Saturday, February 2, 2013

Ambre c1839

When Guerlain introduced Ambre around 1839, the choice of name carried both elegance and resonance. In French, Ambre (pronounced ahm-bruh) refers not to the golden fossilized resin, but to ambergris, one of perfumery’s most legendary materials. Ambergris is a rare substance formed in the digestive system of the sperm whale, discovered when washed ashore after floating for years in the ocean. Its curious origin gave it an air of mystery, while its fragrance—sweet, musky, marine, and animalic—was treasured for its fixative qualities. In perfume, ambergris lends both longevity and a sensual depth, transforming floral or resinous accords into something luminous and unforgettable. The very word Ambre evokes warmth, richness, and intimacy—images of golden light, soft velvet, and the whisper of the exotic.

The perfume debuted during the July Monarchy in France, a period marked by a fascination with refinement and luxury. Paris was the heart of modernity, balancing industrial progress with romanticism. Fashion reflected this duality: women wore crinolines, voluminous skirts, and delicate lace, while men favored fitted frock coats and silk waistcoats. Perfumery at this time was evolving from the simple eaux de colognes of the 18th century into more complex, luxurious compositions. A fragrance called Ambre would have been understood by women of the period as both fashionable and sensuous—an emblem of sophistication, suggestive of mystery and allure, and tied to the exotic imagination so prevalent in 19th-century culture.

Like many perfumes of its day, Guerlain’s Ambre was part of a broader tradition. Throughout the 19th and into the 20th century, nearly every perfumery produced its own interpretation of ambergris-based scents. Recipes for “amber” perfumes appeared in formularies and trade manuals of the time, each offering slight variations on a general structure. Some houses emphasized the marine saltiness of ambergris, while others softened it with resins, vanilla, or florals. The skill of the perfumer lay in the balance—adding or subtracting ingredients to make the perfume stand apart on crowded shelves.

In Guerlain’s case, Ambre of 1839 was an “updated” interpretation of this long-standing theme, a house signature that demonstrated both artistry and refinement. Early versions would have relied heavily on natural tinctures and extracts, including true ambergris, resins, and floral absolutes. But as the century progressed, perfumery embraced the modern discoveries of chemistry. By the late 1800s, synthetic aroma chemicals such as vanillin, coumarin, ambreine and musk ketones began to appear in reformulations. These new tools allowed perfumers to emphasize certain aspects of amber’s character—its sweetness, warmth, or powdery facets—while reducing reliance on the scarce and costly natural material. Guerlain’s Ambre thus bridged two worlds: the romantic naturalism of early 19th-century perfumery and the dawn of modern, scientific fragrance creation.

For its time, Ambre was not wholly unique—amber-based perfumes were popular across Europe—but Guerlain’s interpretation carried the elegance and finesse that would become hallmarks of the house. In context, it offered women an aura of warmth, sensuality, and refinement, a perfume that both followed the trends of the day and subtly elevated them through Guerlain’s artistry. Ambre was less about novelty and more about mastery, a testament to how a timeless theme could be reimagined for a modern audience while maintaining its aura of luxury and seduction.



Fragrance Composition :



So what does it smell like? Ambre by Guerlain is classified as an oriental perfume with notes of pure ambergris tincture, balsamic notes and precious dry woods
  •  Top notes: Calabrian bergamot, Hungarian clary sage oil, Grasse jasmine absolute, Grasse rose otto, Florentine orris 
  • Middle notes: Mysore sandalwood, Sudanese myrrh, Somali olibanum, Omani frankincense, Maltese labdanum, sumbul, Indian champaca, Mediterranean cypress oil   
  • Base notes: Tonkin musk, musk xylene, musk ketone, Indian musk ambrette, Tyrolean oakmoss resin, Malaysian patchouli oil,  Mexican vanilla, Siam benzoin, coumarin, Peru balsam, South American tolu balsam, ambergris, ambreine, Canadian castoreum, Abyssinian civet

Scent Profile:


When first encountering Ambre by Guerlain, the fragrance opens with a luminous yet grounded interplay of freshness and warmth. The Calabrian bergamot lifts the perfume with a sparkling citrus brightness, distinctive for its refined tartness and soft floral undertones—a quality unique to Calabria’s sun-drenched groves, where the climate sharpens the oil’s green-floral edge. This radiance is softened by the resinous, herbaceous depth of Hungarian clary sage oil, a note that hums with slightly leathery warmth, almost like a bridge from citrus to the richness that follows. 

