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White Tea Eau Lilac 2025

7.4 / 10 24 Ratings
A new perfume by Elizabeth Arden for women, released in 2025. The scent is fresh-floral. It is being marketed by Revlon Inc..
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Main accords

Fresh
Floral
Citrus
Powdery
Woody

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
Jasmine sambacJasmine sambac Italian mandarin orangeItalian mandarin orange
Heart Notes Heart Notes
French lilacFrench lilac WisteriaWisteria
Base Notes Base Notes
Blond woodsBlond woods MuskMusk Tonka beanTonka bean
Ratings
Scent
7.424 Ratings
Longevity
5.617 Ratings
Sillage
5.719 Ratings
Bottle
7.018 Ratings
Value for money
7.411 Ratings
Submitted by Franfan20 · last update on 02/18/2026.
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Reviews

1 in-depth fragrance description
DuftfArb3n

14 Reviews
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DuftfArb3n
DuftfArb3n
5  
My beloved lilac…
For a while now, I have been searching for at least one truly beautiful and high-quality lilac fragrance. The lilac should really be the main actor. If crafted by someone with know-how, taste, and style, I am perfectly fine with a few other carefully selected notes being incorporated in such a way that a harmonious overall scent profile emerges from the already heavenly lilac fragrance. It is important that the lilac smells as natural as possible. I prefer it to smell like when I hold my nose to and in the fresh clusters on the bush after a short spring rain at the end of April or beginning of May. I love this scent like hardly anything else. When it comes to beautiful, fragrant flowers, this genuine lilac, in all its possible shades, makes it into my top 3 of most beloved blooms.
Maybe I’m just imagining it, but I have the feeling that the lighter, more bluish-purple lilac and the one with a more pink-violet hue smell the most intense. Stronger and more authentic than, for example, white.
For making lilac syrup, I take 4 fresh clusters from one of the bushes, whose flower cluster color gives the plant its name. Or the flowers their color.

Since the fragrance pyramid looked quite interesting to me from the start, and today I happened to come across this scent in a small perfumery, where it was also ridiculously cheap as a special offer, I decided to take the plunge and bought it despite the very limited testing opportunity.

I had been curious about how it would be, as Elizabeth Arden has some quite decent and successful - especially floral - perfumes, considering the price range.
So I looked again at the pyramid and thought that it might be a fragrance with appeal potential.
So, together with the dearly loved lilac, it also has wisteria in the heart... Wisteria is another wonderfully delicate, soft, and honey/nectar-sweet flowering splendor that brings joy and delight from spring to summer.
At a holiday house in France, we have a wisteria that covers the middle part of the facade, with its woody vines it has climbed up and decorates everything around the beautiful sun balcony with its blue-purple flower clusters and fine leaves.
These two flowers harmonize beautifully together in their natural scent, in my opinion.

I then hoped that the opening with jasmine and mandarin could create a gentle base, round and smooth, also sweet and mild, and that if everything is well coordinated, it would give both the lilac and the wisteria more fullness and their optimal scent spectrum.
Basically, everything fits wonderfully together in terms of the choice of components.

The choice of elements for the base also seemed appropriate and appealing to me:

- Light woods
- Musk
- Tonka bean

It reads wonderfully and sounds like a soft foundation that could go into the powdery or sweetly-fine spicy creamy direction. The aforementioned light and warm effect of the base components should ideally bring everything together into a successful, balanced, round, full yet discreet whole. The fragile flowers on a powdery-creamy musk bed with light muted woods and the lovely airy slightly spicy sweetness of the tonka bean, which as a finely balanced mélange provides a beautiful and indulgent dry down. A delightful spring scent veil enjoyment until the very end.
So was my hope.
I expected a finely floral bouquet that might be highlighted by a mandarin-sweet-sparkling opening, with just the right amount of jasmine sambac, especially making the lilac but also the wisteria shine. With the transition into the aforementioned base, I considered it a sure thing that everything would flow together into a refined lilac fragrance, that everything complements beautifully and hopefully is also nicely intertwined to create a seductive scent image as a whole.
To me, everything looked so tempting and promising.

