


Sun Song Decant
Not sure which size? Start with 10ml — enough for 10–15 full wears to know if you love it before buying the bottle.
Top: Citron · Petitgrain
Heart: Neroli · Orange Blossom
Base: Musk
Sun Song smells like warm sunshine, fresh citrus, and white flowers — clean, bright, and quietly beautiful from the first spray to the last hour. It opens with sharp, fizzy citrus that softens within minutes into orange blossom — the kind of warm, honeyed floral that feels expensive without feeling heavy. It lasts 6–8 hours on skin and days on fabric. Louis Vuitton retails this at $350 with no sample program at most stores.
One thing to know: orange blossom reacts differently on different skin. On most people it's stunning. On some, it doesn't click. The decant is how you find out which side you're on before spending $350.
Spring and summer only. Best in warm weather. Genuinely unisex. Six to eight hours on skin, days on fabric. Not blind-buy safe — the whole point of the decant is to find out first.
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Longevity, skin chemistry, the collector's take, and how we authenticate.
Citron, orange blossom, neroli, petitgrain, and musk — the Jacques Cavallier Belletrud composition for Louis Vuitton that earns "incredible, juicy, tart, sweet, happy, fizzy like cool lemonade — longevity is very good on it; pure orange blossom of finest quality, with just a zest of lemon; the number one of the three LV summer Colognes and to me number one of the entire LV production — pure magic, how can they make such a great perfume with such simple ingredients" from the collector who found in it the cleanest possible answer to that specific question, "vibrant fresh slightly bitter and fizzy lemony opening that feels like hard lemon candy, right until the point it starts to change into neroli — it is the most unisex neroli I came across; what they did with the musk balancing the orange blossom and neroli is impressive" from the Parfumo reviewer who tracked the developmental arc note-by-note, and "this will replace one of my all-time favourites in Neroli Portofino — not exactly the same but similar enough with far better performance; very impressed" from the collector who ran the direct Tom Ford head-to-head and landed on the result the community keeps confirming.
Jacques Cavallier Belletrud is Louis Vuitton's in-house Master Perfumer — the single creative intelligence responsible for every composition in the Les Parfums Louis Vuitton collection. That fact earns a specific kind of collector attention. A house that commits to one nose for its entire catalog is making a statement about coherence and identity that most fragrance conglomerates actively avoid. Cavallier's LV catalog includes Imagination — the floating, almost abstract marine-iris-wood composition that collectors keep returning to as one of the most genuinely original masculine EDTs of the modern era — alongside Sur la Route, L'Immensité, Attrape-Rêves, Ombre Nomade, and the full Les Colognes line. Sun Song is not a separate creative statement from a guest nose. It is Jacques Cavallier Belletrud deploying the same intelligence and the same material access that built Imagination toward a completely different brief: not the open sea and petrichor of Imagination's oceanic ambition, but the simpler, more immediate, more joyful experience of a sun-warmed orange blossom on a Los Angeles spring afternoon.
The Les Colognes line launched in April 2019 as a conceptual departure from Les Parfums' architectural depth. Three compositions — Sun Song, Cactus Garden, and Afternoon Swim — named and colored as a pop-art California triptych, with L.A.-based artist Alex Israel designing the packaging in the vivid sun-yellow, cactus-green, and ocean-blue palette that makes the bottles as visually distinctive as anything in the LV catalog. The bottles are refillable at stores equipped with a perfume fountain — a sustainability positioning that the house deployed to counterbalance the "cologne-like scents in EDP concentration" marketing claim that turned out to be precisely accurate in the best possible way: the simplicity of cologne with the staying power of an EDP.
Sun Song was eventually discontinued — and then revived in 2025 as "a radiant revival of the House's cult-favourite cologne perfume," arriving in a new translucent yellow-orange bottle housed in a plexiglass Monogram trunk. The discontinuation-and-revival arc mirrors Ultra Male in the JPG catalog and confirms the same community dynamic: Sun Song's departure generated the specific kind of collector distress that gets compositions brought back, not merely the general nostalgia that gets them forgotten. "I had smelled the original formula before it was discontinued and thought I was in love and before I could buy it, it was gone" from the Fragrantica collector whose sentence captures the experience of an entire segment of the community.
