The creamy lemon-vanilla of magnolia joins forces with the gourmand glamour of a grand cru coffee liquor. Rich, sweet and deep, set aglow with a ribbon of fluffy musk.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close quarters and low light, when the room is quiet enough for its creamy coffee-magnolia contrast to unfold. It reads as composed and intimate, with a soft gourmand trail that feels more tailored than indulgent.
How to wear
Best worn in moderate or cool weather, where its milky sweetness and coffee depth can stay smooth rather than turn dense. One to two sprays are enough to let the woody base and fluffy musk project gently; on skin it should feel creamy and rounded, with a soft aura in the air.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like gourmand notes with restraint, creamy florals with a twist, and fragrances that balance sweetness with a woody backbone. It will appeal to those who prefer polished, intimate scents over loud dessert-style compositions.
The nose
Jean Sauvage is Binet-Papillon’s exclusive in-house perfumer, working in close collaboration with founder Virginie Choné in a four-handed creative process. His role is central to the house’s identity: he composes only for Binet-Papillon, with the freedom to shape fragrances that feel personal, textured and emotionally direct. Sauvage’s style, as presented by the brand, leans artisanal and poetic, with an emphasis on natural materials and expressive contrasts. In a house built around emotion rather than trend, his work helps translate Choné’s vision into fragrances that feel intimate, distinctive and carefully constructed.
Collaborators
Virginie Choné, the founder, shapes the house’s creative direction and emotional brief, while Jean Sauvage develops the formulas in a four-handed process with her. Their collaboration is presented as a shared authorship: Choné defines the brand’s poetic intent, and Sauvage turns that vision into the finished scent.
Binet-Papillon’s story
Binet-Papillon is a French niche house built around emotion, craftsmanship and a modern reading of haute perfumery. Its identity blends heritage references with a strong artisanal ethic, favouring natural and organic materials, elegant composition and fragrances designed to feel expressive rather than trend-led.
Extra info
Binet-Papillon frames its perfumes as singular creative acts meant to provoke emotion, and this fragrance follows that idea with an unusual pairing of magnolia and coffee. The house also presents its bottles with 17th- and 18th-century Parisian visual references.
The creamy lemon-vanilla of magnolia joins forces with the gourmand glamour of a grand cru coffee liquor. Rich, sweet and deep, set aglow with a ribbon of fluffy musk.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close quarters and low light, when the room is quiet enough for its creamy coffee-magnolia contrast to unfold. It reads as composed and intimate, with a soft gourmand trail that feels more tailored than indulgent.
How to wear
Best worn in moderate or cool weather, where its milky sweetness and coffee depth can stay smooth rather than turn dense. One to two sprays are enough to let the woody base and fluffy musk project gently; on skin it should feel creamy and rounded, with a soft aura in the air.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like gourmand notes with restraint, creamy florals with a twist, and fragrances that balance sweetness with a woody backbone. It will appeal to those who prefer polished, intimate scents over loud dessert-style compositions.
The nose
Jean Sauvage is Binet-Papillon’s exclusive in-house perfumer, working in close collaboration with founder Virginie Choné in a four-handed creative process. His role is central to the house’s identity: he composes only for Binet-Papillon, with the freedom to shape fragrances that feel personal, textured and emotionally direct. Sauvage’s style, as presented by the brand, leans artisanal and poetic, with an emphasis on natural materials and expressive contrasts. In a house built around emotion rather than trend, his work helps translate Choné’s vision into fragrances that feel intimate, distinctive and carefully constructed.
Collaborators
Virginie Choné, the founder, shapes the house’s creative direction and emotional brief, while Jean Sauvage develops the formulas in a four-handed process with her. Their collaboration is presented as a shared authorship: Choné defines the brand’s poetic intent, and Sauvage turns that vision into the finished scent.
Binet-Papillon’s story
Binet-Papillon is a French niche house built around emotion, craftsmanship and a modern reading of haute perfumery. Its identity blends heritage references with a strong artisanal ethic, favouring natural and organic materials, elegant composition and fragrances designed to feel expressive rather than trend-led.
Extra info
Binet-Papillon frames its perfumes as singular creative acts meant to provoke emotion, and this fragrance follows that idea with an unusual pairing of magnolia and coffee. The house also presents its bottles with 17th- and 18th-century Parisian visual references.