Then comes the luxuriant heart of flowers: Grasse jasmine absolute, narcotic and honeyed, but refined by the traditional cultivation in Grasse that ensures a balance between indolic depth and sheer lightness. Grasse rose otto follows with its velvety petals and subtle spice, giving an almost tactile plushness. The Florentine orris, with its powdery, violet-like facets and a hint of earthiness, binds these florals together—its rarity and elegance stemming from years of aging the rhizomes, which coax out their buttery, suede-like richness.

As the fragrance deepens, the heart reveals its oriental soul. Mysore sandalwood, creamy and golden, lends a warm, sacred milkiness unlike any other sandalwood—its scarcity and depth instantly distinguishable from modern substitutes. The resinous pull of Sudanese myrrh and Somali olibanum rises next, both smoky yet sweet, with myrrh leaning toward a bittersweet balsamic glow while olibanum provides a sharper, almost lemony incense lift. The Omani frankincense, treasured for centuries, adds a particularly radiant and almost silvery smoke, giving clarity and a mystical shimmer to the blend. 

Grounding all is Maltese labdanum, resinous and leathery, with a sun-dried warmth that feels primal, while sumbul root adds its musky, slightly spicy woodiness, little-known but deeply grounding. Exotic Indian champaca unfurls in a creamy, magnolia-like bloom tinged with banana and tea, adding a sensual, tropical warmth. Finally, Mediterranean cypress oil lends a clean, resinous sharpness, refreshing yet somber, like the shade of ancient trees.

The base is where Ambre becomes truly opulent and animalic. Tonkin musk, once legendary, radiates a soft, powdery warmth, here reimagined alongside synthetics—musk xylene and musk ketone—which amplify and refine its presence. These early musks, crystalline and slightly sweet, enhance the natural musk’s warmth, making it diffusive while smoothing its raw animal edge. Indian musk ambrette, derived from hibiscus seeds, adds a vegetal softness, musk-like yet slightly fruity, weaving seamlessly into the whole. Tyrolean oakmoss resin introduces its inky, bitter-green depth, anchoring the composition with forest shadows, while Malaysian patchouli oil brings earthy, damp richness, yet smoothed by the humid terroir that softens patchouli’s harsher edges.

Against this backdrop, Mexican vanilla unfurls with creamy, almost boozy sweetness, distinct from Madagascar vanilla for its warmer, spicier tone. Siam benzoin introduces a balsamic, caramel-like glow, fused with coumarin, whose tonka-bean-derived warmth suggests hay and almonds. The medicinal sweetness of Peru balsam and the softer, toffee-like depth of South American tolu balsam enrich the base with resinous density, wrapping the amber accord in plush layers. 

Central to it all is ambergris tincture—saline, animalic, with a soft marine breath—that transforms the sweetness of resins into something radiant and airy. This natural marvel is reinforced by ambreine, its chief aromatic component, ensuring longevity and diffusion while heightening the amber’s glow. The base becomes animalic in its final descent: Canadian castoreum, leathery and slightly smoky, brings a dark fur-like richness, while Abyssinian civet introduces a feral, musky intensity, lending a natural sensuality no synthetic could fully replace.

The result is a fragrance that glows like a jewel: bright at the start, resinous and mystical in the heart, and deeply animalic, balsamic, and glowing in the base. The natural materials speak of place and origin—the sunlight of Calabria, the sacred trees of Oman, the flowers of Grasse—while synthetics like musk ketone or coumarin act as bridges, amplifiers, and harmonizers. Together they create not just a perfume, but an olfactory landscape of richness, shadow, and light.

 


Bottles:


It was housed in the Carre flacon.