The composition itself is Cavallier at his most deliberately restrained. Three materials in the 2019 original: citron, orange blossom, musk. The 2025 re-release's Fragrantica listing adds the technical detail the original listing understated: lemon, petitgrain, neroli, orange blossom, musk — which reflects the actual compositional depth the original wearers were always describing rather than a meaningful reformulation. The petitgrain contributes a slightly green, slightly woody citrus quality with its characteristic bitter-fresh character from the leaves and twigs of the bitter orange tree — the same plant family as neroli and orange blossom, creating the internal coherence that earns "you can see the whole scent pyramid immediately; it's almost transparent in the way you can see through it" from the Fragrantica reviewer who found the composition's architecture its most impressive technical quality.
The orange blossom is the material that earns Sun Song its most emphatic community advocacy and its most polarizing critical response in equal measure. Orange blossom absolute at high concentration is one of perfumery's most complex and most skin-chemistry-dependent materials: warm, slightly honeyed, slightly indolic, slightly solar, with a richness that reads as "pure quality, way ahead of the TF or Chanel dedicated juices" on wearers whose skin amplifies its warmth and as "cleaning product" or "lemon pledge" on wearers whose skin chemistry pushes the material into its more synthetic-adjacent register. The Neroli Portofino comparison — Tom Ford's $300+ orange blossom-neroli benchmark — is the community's most consistent anchor. For those whose skin flatters the composition: Sun Song earns the comparison and delivers the experience with meaningfully better documented longevity than NP's famously brief performance. For those whose skin pushes it synthetic: neither composition resolves the problem.
That skin-chemistry variable is the primary reason the decant exists in the catalog. Louis Vuitton's direct retail price for Sun Song: $375–$450 depending on size and region. No sample program. No testers at most gray-market price points. The decant is the only responsible way to assess whether Sun Song's orange blossom character earns its place in your rotation before the bottle decision at that price.
🔺 The Scent Pyramid
Top Notes (0–15 min — patience past the citrus opening) Citron · Petitgrain
The opening is Sun Song's most skin-chemistry-variable chapter and the one requiring the most patience before forming a verdict. Citron provides sharp, slightly bitter, vivid lemon-forward brightness — "fizzy like hard lemon candy" is the most accurate description of the quality that separates Cavallier's citrus work from standard bergamot-citrus openings. Petitgrain adds the slightly green, woody-fresh quality from the bitter orange tree's leaves, creating the internal family coherence that prepares the transition to the orange blossom-neroli heart. Give it 10 minutes. The citrus is an introduction, not the composition.
Heart Notes (15 min–2 hrs) Neroli · Orange Blossom
The composition's defining and most celebrated chapter. Neroli — the steam-distilled flower of the bitter orange tree, lighter and more citrus-adjacent than orange blossom absolute — arrives first and provides the "slightly bitter, slightly honeyed, airy floral" quality that earns the Neroli Portofino comparison and the "most unisex neroli I've encountered" observation. Orange blossom absolute follows: warmer, richer, slightly honeyed, more deeply indolic than neroli's lighter character. Cavallier's decision to deploy both the flower's distillate (neroli) and its absolute (orange blossom) within the same composition is the technical choice that earns "pure magic with such simple ingredients" — the depth of the heart comes from the same plant material rendered two different ways.
Base Note (2 hrs through 6–8+ hrs, fabric considerably longer) Musk
The single base note is the composition's most quietly impressive structural achievement. A complex musk blend — "white musk provides soft, slightly powdery warmth that feels comforting and skin-like; cedarwood adds subtle dry woody texture" from the Vivir review that identified the secondary materials the Fragrantica listing simplifies to "musk" — that earns fabric persistence extending well beyond skin longevity. "Amazing longevity especially on clothes — I can smell it on my shirt days after spraying" from the Fragrantica collector who tracked the fabric anchor independently. The musk's role is to hold the orange blossom warmth on skin rather than allowing it to evaporate with the citrus opening, which is why Sun Song's longevity consistently overperforms the expectations set by its "cologne-like" positioning.
