Intimately quiet or quietly intimate?
Inspired by famous voyeuristic novel L'Enfer by Henri Barbusse, Poudre de Riz is a perfume that simmers with the scent of the morning after.
A delicate rice accord, mingles with sweet syrupy rose. Luminous coconut & tiare flower rest on a silken bed of benzoin.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close distance and low light, where its powdery rice accord and syrupy rose read as skin rather than statement. It suits a private, composed mood: polished, a little secretive, and more felt than announced.
How to wear
Best in mild to cool weather, where its powdery floral heart can stay soft and readable. Apply lightly, as the creamy coconut, tiare and benzoin can grow plush on skin; one or two sprays are enough for an intimate trail that stays close rather than projecting far.
Who it’s for
For those who love powdery florals with a gourmand edge, especially scents that feel soft, tactile and slightly nostalgic. It will appeal to wearers drawn to rose, rice-powder textures, creamy white florals and a restrained, skin-close sensuality.
The nose
Pierre Guillaume
Pierre Guillaume Black Collection’s story
Pierre Guillaume Paris is an independent French house built around inventive, poetic, highly wearable perfumery. The brand likes to mix genres and work through numbered olfactory ideas, with the Black Collection pushing a more architectural, contemporary style and a focus on bio-tech ingredients.
Poudre de Riz’s concept
Poudre de Riz belongs to the Black Collection, presented by the house as a series of “olfactory photographs” with figurative, image-driven compositions. Its name, “Rice Powder,” and the product’s reference to Henri Barbusse’s L’Enfer point to a fragrance built around intimacy, softness and the charged atmosphere of the morning after.
Extra info
Poudre de Riz means “Rice Powder,” a name that neatly reflects the fragrance’s powdery character. It is part of Pierre Guillaume Paris’s Black Collection, which the house describes as “olfactory photographs,” and it appears in the brand’s full catalog of 78 creations.
Intimately quiet or quietly intimate?
Inspired by famous voyeuristic novel L'Enfer by Henri Barbusse, Poudre de Riz is a perfume that simmers with the scent of the morning after.
A delicate rice accord, mingles with sweet syrupy rose. Luminous coconut & tiare flower rest on a silken bed of benzoin.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a scent for close distance and low light, where its powdery rice accord and syrupy rose read as skin rather than statement. It suits a private, composed mood: polished, a little secretive, and more felt than announced.
How to wear
Best in mild to cool weather, where its powdery floral heart can stay soft and readable. Apply lightly, as the creamy coconut, tiare and benzoin can grow plush on skin; one or two sprays are enough for an intimate trail that stays close rather than projecting far.
Who it’s for
For those who love powdery florals with a gourmand edge, especially scents that feel soft, tactile and slightly nostalgic. It will appeal to wearers drawn to rose, rice-powder textures, creamy white florals and a restrained, skin-close sensuality.
The nose
Pierre Guillaume
Pierre Guillaume Black Collection’s story
Pierre Guillaume Paris is an independent French house built around inventive, poetic, highly wearable perfumery. The brand likes to mix genres and work through numbered olfactory ideas, with the Black Collection pushing a more architectural, contemporary style and a focus on bio-tech ingredients.
Poudre de Riz’s concept
Poudre de Riz belongs to the Black Collection, presented by the house as a series of “olfactory photographs” with figurative, image-driven compositions. Its name, “Rice Powder,” and the product’s reference to Henri Barbusse’s L’Enfer point to a fragrance built around intimacy, softness and the charged atmosphere of the morning after.
Extra info
Poudre de Riz means “Rice Powder,” a name that neatly reflects the fragrance’s powdery character. It is part of Pierre Guillaume Paris’s Black Collection, which the house describes as “olfactory photographs,” and it appears in the brand’s full catalog of 78 creations.