With heart notes of sweet caramel and vanilla and a smoky base, this fragrance is inspired by a formidable English figure who campaigned for women’s right to vote.
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A sweet scent, oozing with salted caramel.
This fragrance is decadent, with enveloping layers of spiced cardamom, gooey caramel, and hot pepper. With hints of creamy musk and Turkish tobacco, it’s a scent intended to break the rules and command attention—much like its namesake, the trailblazing and unapologetic suffragette Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton.
Changing Constance—aka the modern woman with a devil-may-care attitude—is a member of the Penhaligon's Portrait collection. The heritage-steeped perfumery was established in 1870 when a Cornish barber set up shop on Jermyn Street in London. Some 155 years later, the line is still imbued with British idiosyncrasy, and synonymous with royals, rebels, aristocracy, and the well-to-do.
Key notes: Cardamom, salted butter caramel, tobacco.
Alcohol Denat., Aqua (Water), Parfum (Fragrance), Butyl Methoxydibenzoylmethane, Limonene, Linalool, Coumarin, Alcohol, Eugenol, Tris(tetramethylhydroxypiperidinol) Citrate, Citral, Ci 14700 (Red 4), Ci 60730 (Ext. Violet 2), Ci 19140 (Yellow 5), Ci 42090 (Blue 1).
The Violet Code is a rigorous testing process by which our Committee of leading makeup artists, hairstylists, skin care experts, nail artists, and perfumers deem products best-in-class and therefore worthy of their kits, our SHELVES, and your vanity.
With heart notes of sweet caramel and vanilla and a smoky base, this fragrance is inspired by a formidable English figure who campaigned for women’s right to vote.
This fragrance is decadent, with enveloping layers of spiced cardamom, gooey caramel, and hot pepper. With hints of creamy musk and Turkish tobacco, it’s a scent intended to break the rules and command attention—much like its namesake, the trailblazing and unapologetic suffragette Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton.
Changing Constance—aka the modern woman with a devil-may-care attitude—is a member of the Penhaligon's Portrait collection. The heritage-steeped perfumery was established in 1870 when a Cornish barber set up shop on Jermyn Street in London. Some 155 years later, the line is still imbued with British idiosyncrasy, and synonymous with royals, rebels, aristocracy, and the well-to-do.
Key notes: Cardamom, salted butter caramel, tobacco.