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Chloé introduced Lisy in 2008, a Floral women's fragrance crafted by Michel Almairac and Amandine Clerc-Marie. The composition opens with freesia, peony, litchi. A heart of rose, lily-of-the-valley, magnolia follows. Cedar, amber, honey close the composition.
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Lisy delivers a floral and rose experience. With strong community approval and a well-constructed composition, it earns a confident recommendation from the Chloé stable. Worth trying if the note profile appeals to you.
Chloé Lisy is a parfum concentration of the 2008 Chloé fragrance — the same floral-rose-chypre DNA but amplified to a richer, more intense register. It arrived in a hand-crafted Art Deco leather box as a limited collector's piece, and the packaging alone signals that this is not a typical release. Community data is sparse given its limited distribution, but those who have encountered it consistently describe something more substantial and lasting than the standard Chloé EDP, with a honeyed depth that the parfum concentration makes possible.
Lisy opens with pink peony, lychee, and freesia — the familiar, soft-fruit floral entry that characterizes the broader Chloé DNA. The lychee adds sweetness and a slightly exotic note, while the freesia keeps things light and delicate in the opening minutes. It's a charming, feminine introduction that doesn't demand much from the wearer.
The heart is where the concentration level changes the experience. Magnolia, rose, and lily of the valley develop into a fuller, more present floral accord than the EDP allows — the parfum weight gives the rose in particular a rounded, three-dimensional quality rather than the flat watercolor reading that lighter concentrations sometimes produce. The lily of the valley adds a crisp green note that prevents the floral heart from turning heavy.
The base is the most distinctive part: cedar, honey, and amber resolve the florals into a warm, golden drydown that community members describe as a "sweet delightful honeyed rose chypre." The honey is real and present — enough to notice and enjoy, not enough to tip into sticky sweetness. The amber and cedar provide structure. The overall result is warmer and more intimate than the EDP, with better depth and a more satisfying trajectory.
Lisy is a cool-weather fragrance by temperament. The honeyed amber base and richer floral heart perform best when temperatures prevent the composition from reading as heavy. Fall and winter evenings, spring date nights, or any occasion where a warm, feminine floral is appropriate. Summer heat will push the sweetness and honey into potential excess. As a collector's piece, it naturally gravitates toward special occasions rather than everyday use — though those who own it describe wanting to wear it more often than the collector's instinct allows.
The parfum concentration delivers meaningfully better longevity and projection than the standard EDP. Precise community data is limited given the fragrance's rarity, but the concentration alone ensures that performance exceeds the lighter version. Expect 6 to 10 hours on skin, with good sillage through the early hours before settling closer to the skin in the drydown. The honey and amber base anchor the composition effectively.
Community data is genuinely sparse — this is a limited release with limited distribution, and firsthand accounts are rare compared to mainline Chloé releases. Those who have encountered Lisy describe it consistently as a more serious, more satisfying version of the Chloé feminine family. The honeyed chypre aspect of the base generates the most enthusiasm, with reviewers noting that it adds complexity to what might otherwise be a straightforward floral. The broader criticism of the Chloé DNA — that the powdery aspect can read as dated or excessive — does appear from some reviewers, though the parfum concentration seems to redirect this tendency toward richness rather than talc.
The Art Deco leather packaging receives separate appreciation as an object. Collectors value it independently of the juice inside.
Rose floral enthusiasts who want a serious, honeyed version of the Chloé feminine family will appreciate what Lisy offers over the standard EDP. Collectors looking for a beautiful, limited presentation will find the Art Deco box genuinely special. Those who find the broader Chloé DNA too powdery should proceed cautiously — the parfum concentration amplifies the existing character rather than redirecting it. The limited availability means this is an opportunity fragrance: worth acquiring if encountered at a reasonable price, not worth overpaying for.
Chloé Lisy is the elevated version of a beloved feminine rose chypre — richer, more honeyed, and more lasting than the EDP, packaged as a genuine collector's piece. The honey and amber base give it warmth and intimacy that the standard concentration doesn't reach. Sparse community data reflects its limited release rather than lack of quality. If you love the Chloé DNA and want the most complete version of it, Lisy is that version.
Consensus Rating
8.3/10
Community Sentiment
positiveSources Analyzed
4 community posts (1 Reddit) (3 forum)
This review is based on analysis of 4 community discussions. Individual experiences may vary.