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Marie Claire US

There’s Only One Vanilla Perfume My 86-Year-Old Grandmother and I Both Love

Samantha Holender

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 Collage of guerlain shalimar ads through the years with a picture of a girl and her grandmother.
Credit: Guerlain

Fragrance and memory are intertwined—it’s not sentiment, it’s science. Get this: studies show that 75 percent of our memories are triggered by scent. Which, if I’m going to put on my introspective goggles, probably has a little something to do with my current fragrance collection—comprised exclusively of musky gourmands .

Here's the lore. Since I was a little girl, my bubby (aka my grandmother) has stood in firm defense of her one and only signature scent: Guerlain Shalimar. The fragrance, which was developed in 1925, put amber perfumes on the map at a time when feminine florals and powdery jasmines dominated the market. By the '50s (right around the time my bubby got her hands on it), it was an established icon—the pièce de résistance for a seductive, sexy fragrance that oozed French girl sophistication and infused a warm, seductive vanilla into an otherwise masculine mix with effortless ease.

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If a stranger is wearing Shalimar, I can pick them out of a crowd. I can let my nose guide me to the display in a department store. And, I could walk my way to my bubby in a room full of 1000 people with a blindfold on—solely letting the scent lead me. Nostalgic as it is, I’ve never actually worn it myself. It’s a perfume that has, and always will, belong to my bubby (in my brain at least.)

But there’s nothing like a 100-year anniversary to prompt me to change my tune. In celebration of a century (!!) on shelves, Delphine Jelk (the coolest person I know and Guerlain’s Director of Perfume Creation) has made what’s old, new again. After all, vintage is more modern than ever in 2025.

A vintage Shalimar advertisement
A vintage Shalimar advertisement. | Credit: Guerlain

Enter: Shalimar L’Essence, an ode to the past 100 years with a very 2025 twist. Searches for vanilla perfumes grew 41 percent year-over-year, and this new interaction reflects the surge. Rather than having the focal point as amber and vanilla sitting in the background, L’Essence flips the formula on its head.

It's warm and comforting (partly because it reminds me of my bubby, partly because it’s by design), has the complex Madagascar vanilla flavor I’ve come to expect from the brand, and constantly evolves on my skin to create an intoxicatingly delicious smell. It’s like an amalgamation of all my favorite woody gourmands. Just, more expensive. Richer. Deeper.

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I’ve been wearing it all fall (because who wouldn’t want to smell like that?!) and can conclude it’s a bottled recipe for compliments. But the actual test? Bubby’s stamp of approval. Historically, she hates just about everything I wear. Too sweet. Too strong. Smells cheap. (We’re not a family to hold back our opinions).

So when she walked in the door last week and asked, 'What are you wearing? ' I lived for the irony of telling her that it was the 2025 edition of her signature perfume .

Shop Shalimar

Shalimar L'essence Eau De Parfum Intense With Vanilla
Shalimar L'essence Eau De Parfum Intense With Vanilla


View Deal

Shalimar Eau De Parfum
Shalimar Eau De Parfum
Advertisement
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View Deal

Shalimar MillÉsime Jasmin – Eau De Parfum 50 Ml / 1.69 Oz
Shalimar MillÉsime Jasmin Eau De Parfum


View Deal

Why Trust Marie Claire

For more than 30 years, Marie Claire has been an internationally recognized destination for news, fashion, and beauty trends, investigative packages, and more. When it comes to the products Marie Claire recommends, we take your faith in us seriously. Every product that we feature comes personally recommended by a Marie Claire writer or editor, or by an expert we’ve spoken to firsthand.

Fragrance and memory are intertwined—it’s not sentiment, it’s science. Get this: studies show that 75 percent of our memories are triggered by scent. Which, if I’m going to put on my introspective goggles, probably has a little something to do with my current fragrance collection—comprised exclusively of musky gourmands .

Advertisement
Advertisement

Here's the lore. Since I was a little girl, my bubby (aka my grandmother) has stood in firm defense of her one and only signature scent: Guerlain Shalimar. The fragrance, which was developed in 1925, put amber perfumes on the map at a time when feminine florals and powdery jasmines dominated the market. By the '50s (right around the time my bubby got her hands on it), it was an established icon—the pièce de résistance for a seductive, sexy fragrance that oozed French girl sophistication and infused a warm, seductive vanilla into an otherwise masculine mix with effortless ease.

If a stranger is wearing Shalimar, I can pick them out of a crowd. I can let my nose guide me to the display in a department store. And, I could walk my way to my bubby in a room full of 1000 people with a blindfold on—solely letting the scent lead me. Nostalgic as it is, I’ve never actually worn it myself. It’s a perfume that has, and always will, belong to my bubby (in my brain at least.)

But there’s nothing like a 100-year anniversary to prompt me to change my tune. In celebration of a century (!!) on shelves, Delphine Jelk (the coolest person I know and Guerlain’s Director of Perfume Creation) has made what’s old, new again. After all, vintage is more modern than ever in 2025.

A vintage Shalimar advertisement
A vintage Shalimar advertisement. | Credit: Guerlain

Enter: Shalimar L’Essence, an ode to the past 100 years with a very 2025 twist. Searches for vanilla perfumes grew 41 percent year-over-year, and this new interaction reflects the surge. Rather than having the focal point as amber and vanilla sitting in the background, L’Essence flips the formula on its head.

Advertisement
Advertisement

It's warm and comforting (partly because it reminds me of my bubby, partly because it’s by design), has the complex Madagascar vanilla flavor I’ve come to expect from the brand, and constantly evolves on my skin to create an intoxicatingly delicious smell. It’s like an amalgamation of all my favorite woody gourmands. Just, more expensive. Richer. Deeper.

I’ve been wearing it all fall (because who wouldn’t want to smell like that?!) and can conclude it’s a bottled recipe for compliments. But the actual test? Bubby’s stamp of approval. Historically, she hates just about everything I wear. Too sweet. Too strong. Smells cheap. (We’re not a family to hold back our opinions).

So when she walked in the door last week and asked, 'What are you wearing? ' I lived for the irony of telling her that it was the 2025 edition of her signature perfume .

Shop Shalimar

Shalimar L'essence Eau De Parfum Intense With Vanilla
Shalimar L'essence Eau De Parfum Intense With Vanilla


View Deal

Shalimar Eau De Parfum
Shalimar Eau De Parfum
Advertisement
Advertisement


View Deal

Shalimar MillÉsime Jasmin – Eau De Parfum 50 Ml / 1.69 Oz
Shalimar MillÉsime Jasmin Eau De Parfum


View Deal

Why Trust Marie Claire

For more than 30 years, Marie Claire has been an internationally recognized destination for news, fashion, and beauty trends, investigative packages, and more. When it comes to the products Marie Claire recommends, we take your faith in us seriously. Every product that we feature comes personally recommended by a Marie Claire writer or editor, or by an expert we’ve spoken to firsthand.

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