Day and night, blue is the color of reverie. Because it opens the door to dreams, this immaterial chromatic field is also that of creativity.
It connects the sea to the sky. Celestial, blue uplifts the spirit. Aquatic, it envelops it in its liquid freshness.
"I use the intensity of these night owls as an alternative to radical black to create intimate and subdued atmospheres. In this regard, the work of light - natural and artificial - is essential to reveal or mute the colorful dimension of these dark shades that have chic in the skin!"
Sarah Poniatowski





It's both the little black dress and the evening tuxedo! These wardrobe essentials are just as essential in decoration. We like to say that black is "the good friend," a dark companion that supports other colors by framing them, highlighting them, and emphasizing them.
It's very useful for highlighting strengths and softening weaknesses. While Radish Black is certainly the darkest and most radical shade in my palette, it's not an absolute black. More nuanced than pure black, it's worked with small touches of red and green that give it its innate sense of adaptation, to combine harmoniously with warm colors as well as cooler ones.







On the edge of black, the subtle Chinese tea strolls its elegance along the wooded paths of forest green. From temperate coniferous forests to humid equatorial forests, this precious shade makes no secret of its affinity with noble materials like velvet, brass, and marble.
In decoration, it is a reserve of freshness in ceremonial attire.




Broadway is pitch black on a full moon! All the depth of a clear sky, as we sometimes observe, under the stars, in the desert, or on a boat at sea.
This jazzy shade, subtly purplish with a hint of red, is at the peak of density on my blue scale. It lives at night and calls for glamorous atmospheres, rhinestones and sequins. A star, in short!