In the fragrance Magnolia Bliss, I envisioned Juliette as free as the famous summer of 1969 - the time of Woodstock, the legendary music festival. Floral wreaths adorning the hair, flashes of Polaroid cameras, pastel shades in clothing, and the music of that time... The composition is built around the essence of magnolia and evokes memories of summer in the lap of nature, far from the hustle and bustle of the metropolis, while the mirabelle plum with a light gourmand shade fills the fragrance with a sense of sun and taste of freedom...
In the fragrance Magnolia Bliss, I envisioned Juliette as free as the famous summer of 1969 - the time of Woodstock, the legendary music festival. Floral wreaths adorning the hair, flashes of Polaroid cameras, pastel shades in clothing, and the music of that time... The composition is built around the essence of magnolia and evokes memories of summer in the lap of nature, far from the hustle and bustle of the metropolis, while the mirabelle plum with a light gourmand shade fills the fragrance with a sense of sun and taste of freedom...
Juliette Has a Gun is a French perfume house founded in 2006 by Romano Ricci, the great-grandson of the legendary Nina Ricci. Romano has been captivated by fashion, beauty, style, perfumery, and creativity since birth. Once a notorious womanizer and nightlife enthusiast, today Romano Ricci dedicates all his strength and energy to the house of Juliette Has a Gun, where he creates each fragrance as a secret weapon of feminine seduction and allure. The brand has a provocative name – what lies behind it? Juliette is a Shakespearean heroine, pure and innocent. Romano seems to transport her into the 21st century and equips her with a weapon. Her weapon is her fragrance! In Juliette Has a Gun, Romano Ricci combines two aspects – romantic and daring, revealing the eternal paradox of women's desires – the simultaneous yearning for independence and romance. 'I wanted to open a new universe for the modern woman, where romanticism and fragility harmoniously coexist with freedom and independence' – Romano Ricci.