As a perfume-obsessed beauty editor, I can’t believe it’s taken me 25 years to try this classic Y2K scent

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As a perfume-obsessed beauty editor, I can’t believe it’s taken me 25 years to try this classic Y2K scent


Like almost every beauty editor I know, my fascination with beauty products started young. I’d spend hours poring over the Avon catalogues that came through the front door while I was still in primary school and, if I were lucky, my mum would let me pick out a fruity body mist or a tinted lip balm as a treat. Once I hit my teenage years and could buy my own magazines, I’d cut out pictures of colourful eyeshadows or body shimmers and stick them into wishlists in my scrapbook. As for perfume? Well, I was utterly obsessed. I’d tear out the fragrance samples that you’d find inside the pages of the monthly glossies and save them for special occasions (aka a friend’s bowling birthday party) and every birthday and Christmas, I’d ask for a new scent. And since I came of age in the noughties, when beauty brands had started to target a younger demographic, there was no shortage of covetable perfumes. Yet, for me, Kenzo’s Flower by Kenzo wasn’t one of them.

(Image credit: Mica Ricketts)

From Ralph by Ralph Lauren (my very first “proper” perfume) to DKNY’s iconic Be Delicious, the fragrance choices of my youth were light, bright and juicy. Yet, it seems that like many of my favourite nostalgic fragrances, they were united by one thing—being undeniably fruity. So while I vividly remember seeing countless adverts for Flower By Kenzo and even smelling it on the fragrance counter in Boots it never made my personal perfume wishlist. I can only guess that, at the time, I deemed it far too sophisticated a scent for me. Not only was the elegantly-shaped bottle with a single red flower encased inside so much more pared-back and minimal than the vibrant colourful bottles that cluttered my bedroom shelves, but the perfume itself was decidedly more grown-up.



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