That was my ideal vision.
How much I long for this masterpiece that smells of REAL LILAC…

Full of anticipation, I pressed the spray head of the simply yet neatly designed bottle a few times. And now: Test!
But soon it became quite clear how far my idea deviated from the actual scent.

I find the lilac note does not smell natural but rather piercingly synthetic. In combination with the other flowers, it becomes too sweet and overwhelming. It lacks the delicacy and clarity of a lilac, which is indeed the namesake for this fragrance.
The citrus of the mandarin comes across as consistently sharp and takes away the grace and elegance from the scent. To me, it already seems quite coarse upon spraying, it feels like too much for me at the moment. Overwhelming, I would say. Immediately after spraying, a moderately interesting mix of overly sweet artificial flowers with a fresh fruitiness emerges. Nice refreshing spray, but even for that, it’s too penetrating.

I must say, it’s a pity, even though it was really that cheap. To be honest, I can only imagine it as a room fragrance or something along those lines. That’s okay since I wanted to buy another one anyway. But the point of buying perfumes for me is (always) more to specifically search for the scents that are at the top of my priority list, to test them sufficiently beforehand whenever possible, and to only buy true favorite scents of good quality and craftsmanship.
Thus, piece by piece, I aim for an exquisite collection that reflects my taste and style, but also scents that I have a special interest in for some reason. This can certainly be quite varied. I like diversity, and scents are so wonderfully applicable to create a certain mood or to give more individuality to one’s own experience horizon. It can be the icing on the cake for styling, a motivator for..., more self-confidence, olfactory writing accompaniment, coziness alone or together, and much more.
My collection should include something for practically every occasion. Big bottles only for favorites; otherwise, a small amount suffices if used only rarely.
Yes, so still regarding LILAC:

For example, I really loved the Pur Désir de Lilas that was around the millennium.
It was actually, as far as I know, a soliflore, and it smelled wonderfully enchanting of natural lilac. That was one of my constant companions.

A Drop d'Issey Eau de Parfum is also supposed to go in this direction. I can hardly remember, so I definitely need to test it again soon.

There are surely others, but that’s enough for now.

Thank you for reading.
PS: If anyone knows of a naturally and as authentically smelling lilac fragrance, please let me know.

There are still a few other flowers on the "Top Fragrance" search list:

- IRIS !!!
- Lilies (those strongly scented, white or pink, "Stargazer"?!
- Violets
- Tuberose
- Magnolia
- Mimosa
- Heliotrope
-
I appreciate any tips and look forward to discovering new treasures.
Updated on 09/18/2025
5 Comments

Statements

11 short views on the fragrance
8 months ago
2
A surprisingly well-balanced lilac, not too sweet, not too watery. Given how hard it is to come across a good lilac perfume, a must try.
0 Comments
26
27
Cool powdery (blue) rain
on a freshly made musk bed
barely lilac, but my nose suspects
a hint of dry iris
at the heart
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27 Comments
8 months ago
8
3
Really pleasant. Subtle and quickly skin-close lilac tea with a splash of lemon at the start and a powder puff at the end. I like it!
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3 Comments
8
3
Uh Lizzy A. has created a pretty-clean 'totally white' clone with subtle lilac and fresh jasmine + citrus sprinkles. Good value!
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3 Comments
11 months ago
4
1
The original DNA clearly comes through in the head, then lilac dominates. For me personally, too much lilac, but a great, natural scent!
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1 Comment
4
Fresh, bright, and lightly aquatic lilac fabric softener scent. Very suitable for everyday use, pleasant, uncomplicated. DD a bit scratchy.
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0 Comments
4
Musk cloud with subtle flowers. Unfortunately, not lilac for me. More green with powdery hints. A sadly disappointing scent.
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0 Comments
11 months ago
3
Powdery transparency with flowers, where lilac takes the lead role.
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0 Comments
10 months ago
2
Musk hits hard. Too much synthetic lilac as a punch. A bit of powder and green added. Gives me headaches/migraines. What a shame.
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0 Comments
1
Sweet, subtle lilac with a slightly bitter note that I can't quite define. Neat and elegant, perfect for the office.
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