Photo by basenotes member Griff
 







 


Fate of the Fragrance:


Discontinued, dates unknown. Apparently relaunched in 1910-1920 and again discontinued.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Nahema 1979

Nahema by Guerlain, launched in 1979, was the creation of Jean-Paul Guerlain, a perfume that merged fantasy, sensuality, and technical innovation into one breathtaking statement of modern femininity. The name Nahema itself is rooted in legend—it comes from the Arabic name “Nahema,” meaning “daughter of fire.” It was borrowed from the tales of One Thousand and One Nights, where Nahema was the fiery twin of the gentle Mahane, a woman of irresistible passion and strength. Guerlain’s own retelling of this story cast Nahema as the embodiment of absolute femininity—provocative, magnetic, and untamable. Pronounced “nah-AY-mah” in French (or simply “na-hee-mah” in English), the word rolls from the tongue with an exotic rhythm, evoking both heat and mystery.

The perfume’s inspiration, according to Jean-Paul Guerlain, came from the incomparable Catherine Deneuve, whom he had seen in the 1968 film Benjamin. Her poised beauty—icy yet sensual—captured the duality he wished to express in scent: an elegant exterior concealing smoldering passion. Other sources claim that Maurice Ravel’s Boléro also influenced the composition, with its hypnotic, slow-building rhythm that mirrors the fragrance’s crescendo of floral intensity. Though Deneuve never appeared in advertisements for Nahema, her image seems to haunt the perfume: the polished allure of a modern woman touched with something enigmatic and untamed.

The late 1970s marked a transitional moment in perfumery. The extravagant chypres and aldehydic florals that had dominated earlier decades were giving way to richer, more emotive compositions that flirted with both opulence and modernity. Fashion was moving away from bohemian looseness toward sharper silhouettes, luxurious fabrics, and bold glamour—embodied by the likes of Yves Saint Laurent and Thierry Mugler. In this atmosphere of liberated sophistication, Nahema emerged as a statement fragrance for the woman who refused to be merely pretty; she wanted to be remembered. To women of the time, Nahema represented confidence and passion—the fragrance of someone who seized her own narrative rather than existing within another’s.


Jean-Paul Guerlain’s creation was nothing short of revolutionary in its composition. Determined to craft the most lifelike rose ever captured in perfume, he turned to the newly discovered aroma chemicals known as damascenones, molecules that occur naturally in roses and fruits and are responsible for their lush, honeyed depth. These ingredients allowed him to amplify the radiance and dimension of rose far beyond what could be achieved with natural materials alone. After 900 experimental trials, Guerlain settled on a formulation that contained a mere 0.5% of genuine rose absolute, yet smelled as if an entire garden were compressed into a single drop.

The result was a floral-oriental masterpiece: a tapestry of rich rose, hyacinth, peach, passion fruit, and sandalwood, with a glowing ambered warmth beneath. It was both radiant and shadowed—a rose caught between love and fire. At a time when perfumes like Opium (1977) and Coco (1984) were redefining sensuality with overt, spicy drama, Nahema stood apart. It was not loud, but hypnotic—its intensity blooming like a secret whispered too close to the skin.

In essence, Nahema was Guerlain’s ode to passion itself: born from myth, inspired by cinema, and realized through scientific artistry. Its name evokes a woman of fierce beauty and inner fire—an image that still burns brightly in the history of perfumery.
 
From Guerlain: “Once upon a time, far away in the Orient, a sultan had twin daughters. They were so much alike that their father gave them each names that were formed using the same letters: Mahane and Nahema. Their beauty was soon renowned throughout the land. But their resemblance was only skin-deep, for insofar as Mahane was gentle, timid and obedient, Nahema, whose symbol of femininity was the flower, was filled with fire, indomitable and passionate. One day a prince came to court them, but his heart was divided and he did not know which sister to choose. The fiery Nahema, whose nature was to devour everything, understood her fate and let her gentle sister marry the prince, then departed for a faraway land. Nahema is the perfume of provocation, seduction and absolute femininity.”  
 
