Inspired by a dream of a romantic encounter in a Parisian bakery. The air is filled with the mouthwatering aroma of candied fruits, vanilla-laced pastries, a hint of sweet tobacco. You’re captivated by the sight of a beautiful stranger holding a bouquet of fresh freesias. This playfully flirty mix of cream-topped fruits and florals conjures the dream all over again.
Perfumer: Bertrand Duchaufour
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a fragrance for close quarters and low light, where its chocolate, tobacco and floral facets can feel almost tactile. It suits a confident, intimate setting rather than open-air brightness, projecting the sense of someone who arrives with warmth, mystery and a slightly dangerous sweetness.
How to wear
Best in cool weather or evening air, where the vanilla, myrrh and tobacco can bloom without becoming too dense. Apply sparingly at first; one to three sprays is enough to let the scent radiate in a soft, smoky halo and settle into a plush, edible skin scent.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like gourmand fragrances with depth: dark chocolate, resin, tobacco and rose rather than airy sweetness. It will appeal to those drawn to sensual, slightly animalic compositions with a polished woody-amber finish.
Release year
2024
The nose
Bertrand Duchaufour
Collaborators
Bernardo Fleming, Neydo’s founder and scent designer, shaped the brand’s dream-led concept and the broader creative framework behind the fragrance, treating perfumers as interpreters of imagined scents rather than simply executors of a brief.
Neydo’s story
Neydo treats perfume as a bridge between dreams and scent, turning nocturnal impressions into wearable compositions. The house leans into imagination and atmosphere, using fragrance as a way to translate inner images into something intimate, sensual and distinctly modern.
Blond Redhead 16.11’s concept
Blond Redhead 16.11 is built around Neydo’s dream-led concept, here imagined as a romantic encounter in a Parisian bakery. Vanilla pastries, candied fruits, sweet tobacco and a bouquet of fresh freesias create a scene that feels both playful and charged, with the fragrance unfolding like a remembered dream.
Extra info
The name appears in Neydo’s numbered format, with 16.11 likely referencing a date rather than a conventional title. The fragrance’s official imagery centers on a Parisian bakery, and the brand frames its perfumers as “dream catchers” translating dream scents into perfume.
Inspired by a dream of a romantic encounter in a Parisian bakery. The air is filled with the mouthwatering aroma of candied fruits, vanilla-laced pastries, a hint of sweet tobacco. You’re captivated by the sight of a beautiful stranger holding a bouquet of fresh freesias. This playfully flirty mix of cream-topped fruits and florals conjures the dream all over again.
Perfumer: Bertrand Duchaufour
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a fragrance for close quarters and low light, where its chocolate, tobacco and floral facets can feel almost tactile. It suits a confident, intimate setting rather than open-air brightness, projecting the sense of someone who arrives with warmth, mystery and a slightly dangerous sweetness.
How to wear
Best in cool weather or evening air, where the vanilla, myrrh and tobacco can bloom without becoming too dense. Apply sparingly at first; one to three sprays is enough to let the scent radiate in a soft, smoky halo and settle into a plush, edible skin scent.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like gourmand fragrances with depth: dark chocolate, resin, tobacco and rose rather than airy sweetness. It will appeal to those drawn to sensual, slightly animalic compositions with a polished woody-amber finish.
Release year
2024
The nose
Bertrand Duchaufour
Collaborators
Bernardo Fleming, Neydo’s founder and scent designer, shaped the brand’s dream-led concept and the broader creative framework behind the fragrance, treating perfumers as interpreters of imagined scents rather than simply executors of a brief.
Neydo’s story
Neydo treats perfume as a bridge between dreams and scent, turning nocturnal impressions into wearable compositions. The house leans into imagination and atmosphere, using fragrance as a way to translate inner images into something intimate, sensual and distinctly modern.
Blond Redhead 16.11’s concept
Blond Redhead 16.11 is built around Neydo’s dream-led concept, here imagined as a romantic encounter in a Parisian bakery. Vanilla pastries, candied fruits, sweet tobacco and a bouquet of fresh freesias create a scene that feels both playful and charged, with the fragrance unfolding like a remembered dream.
Extra info
The name appears in Neydo’s numbered format, with 16.11 likely referencing a date rather than a conventional title. The fragrance’s official imagery centers on a Parisian bakery, and the brand frames its perfumers as “dream catchers” translating dream scents into perfume.