The thrush stands like a thinly humid spring breeze, leaving all its facets, whether they are floral, green or light, in its wake. Fresh touches of rose and jasmine complete this spring landscape, on a woody and musk base.
Lily of the Valley was composed in 1948, as if to bottle spring and symbolize the rebirth after the war. A contemporary look could see Paul Vacher as a pioneer of the perfume, since the thrush became the well-known protagonist in Diorissimo eight years later, in 1956. The formula of Lily of the Valley was restored in 2020 by Domitile Michalon-Bertier.