 


Fragrance Composition:



So what does it smell like? The 1989 Nahema vintage version is classified as an aldehydic floral fragrance for women, opening with a fruity floral top, followed by a rosy fruity heart, and resting on a balsamic, sweet, powdery base.
  • Top notes: bergamot, hesperides, citronellol, sweet orange essence, aldehydes, flower calyx note, green notes, phenylethyl alcohol, peach, allyl cyclohexyl propionate, passion fruit, 3-Benzyl-4-Heptanone
  • Middle notes: Bulgarian rose essence, rose de Mai absolute, damascenones, geraniol, hyacinth, ylang ylang essence, lilac, lily of the valley, jasmine, muguet, violet, methyl ionone, iris absolute, davana essence
  • Base notes: Peru balsam, tolu balsam, benzoin, vanilla, vanillin, cinnamon, vetiver, vetiveryl acetate, sandalwood essence, styrax, patchouli essence

Scent Profile:


Smelling Nahema (vintage 1989) by Guerlain is like stepping into a dream—one that begins in a sunlit garden, drenched in dew, and ends in a velvet-draped room flickering with candlelight. It is an aldehydic floral of grand orchestration, where each note feels alive—fresh, petaled, and luminous—yet suffused with the unmistakable warmth and sensuality of Guerlain’s signature style.

The opening is a dazzling burst of bergamot and hesperides, their radiant citrus sparkle lending Nahema its first, effervescent breath. Bergamot, sourced traditionally from Calabria in southern Italy, offers its distinctive green-citric aroma with faint floral undertones—an uplifting freshness that sets the stage. The sweet orange essence follows, sun-ripened and juicy, brightening the opening like a shaft of Mediterranean light. Subtle touches of citronellol, a molecule naturally found in rose and geranium oils, enhance this airy vibrancy by imparting a lemony-rosy sheen, connecting the zest of citrus to the softness of flowers.

Soon, the aldehydes make their presence known—those shimmering molecules that lend sparkle, lift, and a faint metallic crispness, like light glinting on fine crystal. They act as the perfume’s breath, expanding and diffusing the florals to come. A flower calyx note—that tender green part that cups the bloom—introduces a hint of vegetal freshness, reminding one of crushed stems and garden air. The green notes—slightly sharp, slightly sweet—echo this sensation, like inhaling the scent of a bouquet just snipped from the garden.

As the top begins to soften, phenylethyl alcohol emerges—one of perfumery’s most faithful recreations of natural rose, lending a clean, honeyed floralcy that bridges the transition to Nahema’s heart. Fruity nuances begin to bloom: the fuzzy sweetness of peach, the tropical brightness of passion fruit, and the creamy fruitiness of allyl cyclohexyl propionate, a synthetic note that captures the lush, ripe quality of exotic fruit with a crystalline clarity no natural ingredient could achieve. A trace of 3-Benzyl-4-Heptanone adds a delicate woody nuance, lending depth and sophistication beneath the fruits, ensuring the opening never feels too saccharine.

Then comes the magnificent heart—the soul of Nahema—where Jean-Paul Guerlain’s obsession with the perfect rose unfolds in layer upon layer of scent. Bulgarian rose essence provides a deep, honeyed warmth—its spiciness and subtle raspberry tone giving the fragrance its velvety richness. By contrast, Rose de Mai absolute, harvested in Grasse, offers an ethereal, powdery sweetness—fresh, romantic, and airy. Between them, they form the twin pillars of Nahema’s floral core. These are amplified by the groundbreaking use of damascenones, the aroma molecules that naturally occur in rose oil and are responsible for its jammy, fruity, almost wine-like undertone. Guerlain used these with visionary precision—tiny quantities that radiate power—expanding the rose into something more abstract and incandescent than nature alone could provide.

Surrounding the roses bloom a lavish bouquet of hyacinth, ylang-ylang, lilac, lily of the valley, jasmine, and violet, each flower contributing its own texture. The hyacinth adds a green, almost spicy freshness—slightly wet and sappy—while ylang-ylang essence, likely from the Comoros or Madagascar, brings a narcotic creaminess tinged with banana and clove. Lilac and muguet (lily of the valley) lend silvery brightness, an illusion of springtime transparency amidst the lushness. Jasmine deepens the sensuality, its indolic richness recalling sun-warmed petals, while violet and methyl ionone impart a cool, powdery softness, a whisper of makeup and silk gloves. Finally, iris absolute—one of perfumery’s most precious ingredients—adds a buttery, rooty depth, and davana essence, an aromatic herb from India with fruity, apricot-like tones, gives a final golden touch, enhancing the sensual warmth of the rose heart.

