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Marc Jacobs introduced Daisy Delight in 2014, a Floral women's fragrance crafted by Frank Voelkl. The composition opens with freesia, apple, quince. The heart features iris, gardenia, peony. Musk, sandalwood, cedar close the composition.
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The Daisy Variant That Deserved to Stay — Daisy Delight by Marc Jacobs
Marc Jacobs has released enough Daisy flankers to fill an entire department store counter, and the sheer volume of variations can make it easy to dismiss any single one as unnecessary. Daisy Delight, a limited edition from 2014 crafted by Frank Voelkl, deserves better than that dismissal. It takes the DNA of the original 2007 Daisy and pushes it in a fruitier, brighter direction with Quince, Apple, and Freesia at the top, while retaining the warm Sandalwood and Musk base that gives the line its comfort-blanket quality. On Fragrantica, where it carries a 3.98 average from 233 votes, the community is broadly positive if not ecstatic -- 30% love it, 52% like it, and the complaints that do exist center on longevity and the broader question of whether the world needs another Daisy. For those who connect with its particular fruity-floral balance, the answer is an easy yes.
The opening is immediately cheerful. Apple provides a crisp, green-skinned sweetness, while Quince adds a rounder, almost honeyed fruit quality that is less common in fragrances and gives Delight a subtle point of distinction from other fruity-floral releases. Freesia bridges the gap between the fruit and the flowers, contributing a clean, slightly peppery freshness that keeps the top from reading as purely sweet. One reviewer described this combination as "fragrant, floral tea leaves with a bit of added fruit essences," which captures the delicate, almost beverage-like quality of the opening.
The heart blooms into a classic floral bouquet. Peony provides soft, romantic sweetness, Gardenia adds a creamy white-floral richness, and Iris contributes a powdery elegance that anchors the florals and prevents them from becoming too sheer. The florals are light rather than heady -- there is nothing narcotic or indolic here. This is a sunlit garden, not a hothouse.
The base is where Delight becomes most wearable and, for some, most surprising. Sandalwood emerges with a creamy, slightly spicy warmth that one devoted wearer described as "spicy sandalwood that smells divine and makes me feel hugged." Cedar provides a dry, elegant frame, and Musk ties everything together with a clean, skin-like softness. The drydown is genuinely lovely -- warmer and more substantial than the airy opening might suggest.
This is a daylight fragrance through and through. The community voting data tells the story clearly: 33% favor daytime versus only 5% for evening. The light, breezy character works beautifully for spring mornings, summer afternoons, office environments, and casual weekend outings.
Spring is the ideal season, where the fruity-floral character feels perfectly in sync with the warming air and blooming flowers. Summer works well too, though extreme heat may cause the sweeter notes to become more prominent than intended. Fall and winter are poor matches -- the composition is simply too light and sunny to resonate in cold weather.
This is one of those rare fragrances that is genuinely office-appropriate without being boring. The moderate sillage and pleasant, inoffensive character make it ideal for close-quarters professional environments where you want to smell good without making a statement.
Performance is the expected weakness, and the community does not sugarcoat it. Expect roughly 3 to 5 hours of wear on most skin types, with the opening fruity-floral phase lasting about 2 hours before transitioning to the warmer sandalwood-musk base. Some reviewers report up to 6 hours with generous application, while others find it fades within 3. This is consistent with the broader Marc Jacobs Daisy line, which has never been known for beast-mode performance.
Sillage is intimate to moderate. You will not fill a room, but people close to you will notice. For the Daisy line, this is par for the course. If longevity is your top priority, this may not satisfy, and reapplication during the day is a reasonable expectation.
The Fragrantica community treats Daisy Delight with warm but measured affection. With a 3.98 average and 82% positive-to-like ratings, the general consensus is that it is a solid, enjoyable twist on a familiar formula.
One dedicated fan searched for the fragrance for eight years after it was discontinued, finally securing a bottle and declaring it well worth the hunt, noting that it "smells almost nearly identical to Chanel Chance Eau Tendre." Another enthusiast praised the powdery aspect specifically, naming it as their favorite among all the Daisy limited editions. A third reviewer appreciated how the freesia and fruitiness made it feel "fresher, lighter, and more pleasant" than the original.
The criticism falls into two camps. Some reviewers found the drydown unexpectedly sweet and strong, with one noting it "turned bad" as it developed, becoming "too sweet, floral, and fruity." More memorably, one buyer initially loved the fragrance but reported that after extended wear, it reminded them of "old cigarettes -- stale, musky, and powdery." And then there are the Daisy-fatigued collectors who simply wish Marc Jacobs would stop releasing variations on the same theme. As one commenter sighed: "Enough with the Daisy reformulations."
If you love the original Daisy but wish it had more fruit and a slightly brighter personality, Delight is the flanker made for you. It retains everything that makes the Daisy line appealing -- easy wearability, pleasant florals, warm base -- while adding enough fruity sparkle to justify its existence as a separate release.
It is also an excellent choice for anyone building a spring and summer daytime rotation on a moderate budget. While the limited edition status means it is no longer at retail, bottles surface regularly on discount fragrance sites and secondary markets at reasonable prices.
If you already own several Daisy flankers and struggle to tell them apart, Delight is unlikely to convert you. And if longevity is a dealbreaker, the Daisy line in general may not be your best investment. Consider the Daisy Eau So Intense, which offers similar DNA with significantly better performance.
Daisy Delight is not a revelation, and it does not need to be. It is a well-executed, enjoyable variation on one of the most successful designer fragrance families of the twenty-first century, adding enough fruity brightness and powdery warmth to stand on its own while remaining unmistakably a Daisy. The limited edition format means it comes with a slight treasure-hunt element, but for those who value light, cheerful, office-friendly spring fragrances, the hunt is worth the reward. Just keep your expectations realistic on the longevity front.
Consensus Rating
7.3/10
Community Sentiment
mixedSources Analyzed
5 community posts (2 Reddit) (3 forum)
This review is based on analysis of 5 community discussions. Individual experiences may vary.