Vanilla Perfumes & Fragrances

Vanilla fragrance note icon

Vanilla in perfume is rarely the cupcake version. At full strength it is dark, boozy, slightly smoky and faintly leathery, with the sweetness arriving only in the dry-down.

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Natural vanilla absolute is extracted from the cured pods of Vanilla planifolia, a climbing orchid native to Mexico and now grown mostly in Madagascar, Tahiti and Uganda. Curing takes months and drives up the cost of the absolute, which is why most commercial fragrances use vanillin or ethylvanillin, synthetic molecules that reproduce the dominant sweet facet. Bourbon vanilla reads creamy and rum-like, Tahitian vanilla more floral and anise-tinged.

Vanilla sits in the base as a fixative and sweetener. Perfumers pair it with amber and benzoin for classic orientals, with tonka and coumarin for gourmands, and with oud or leather to soften darker compositions.

Vanilla performs best in cold weather and low light: autumn, winter, evenings and cosy indoor settings where its warmth has room to bloom.