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Day 21

by Wessel-Jan Kos
A warm light that transforms into an addictive heat. Day 21 highlights a turning point, like a warmth that slowly settles on the skin. The perfume is inspired by the solstice, that moment when the light is at its peak, with this sensation of warmth, energy, and transition.
Capacity 75ml
125,00€
Regular price 125,00€
Familles olfactives
Épicée
Agrumes
Ambrée
Boisée
Boisée
Notes de tête
  • Orange
Notes de cœur
  • Saffron
  • Jasmine
  • Woody moss
Notes de fond
  • Vanilla
  • Amber

Occasions
  • Daily
  • Evening
  • Romantic
Sillage
Powerful
The Fragrance

Day 21 opens with a round, luminous, almost solar orange, bringing a soft yet already warm freshness. Then the fragrance becomes more textured, with a blend of jasmine, saffron, and moss that gives it a floral, spicy, and slightly earthy quality. Over time, the scent becomes more enveloping, with vanilla and amber woods providing continuous warmth, almost like "sun-warmed skin." The perfume retains a real presence, with a feeling that is both luminous and dense. It's a fragrance that plays on the transition between freshness and warmth, with a solar yet already sensual vibe.

The brand

Majouri is a French perfumery house founded in Paris in 2017 by Hadi Masmoum, who was born in Damascus into a family of perfume merchants, in one of the world's oldest capitals. This dual heritage—the Orient of his childhood and the France of his training—structures everything the house does. The name says it all. Maa, water in Arabic, and Jouri, the Damask rose: two words, two worlds, one house. Hadi Masmoum studied perfumery in Grasse, falling in love with a Mediterranean light common to both sides of his life, a light that nourishes both the Grasse rose and the Damask rose of his origins. This shared light has become the guiding principle of all his compositions. The perfumes are developed in Grasse in collaboration with renowned perfumers, whom Hadi Masmoum grants real freedom of expression, while inviting them to explore his own olfactory sensibility. The bottle, designed by Pochet du Courval, founded in Normandy in the 17th century and a benchmark in luxury, reflects this same dialogue: textured glass with oriental arabesques, a golden cap evoking a rising or setting sun, somewhere between the two shores. Refillable from the outset, long before sustainability became a trend, it is designed to last as long as the memory it carries.

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