As Nahema settles, it descends gracefully into a balsamic, sweet, and powdery base that lingers for hours. The combination of Peru balsam, tolu balsam, and benzoin creates a resinous foundation—sweet, warm, and slightly smoky, like polished wood dusted with vanilla. These are traditional Guerlain materials, forming the comforting signature of the house’s base accords. Vanilla and vanillin—one natural, one synthetic—mingle to produce a dual-layered sweetness: the natural vanilla brings complexity and softness, while vanillin enhances projection and creaminess. A trace of cinnamon adds warmth and a faintly exotic spice, echoing Nahema’s Eastern inspiration.

Then the woods rise: sandalwood essence (likely from Mysore, India, before restrictions made it rare) lends a milky, velvety smoothness that supports the florals like warm skin. Vetiver and its refined derivative, vetiveryl acetate, contribute dryness and structure, grounding the sweetness with earthy sophistication. Patchouli essence adds depth and a faint chocolaty shadow, while styrax weaves in a subtle leathery, ambered nuance that keeps the perfume sensual rather than overtly sweet.

In its final moments, Nahema becomes a radiant echo of itself—rose, vanilla, and amber intertwined in a soft, powdery haze. It feels alive with contrast: cool aldehydes and warm balsams, delicate petals and molten resins. The synthetics here do not compete with the naturals; they magnify them. The damascenones make the rose more voluptuous; the methyl ionone lends iris more radiance; the vanillin perfects the vanilla’s caress. The result is both natural and otherworldly—a rose that breathes fire and silk, the very embodiment of Nahema’s name: the daughter of fire.



Bottles:



The crystal parfum flacon for Nahema, designed by Robert Granai, is among the most poetic perfume presentations ever conceived by Guerlain—a vessel that visually captures the alchemy of perfumery itself. Granai, who frequently collaborated with the house, took his inspiration from the moment a drop of pure essence emerges from the distiller, that fleeting instant when liquid gold first condenses from vapor. The flacon’s elegant contours mirror this concept: it swells from a rounded base and narrows gracefully upward, as if the perfume were caught mid-birth, suspended in crystal form. The glass appears to ripple with fluid motion, giving the impression that the fragrance inside is still being born, drop by precious drop. Crafted in clear, heavy crystal, the bottle allows light to play across the amber liquid, evoking the warmth and radiance of Nahema’s fiery rose heart.

In addition to this sculptural design, Nahema’s extrait de parfum was also offered in Guerlain’s classic quadrilobe flacon, the house’s timeless symbol of luxury and continuity. The quadrilobe, with its symmetrical, four-lobed stopper, has been used since 1908 for Guerlain’s most exquisite extraits—from L’Heure Bleue to Shalimar—and in the case of Nahema, it lent a sense of lineage and tradition to what was, in 1979, a boldly modern floral creation. The rich golden liquid gleamed through the clear glass, often sealed with a gold cord and wax, underscoring the preciousness of the fragrance it contained.

For the eau de parfum concentration, Guerlain introduced a more contemporary presentation housed in the refillable “Habit de Fête” canisters, cylindrical metal cases adorned with gold detailing and the Guerlain logo. These were designed for both practicality and elegance—a luxurious object meant to be cherished, refilled, and displayed. The name “Habit de Fête,” meaning party dress, captured the celebratory nature of these canisters, each one gleaming like jewelry and emphasizing Guerlain’s belief that perfume should be a tactile as well as olfactory pleasure.

Though Nahema has long since become a treasured vintage piece, the original extrait flacon and the 1980s parfum de toilette occasionally surface in the secondary market, each preserving the unmistakable essence of its era. The extrait, with its deep, velvety rose and luminous balsamic base, remains a testament to Guerlain’s artistry in perfumery and presentation. The parfum de toilette, introduced in the 1980s, offers a lighter but still intensely romantic interpretation of the same radiant floral theme, its formulation perfectly capturing Nahema’s duality—its fire and tenderness, its opulence and restraint. Each bottle, whether crystal, quadrilobe, or canister, tells the same story: a fragrance born from passion, distilled into art, and immortalized in glass.












photos by ebay seller nsnowdon













Fate of the Fragrance:



