Aunt Judy S Mature Lola ❲FULL · 2024❳

If you ever find a dusty bottle of this at a flea market or a decant online, buy it. Not because it’s trendy. But because we all need a little bit of Lola’s confidence in our back pocket.

The notes are deceptive. On paper, it sounds like a standard chypre: oakmoss, bergamot, patchouli. But the heart is where Lola lives. Aunt Judy S Mature Lola

I opened the cap, and let me tell you—I didn’t just smell a perfume. I met a person. Let’s get this straight: "Mature Lola" isn’t a euphemism for old. It’s a euphemism for arrived . If you ever find a dusty bottle of

is firmly in the second category.

If you’ve never heard of the fictional (or is she?) Aunt Judy line, here’s the lore: In the 70s and 80s, a mysterious woman named Judy allegedly created small-batch perfumes for her friends who were tired of smelling like baby powder or their husband’s Old Spice. "Mature Lola" was the signature scent for her wildest friend—the one who divorced her boring accountant, took up ballroom dancing, and drank her coffee black. The notes are deceptive

There’s a stubborn rose absolute—the kind that has thorns. There’s a splash of dark rum that doesn’t smell like a frat party, but rather like a library where the librarian offers you a snifter of cognac. And underneath it all? Leather. Not new car leather. Old, worn-in saddle leather. The leather of a woman who has ridden out a few storms. In an industry obsessed with "fresh," "clean," and "innocent," the word "Mature" usually sends brands running for the hills. But Aunt Judy knew what she was doing.

That’s the perfect description.