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Scents lighten up for spring

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In Southern California, “seasons” are more loosely defined than in other parts of the country, but many of us still crave a change in style, scenery and mind-set once spring rolls around. A new scent can signal the onset of a new season, and beauty counters are more than ready to fulfill any yearnings for change.

One of the easiest ways to achieve these changes is through scent, and with a new round of fragrances hitting beauty counters now, dabbing these behind your ear could kick-start your spring and be that subtle shift you’re searching for.

Finding a spring fragrance doesn’t mean having to douse yourself in a garden full of freesia or lily of the valley. (In truth, nothing on the calendar should require that.) Florals are fitting for the coming months, but generally something light, luminous and uplifting is best.

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“As in fashion, spring fragrances call for a pop of color,” says Jessica Hanson, fragrance buyer for Sephora. Bright scents can punctuate your mood and ensemble, transforming your surroundings even when the weather stays the same.

What follows is a survey of some of the season’s new (or reinterpreted) scents:

Van Cleef & Arpels Oriens

$150, 100 milliliters, at Neiman Marcus and Van Cleef & Arpels, Beverly Hills

The ornate bottle with a multicolored, jewel-cut top and silver leaves echoes some of the elaborate baubles issued by the French jeweler. This more affordable token smells like spun sugar with a hint of fruity berries and will work for those who like an initially sweet scent tempered by faint notes of patchouli after it dries.

Notes

Top: raspberry, black currant and praline

Middle: jasmine and white flowers

Base: patchouli

Issey Miyake Fleur de Bois

$78, 75 milliliters, at Saks Fifth Avenue and Bloomingdales

The conical bottle and floral aquatic notes are evocative of Miyake’s first scent, L’Eau d’Issey. But this fragrance is deeper and more complex than his first. Cedar and amber cut through the familiar fruity notes he’s used before, balancing this blend to become the most sophisticated scent from Miyake thus far.

Notes

Top: black currant, mandarin orange

Middle: rose, mimosa and freesia

Base: cedar, white musk, amber

Balenciaga Paris

$95, 1.7 ounces, at Balenciaga, West Hollywood

The bottle is so chic, it almost wouldn’t matter if its contents smelled like vinegar. Thankfully, the fourth fragrance from the French fashion house is elegant, with a violet aroma. It’s soft but not powdery; floral, but not sharp.

Notes

Violet with mossy wood notes

Chanel Chance eau Tendre

$65, 1.7 ounces

As the third perfume in the Chance franchise (the original came out in 2002, followed by Chance eau Fraiche in 2006), Chance eau Tendre is lighter than the original, with notes of grass and clover and sweet jasmine. It’s certainly smells the “youngest” of the three with an almost bouncy quality. Fruity tones such as grapefruit and quince add to the youthful blend, making this scent more suited for casual days in sweats rather than a boucle suit.

Notes

Top: grapefruit and quince

Middle: jasmine

Base: white musk

Jo Malone Lotus Blossom & Water Lily, Dark Amber & Ginger Lily

$100 each, 100 milliliters

These popular scents from Jo Malone were released years ago as limited-edition items and are being brought back this spring. The lotus blossom and water lily smells just as it sounds: transparent, light and aquatic. It’s a pretty daytime fragrance. Dark amber and ginger lily is deep, earthy and a bit smoky. Not the most obvious “springtime” scent (with traces of creamy fig), this is suitable for evening or for anyone who likes clean, full-bodied fragrances.

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Notes

Lotus Blossom

& Water Lily

Top: grapefruit, bergamot, mandarin

Middle: lotus blossom, freesia, honeysuckle, water lily

Base: Incense, amber, sandalwood, musk

Notes

Dark Amber & Ginger Lily

Top: black cardamom, pink pepper, ginger

Middle: night-blooming jasmine, orchid, water lily, rose

Base: black amber, leather, patchouli, sandalwood, incense

Miss Dior Cherie eau de Toilette

$82, 100 milliliters, exclusively

at Sephora

Though not quite as pixie-stick sweet as the first Miss Dior Cherie (which debuted in 2005), this lighter interpretation still caters to those who like to smell like a candy store. Fruity notes have been added to create a more playful and youthful scent. This version is more grounded and earthy than the original, with notes of neroli and patchouli, but the uber-girly bottle with the silver metal bow and pale pink perfume remains.

Notes

Top: sweet orange

Middle: neroli, jasmine, rose

Base: patchouli

L’eau Serge Lutens

$150, 100 milliliters

The French perfumer has switched his classic packaging to look more modern -- almost futuristic. His new fragrance L’eau Serge Lutens is as crisp and sparkling as its new bottle with a burst of green and soapy notes so fresh this one almost feels like a sport edition of a classic. “It expresses a longing for cleanliness and a reaction against society’s compulsion to fill the air with artificial scents,” Lutens says. For anyone who likes a clean scent, this one is completely spotless.

Notes

Top: clary sage

Middle: white mint

Base: magnolia

Byredo La Tulipe

$195, 100 milliliters

Tulips don’t have a strong scent (if any at all), and this fragrance by the Stockholm perfume company Byredo smells more of sweet and powdery lilac and freesia than of the tea-cup-shaped flower. It first smells like those fancy bars of soap wrapped so perfectly you display them on a bathroom shelf rather than use them in the shower. Then Tulipe dries to a sweet and familiar scent that evokes lemon Pez candy just unleashed from its wrapper.

Notes

Top: rhubarb, cyclamen, freesia

Middle: tulip

Base: vetiver

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-- Melissa Magsaysay

melissa.magsaysay@latimes.com

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