What it smells like on skin:
The citron opening is bright, fizzy, slightly bitter, and brief — 10–15 minutes before the neroli-orange blossom heart asserts itself and the composition arrives at its true character. At that point: warm, honeyed, slightly solar, the specific quality of orange blossom in morning sun rather than orange blossom at night. The musk base catches and holds the floral warmth for hours in the way that earns the Neroli Portofino performance comparison as the credentialing reference. The composition is transparent rather than dense — "you can see through it" is the collector expression for the specific quality of a well-made simple composition that reveals all of its materials simultaneously rather than hiding them behind density. It is not a complex composition. It is a perfectly made simple one, from the same intelligence that built Imagination.
Why Collectors Decant This:
🌸 Citron, petitgrain, orange blossom, neroli, and musk — "sun in a bottle; pure orange blossom of finest quality, way ahead of TF or Chanel dedicated juices; the most unisex neroli I've encountered; vibrant fizzy lemon until it changes into neroli; number one of the entire LV production; pure magic"
🏆 Jacques Cavallier Belletrud — the same nose behind Imagination — building the lightest, most transparent, most deliberately simple composition in the LV catalog. The same material mastery that makes Imagination's oceanic abstraction work deploys here toward a single intent: orange blossom at its most immediately beautiful, held by the musk architecture that makes it last.
🔍 Decanted from authenticated Louis Vuitton Les Colognes EDP gray-market stock. Rodney authenticates all LV inventory before entering the Aromatick catalog — fill level, batch consistency, and juice character verified.
💸 Louis Vuitton direct retail: $375–$450 for 100ml with no sample program at most touchpoints. The gray-market decant is the only responsible access point for a composition this skin-chemistry-dependent at this price tier. Skin chemistry determines whether this is "beats Neroli Portofino at every level" or "cleaning products." The decant resolves which.
⚡ Spring and summer exclusively; best in warm-to-hot weather — genuinely unisex — 6–8+ hrs on skin, days on fabric — moderate intimate projection after the opening — NOT blind-buy safe at any price; not because of complexity but because orange blossom at this concentration divides skin chemistry cleanly into two experiences with no middle ground
The LV Cavallier comparison collectors want:
Imagination EDP — marine, iris, amberwood, cedar; complex, abstract, deeply original; the LV composition that earns "there's nothing else like it in the catalog or outside it." Sun Song — citron, orange blossom, neroli, musk; deliberately simple, transparently beautiful, deliberately joyful; Cavallier answering a completely different brief with the same material fluency. They share a house and a perfumer. They share nothing else — which is the specific quality that makes Sun Song worth cataloging alongside Imagination rather than as a lesser version of it.
Performance & Wear Guide
- Spring and summer exclusively; best in warm-to-hot weather
- genuinely unisex
- 8+ hrs on skin, days on fabric
- moderate intimate projection after the opening
- NOT blind-buy safe at any price; not because of complexity but because orange blossom at this concentration divides skin chemistry cleanly into two experiences with no middle ground
Performance varies with skin chemistry and ambient temperature. Apply to pulse points. Start with fewer sprays and adjust.
All Louis Vuitton inventory is sourced through authenticated gray-market channels. Fill level, batch consistency, and juice character verified before entering the catalog.
LV does not operate a sample or decant program. These are authentic compositions at below-boutique pricing under the first sale doctrine. Retail: $375–$450 for 100ml.
Decants are hand-filled into sterile atomizers from authenticated source bottles, sealed and labeled before shipping. Questions: contact us.
— Rodney Gallagher, founder, Aromatick.com






