I just asked my fellow beauty editors about the first perfumes they wore—get ready for a hit of nostalgia

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I just asked my fellow beauty editors about the first perfumes they wore—get ready for a hit of nostalgia


There are few things beauty editors love more than snooping through each other’s make-up bags and grilling them on products they spend their money on. But after thinking about nostalgic perfumes recently, I found myself asking all my beauty editor pals about their very first fragrances. And the answers I got back were revealing…

This list features some truly sentimental scents and some serious blasts from the past. You are in for a real treat.

Beauty editors’ first perfumes

1. Ghost by Ghost Eau de Toilette

(Image credit: fragrantica)

Rebecca Fearn

(Image credit: Rebecca Fearn)

“I remember wearing Ghost by Ghost Eau de Toilette for the first time when I was in year 10, so it was one of my first ‘grown-up’ perfumes. I was mesmerised by its smell; I remember it being powdery and ethereal, with some punchy florals in there too. I also loved the bottle and the branding, plus it was affordable. I felt far beyond my years wearing this one, at an adolescent age where the most pivotal changes were happening in my life. I’m not sure it even still exists. If it is available to buy, I would love to spritz it occasionally just for a rush of nostalgia.” Rebecca Fearn, freelance beauty editor

2. Britney Spears Fantasy Eau de Parfum

Britney Spears Fantasy Eau de Parfum

Vanese Maddix

(Image credit: Vanese Maddix)

“One of my first fragrances was Britney Spears Fantasy Eau de Parfum. I used to sneak a couple of spritzes from my older sister’s. The first time I smelt it, I was instantly obsessed with how sweet and long-lasting it was. It wasn’t a subtle fragrance, and that’s exactly what I loved about it. When I finally got my hands on my own bottle, I was beyond excited, not just because it smelt amazing, but because the Swarovski crystals on the bottle made it feel extra special. Though I haven’t worn it in a while, it’s a scent I’ll always keep in my collection. One sniff instantly takes me back to happy memories. It was the fragrance that sparked my love for fruity and floral scents. Addictively sweet and impossible to ignore.” Vanese Maddix, freelance beauty journalist

3. Chanel No 5 Eau de Parfum

Chanel No5

(Image credit: Chanel)

Lucy Abbersteen

(Image credit: Lucy Abbersteen)

“Technically, my first proper fragrance was Marc Jacobs Daisy, but I didn’t actually wear it for that long. It was my second fragrance that became my go-to for much of my early years. And what a classic it is: Chanel No. 5. I started out with the Eau de Toilette, later graduating to the EDP, and I felt like such an adult when I wore it. It has an instantly recognisable ambery warmth—I still have an ancient, almost-empty bottle in my collection today.” Lucy Abbersteen, freelance beauty journalist

4. Tommy Girl Eau de Toilette

Tommy Girl Eau de Toilette

(Image credit: Boots)

Laura Capon

(Image credit: Laura Capon)

“My sister heavily influenced this, because it was Tommy Girl she used to wear. Ironically, I don’t think I cared about the scent, I wasn’t all that keen on it. I just liked that it made me feel older and growing up in an era obsessed with yellow school buses, I loved the all-American girl marketing around it. I think the brand released a new version last year or relaunched it and I had such a nostalgic longing for it, but then I remembered, I don’t actually like the floral scent so I wouldn’t wear it now.” Laura Capon, freelance beauty editor

5. Kate Moss by Kate Moss Eau de Parfum

Kate Moss by Kate Moss Eau de Parfum

(Image credit: Direct Cosmetics)

Jacqueline Kilikita

(Image credit: Courtesy of Jacqueline Kilikita)

“My first perfume was Kate Moss by, you guessed it, Kate Moss. I remember marching my mum to Superdrug in 2007 so that she could buy it for me (I had no funds of my own then, obviously), but it wasn’t actually love at first spritz. I was used to the saccharine sweetness of Impulse and So…?, and Kate Moss (with its zippy pink pepper, syrupy orange blossom, skin-like musk and heady patchouli) was far too grown up for me. I hate to admit that I never finished the bottle, but now my tastes have changed, I’d probably pay an inordinate amount to wear it to the last drop these days. As it’s no longer available, I’ve done lots of research since, and think that GIVENCHY’s L’Interdit is probably the closest I might get to wearing it again.” Jacqueline Kilikita, Refinery29 beauty director

6. Mugler Angel Eau de Parfum

Mugler Angel

(Image credit: Mugler)

Bethan King

(Image credit: Bethan King)

“As a teen I’d read about Angel in magazines but it wasn’t until 1997 and I turned 17 that it landed in my local department store and I finally had a spritz. That was it for me, the heady combination of chocolate and powdery notes that felt young, but ground-breaking and sexy in a fragrance world that was, in the Nineties, all about varsity-fresh scents like CK One and Tommy Girl. Needless to say, I was hooked. Angel was intoxicating, a real talking point, the original gourmand that inspired thousands of others.





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