Perfume: Sidonie Lancesseur
A body mist with refreshing essential oils of mandarin, rosemary and petitgrain. Marie Jeanne created a fairly novel format of a very gentle, pleasant mist which lends a boost of citrus freshness to sooth and delight the senses and mind.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is the scent of a bright, unhurried morning when you want to feel freshly washed without smelling perfumed. It suits close, everyday spaces: a shirt collar, damp hair, the quiet movement of someone who prefers understatement to display.
How to wear
Best in warm weather and mild heat, where its citrus-herbal profile stays crisp rather than sharp. Spray lightly on skin or hair for a soft, close-to-the-body trail, or mist onto fabric and linens for a cleaner, more diffused freshness that lingers without weight.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like aromatic citrus scents with a natural, understated feel: clean herbs, cool mint, and a soft lavender edge rather than sweetness or heavy projection. It will appeal to those who prefer discreet, easy freshness with a slightly botanical character.
The nose
Sidonie Lancesseur is known for a refined, modern style that often balances clarity with texture, letting raw materials feel legible rather than overworked. Her work frequently moves between natural brightness and a subtle, polished softness, which suits a composition like Brume d'été, where citrus and herbs are kept airy and transparent. In Brume d'été, her approach supports MarieJeanne’s preference for simplified formulas and ingredient focus: the fragrance reads as a clean, essential-oil mist rather than a dense perfume. That restraint is central to the scent’s appeal, giving the notes room to feel fresh, tactile, and easy to wear.
Collaborators
Georges Maubert shaped the creative direction of the house and its raw-material-led approach, simplifying the formula so the essential oils could stay vivid and recognizable. His role here is less about adding ornament than about framing the mist as a gentle, modern expression of natural freshness.
Marie Jeanne’s story
MarieJeanne is built around natural raw materials, traceable sourcing, and a pared-back aesthetic that keeps the focus on scent itself. The house favors simple formulas, responsible production, and a quietly artisanal spirit rooted in Grasse and in the memory of classic French perfumery.
Brume d'été’s concept
Brume d'été was conceived as a novel, very gentle mist format, using natural essential oils to create a refreshing summer veil for skin, hair, and even linens. The composition reflects MarieJeanne’s interest in pure ingredient identity and in the mood-lifting clarity of herbs and citrus, especially rosemary, mandarin, and petitgrain.
Extra info
Brume d'été is presented as a body and hair mist rather than a conventional perfume, and the house also suggests it can be used on bath linens or in interiors. Its formula highlights essential oils and a distinctly French, Grasse-rooted approach to natural freshness.
Perfume: Sidonie Lancesseur
A body mist with refreshing essential oils of mandarin, rosemary and petitgrain. Marie Jeanne created a fairly novel format of a very gentle, pleasant mist which lends a boost of citrus freshness to sooth and delight the senses and mind.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is the scent of a bright, unhurried morning when you want to feel freshly washed without smelling perfumed. It suits close, everyday spaces: a shirt collar, damp hair, the quiet movement of someone who prefers understatement to display.
How to wear
Best in warm weather and mild heat, where its citrus-herbal profile stays crisp rather than sharp. Spray lightly on skin or hair for a soft, close-to-the-body trail, or mist onto fabric and linens for a cleaner, more diffused freshness that lingers without weight.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like aromatic citrus scents with a natural, understated feel: clean herbs, cool mint, and a soft lavender edge rather than sweetness or heavy projection. It will appeal to those who prefer discreet, easy freshness with a slightly botanical character.
The nose
Sidonie Lancesseur is known for a refined, modern style that often balances clarity with texture, letting raw materials feel legible rather than overworked. Her work frequently moves between natural brightness and a subtle, polished softness, which suits a composition like Brume d'été, where citrus and herbs are kept airy and transparent. In Brume d'été, her approach supports MarieJeanne’s preference for simplified formulas and ingredient focus: the fragrance reads as a clean, essential-oil mist rather than a dense perfume. That restraint is central to the scent’s appeal, giving the notes room to feel fresh, tactile, and easy to wear.
Collaborators
Georges Maubert shaped the creative direction of the house and its raw-material-led approach, simplifying the formula so the essential oils could stay vivid and recognizable. His role here is less about adding ornament than about framing the mist as a gentle, modern expression of natural freshness.
Marie Jeanne’s story
MarieJeanne is built around natural raw materials, traceable sourcing, and a pared-back aesthetic that keeps the focus on scent itself. The house favors simple formulas, responsible production, and a quietly artisanal spirit rooted in Grasse and in the memory of classic French perfumery.
Brume d'été’s concept
Brume d'été was conceived as a novel, very gentle mist format, using natural essential oils to create a refreshing summer veil for skin, hair, and even linens. The composition reflects MarieJeanne’s interest in pure ingredient identity and in the mood-lifting clarity of herbs and citrus, especially rosemary, mandarin, and petitgrain.
Extra info
Brume d'été is presented as a body and hair mist rather than a conventional perfume, and the house also suggests it can be used on bath linens or in interiors. Its formula highlights essential oils and a distinctly French, Grasse-rooted approach to natural freshness.