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Estee Lauder

Estée Lauder was born Josephine Esther Mentzer in Corona, Queens in 1908, the daughter of Hungarian Jewish immigrants. She learned the basics of skin care from her chemist uncle John Schotz and began selling face creams from a kitchen stove before opening her first cosmetics counter at Saks Fifth Avenue in 1948. Her sales technique — the face-to-face demonstration, the unsolicited free sample, the personal touch that transformed a commercial transaction into a relationship — became the model for luxury beauty retail worldwide. She died in 2004, having built one of the world's most profitable beauty empires with annual revenues exceeding $14 billion. The Estée Lauder Companies now owns over 25 beauty brands including MAC, Bobbi Brown, Tom Ford Beauty, Jo Malone London, Clinique, and Aveda.

Estée Lauder fragrances have attracted significant perfumery talent across eight decades. Sophia Grojsman — who also created Trésor, White Linen, and Eternity for Women — created Beautiful (1985), the house's landmark rose-lily bridal feminine. She used multiple rose varieties, lily, chamomile, and amber in a composition of extraordinary femininity. Youth Dew (1953) was the house's foundational fragrance — an orientale that Estée Lauder marketed directly to women as a gift for themselves rather than requiring male purchase, at a time when this was genuinely revolutionary. White Linen (1978), also by Grojsman, is a classic aldehydic floral of bergamot, rose, jasmine, and white musks.

Beautiful (1985) is Estée Lauder's most iconic modern feminine — a rose-lily-chamomile-amber composition by Sophia Grojsman that became the defining wedding fragrance of the 1980s-90s and has been worn at more ceremonies than perhaps any other. Youth Dew (1953) — a dense, oriental spiced bath oil and EDP of cinnamon, clove, patchouli, and amber — is the house's historical masterpiece, revolutionary in its direct-to-women marketing at a time when luxury fragrance required male gifting. Pleasures (1995), a lighter floral of lily, rose, and peony, provided an accessible counterpoint to Beautiful's romantic intensity. Modern Muse (2013) and the Lauder For Men series demonstrate the house's breadth across decades.

Estée Lauder occupies premium accessible luxury — EDPs from €75-€120 — with 75 years of beauty expertise and an Anglophone luxury heritage that gives their classic compositions a cultural authority in English-speaking markets that French houses rarely match. Beautiful is simply one of the most important fragrances in American cultural history.

Every Estée Lauder fragrance at The Scent Stories® is 100% authentic, factory-sealed and brand-packaged — sourced from authorised channels and shipped worldwide.

Estee Lauder — Common Questions

Who was Estée Lauder?

Estée Lauder was born Josephine Esther Mentzer in Queens, New York in 1908, the daughter of Hungarian Jewish immigrants. She built her beauty empire from a kitchen stove and a Saks Fifth Avenue counter, pioneering the free sample, face-to-face demonstration, and personal beauty relationships that became the industry standard. She died in 2004; the Estée Lauder Companies now owns over 25 brands including MAC, Tom Ford Beauty, Jo Malone London, and Clinique, with annual revenues exceeding $14 billion.

What is Beautiful by Estée Lauder?

Beautiful (1985), created by Sophia Grojsman, is Estée Lauder's most iconic feminine and one of the most important American fragrances ever made. A complex floral of multiple rose varieties, lily, chamomile, and amber, it became the defining wedding fragrance of the 1980s-90s and has been worn at more ceremonies than perhaps any other fragrance in American history. Sophia Grojsman — also responsible for Trésor, White Linen, and Eternity for Women — created it as her most romantically feminine composition.

What was Youth Dew and why was it revolutionary?

Youth Dew (1953) was Estée Lauder's foundational fragrance — a dense, oriental bath oil and perfume of cinnamon, clove, patchouli, and amber. Its historical importance lies as much in marketing as in composition: at a time when luxury fragrance was marketed as a gift requiring male purchase, Lauder positioned Youth Dew directly as something women should buy for themselves. This direct-to-consumer feminine marketing was genuinely revolutionary in 1953 American beauty culture.

How does Estée Lauder compare to Lancôme and Dior in prestige feminine fragrance?

All three are major prestige feminine fragrance houses at comparable price points. Lancôme has the strongest recent commercial performance (La Vie est Belle). Dior has the strongest global marketing machine (J'adore). Estée Lauder has the deepest American cultural heritage — Beautiful and Youth Dew represent American luxury femininity in ways that no French brand can replicate. For American customers particularly, Estée Lauder's brand carries emotional resonance beyond the purely olfactive.

Can I try Estée Lauder fragrances as samples?

Yes — The Scent Stories® stocks authentic Estée Lauder samples, miniatures, and tester bottles including Beautiful, Pleasures, Youth Dew, White Linen, and more. All are factory-sealed and brand-packaged, shipped worldwide.

₹ 1,000.00 ₹ 2,000.00 1000.0 INR
₹ 2,450.00 ₹ 6,500.00 2450.0 INR
₹ 2,500.00 ₹ 3,100.00 2500.0 INR
₹ 4,500.00 ₹ 6,600.00 4500.0 INR
₹ 5,000.00 ₹ 6,500.00 5000.0 INR
₹ 5,800.00 ₹ 7,900.00 5800.0 INR