Description
Love don’t be Shy Hair Mist by Kilian Paris
50ml Spray Atomiser
Perfume Author – Calice Becker
Love, don’t be shy Hair Mist blends an iconic Kilian Paris fragrance and a haircare ally, featuring an addictive, gourmand scent inside an advanced formula, both hydrating and protective from the drying sun effects. A beauty must-have for brighter days. Love, don’t be shy Hair Mist is a perfumed and protective secret weapon of the finest order, a summer essential.
The marshmallowy accord of Love, don’t be shy is its signature, while notes of neroli and vanilla add luminosity like sun-drenched days. For the uninitiated, the scent Love, don’t be shy teases the sweet side of love; for connoisseurs, it is a sexy treat one never tires of. It is—quite simply— “yummy”. Joining the perfume for a complete scented ritual, Love, don’t be shy Hair Mist invites a few quick sprays around the hair. Whether for beach, poolside or smartening up for evening, it has also been known to drive short summer nights until dawn.
Perfume notes: Neroli, Orange Blossom and Marshmallow
When I launched my brand in 2007, my goal was to put perfumery back on its pedestal and return it to its former glory, the way perfumery existed in the late 19th century and early 20th century.
For me, perfume is the essential accessory of every man and woman. Each fragrance that I make is imagined and created as the ultimate way to express oneself and all the facets of our unique personalities‘ – Kilian Hennessy
Heir to a long line of cognac makers who were pioneers in luxury, Kilian decided to take up the torch of family tradition. Creating a new luxury brand was definitely a challenge worthy of his predecessors.
His childhood haunts included the family cellars in Cognac. Before graduating from CELSA, he wrote a thesis on the semantics of scent, in search of a ‘language’ common to gods and mortals. Remembering the “angels’ share” as part of his heritage, he was led into the world of perfumery. The “angels’ share” is what the House of Hennessy calls the percentage that – inexplicably – evaporates from cognac cellars, like an offering to the gods.
Many of Kilian’s fragrances today carry this childhood memory as they are reminiscent of the sugar in the alcohol and the wood of the cognac barrels