Celeste — salt on skin and sugar dust
The marine freshness here doesn’t ring with ice — it settles softly, like light on sun-faded fabric.
Celeste opens clear, almost airy: seawater and lime arrive at once, without theatrical sharpness. This is not aquatic coolness made of glass and metal, but a salty breeze carrying the dampness of skin, white light, and the faintly tart green acidity of citrus. The lime here does not perform freshness for effect — it rather traces the outline, making the first breath cleaner.
Then the fragrance shifts into a softer, slightly blurred heart. Violet brings a powdery shadow, raspberry a translucent berry with no jam or syrup. The exotic flowers do not aim for botanical precision: they work instead as a colored glow within the composition, lending it a milky smoothness and the feeling of warm air. At this stage Celeste feels especially corporeal — like a cotton shirt after a day by the sea, when salt still lingers on the cuffs and a sweet sun-trace remains on the skin.
The base is composed with subtlety and modernity. Vanilla sugar does not turn the fragrance into dessert; it merely softens the edges, leaving an impression of dry sweetness, as if sugar dust had settled on a cool surface. Ambroxan gathers everything together: sea, powder, berry, light. It gives a clean, almost mineral trail that stays close to the body and therefore sounds especially intimate.
Created by Silvia Martinelli, Celeste has remained since 2000 a rare example of a fougère fragrance without hardness: here, freshness does not contend with tenderness, nor salt with soft sweetness. Feel how, within it, sea air meets violet powder and the warm vanilla light of skin.