35 and $49, respectively.“It was an easier route for us to play in by [working with] a massively engaged audience, and that allowed us to test it with our community and the fans,” said Lyndon Robertson, brand director for Lottie London. “People also crave out-of-screen moments with [television] shows, so this felt like the right first step into fragrance.”Lottie London plans to roll out body spray with its retail partners, which include CVS and Walmart, in early 2025, and perfumes are planned for the second half of 2025. Body sprays and mists have gained significant traction among Gen-Zers, with Circana reporting that these products have average prices under $25, and have more than doubled in sales revenue since the first half of 2023. “Every [retailer] is looking for the next Sol de Janeiro,” Robertson said, referring to the L’Occitane Group-owned brand, whose beachy scents have become a Gen-Z and Gen Alpha favourite. Last year, Sol de Janeiro was Sephora’s top-selling brand.Communicating On and OfflineAccording to Circana’s most recent consumer fragrance study, 73 percent of Gen-Zers wear fragrance at least three times per week. And oftentimes, social media spurs those purchases: TikTok ranked No. 1 for Gen-Z in influencing fragrance purchases at 66 percent, while Instagram came in second at 64 percent, followed by YouTube at 41 percent.“Fragrance had historically been behind the other categories in social, and more and more, it’s finding space to grow because there’s more of a passion and the community is driving it,” said Malena Higuera, general manager of Noyz, a Gen-Z-centric brand from incubator Beach House Group. “People are excited to share their personal cocktail of what they feel like that day, and as a result, what they want to evoke and emote and smell like.”Noyz is about “raw emotion” and not taking yourself too seriously, she said, as demonstrated with the names of its initial fragrances,“Shitty Day” and “Unmute.” Noyz launched nationally in Ulta Beauty when the brand debuted in June. It offers four fragrances for 50 millilitres at $85 each, plus a sample discovery set for $22, and individual 15-millilitre sprays for $35 each. “Storytelling in fragrance is aspirational but fantastical to the point that it doesn’t reflect how you truly feel,” she said. “We want to be there where we’re ready to get [emotionally] raw.”Higuera said that keeping Gen-Z engaged in fragrances requires more than just product innovation, particularly around aligning with their values. For World Mental Health Day last fall the brand created a voicemail box for its customers, meant to encourage unfiltered emotional expression; fans could call and “leave a message” with their thoughts and concerns.Feeding into online communities is a key sales and brand equity driver in a social media age. Unlike the splashy and highly-sexed perfume ads from fashion brands and celebrities that have long dominated, digitally native fragrance brands aim for conversations with customers, not aspirational dictations. Glossier first teased its two latest fragrances, Rêve and Doux, in Sept. 2024 on Instagram, and sent locked boxes with the scents inside to a number of influencers who, on the day of their release, received a code to open them.However, while Gen-Z is significantly more likely to be influenced by social media than other generations, online reviews and recommendations from friends and family also play a big role with this cohort, according to Circana. And they’re still making impulse purchases in-store. Higuera said she anticipates more experiential opportunities in 2025, especially in the face of a TikTok ban, and Noyz already plans to partake in offline marketing. Lottie London invested in offline events with Netflix to promote its “Outer Banks” scents, with plans for more in 2025.“The sensory side of beauty is so important to [Gen-Z] and taking it off a screen to interact in-real-life is key to build even stronger consumer-brand connections,” said Robertson. “[But] events do need to have a pull beyond products — they need to be made into a ‘day out’ with multifaceted events that invite consumers to be fully immersed into the brand world.” Source link
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is there a perfumehead mutual that can give me fragrance recs i like burberry her & lancome idole rn. i own versace red jeans zara energetically new york lush lust idk i like fruity and i like jasmine i guess. looking for something feminine and like fresh but not girly and not too powdery ykwim. ❤️
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: Perfumehead Somewhere EDP.
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