Around 1998 Nahema went through a slight reformulation. It is classified as floral oriental fragrance for women. A kaleidoscope of honey roses, unfolding in a bed of passion fruit and vanilla.
  • The top notes: aldehydes, rose, peach, bergamot and green notes
  • Middle notes: hyacinth, Bulgarian rose, ylang-ylang, jasmine, lilac, lily of the valley, violet
  • Base notes: vanilla, passion flower, passion fruit, benzoin, cinnamon, styrax, Peru balsam, vetiver and sandalwood

Scent Profile:


The 1998 reformulation of Guerlain’s Nahema remains a sumptuous ode to the rose, but its evolution from the 1989 vintage version reveals how subtle shifts in materials and modern regulatory demands can transform a masterpiece while preserving its soul. Both share the same romantic architecture—a lush, oriental floral tapestry centered around the opulent Bulgarian rose—but the later edition softens the edges, smoothing the dramatic contrasts of the original into a more fluid, honeyed harmony. Where the 1989 Nahema burned with intensity—its damascenone-charged rose incandescent and fierce—the 1998 version glows with a mellow radiance, more luminous than smoldering, a reflection of changing tastes and ingredient availability in late-20th-century perfumery.

Upon first breath, the top notes reveal a glistening interplay of aldehydes and green notes, sparkling like dew on rose petals at dawn. The aldehydes—synthetic molecules that lift and expand the composition—give a champagne-like brightness, effervescent and airy, contrasting beautifully with the dewy greenness. A touch of bergamot lends its sunlit freshness, while peach infuses the opening with a tender, velvety sweetness—less ripe than in 1989, now more translucent, recalling soft apricot skin brushed by morning light. The first impression is of a rose garden awakened by dawn—a sense of anticipation before the full bloom.

The heart of Nahema is, as ever, an intoxicating bouquet of roses, but in 1998, the blend leans toward Bulgarian rose, prized for its radiant, honeyed warmth and balance of spicy and fruity nuances. Bulgarian roses are cultivated in the famed Valley of Roses near Kazanlak, where the unique soil and climate yield petals rich in citronellol and geraniol, giving a lush, almost velveteen texture to the scent. This contrasts the 1989 version’s heavier emphasis on rose de Mai and rose damascena absolute, which, paired with damascenones, created a deeper, wine-like tone. In 1998, the damascenone levels were softened—likely due to both IFRA restrictions and a shift in aesthetic—from bold drama to gentle radiance. Hyacinth and lily of the valley lend a cool, green lift, brightening the florals and echoing the aldehydic sparkle above, while ylang-ylang from the Comoros Islands adds its buttery, custard-like sweetness. Violet and lilac, subtle and powdery, blur the edges of the bouquet into a pastel haze, softening the rose’s intensity with a nostalgic delicacy.

As the perfume settles, the base notes unfold in a warm, sensual embrace. The vanilla—a hallmark of Guerlain’s sensual signature—is now rounder and more prominent, sourced from Madagascar, where the world’s finest vanilla orchids yield pods rich in vanillin, coumarin, and heliotropin-like nuances. The addition of passion fruit and passion flower—new to this reformulation—introduces a silky, nectar-like tropical nuance that didn’t exist in the 1989 formula. It gives the base a tender sweetness and modern sensuality, replacing the older formula’s more resinous balsamic core. The Peru balsam and benzoin still provide a golden, resinous warmth, binding the florals with a soft amber glow, while styrax adds a smoky undertone that deepens the perfume’s sensuality. Sandalwood and vetiver, earthy and grounding, temper the sweetness, their dry woods lingering like the memory of heat on skin.

The reason for this change in 1998 was multifold: evolving IFRA regulations restricted or discouraged the use of certain naturals such as high levels of damascenones, oakmoss, and certain nitro-musks, prompting Guerlain to rebalance the composition. At the same time, the 1990s ushered in a new olfactory trend toward transparency—lush yet airy florals that shimmered rather than smoldered. The reformulated Nahema reflects this sensibility: it maintains the grandeur of the rose yet translates it into a more ethereal, approachable form.

Smelling both versions side by side is like comparing two portraits of the same woman—one painted in the chiaroscuro richness of oil, the other in luminous watercolor. The 1989 Nahema is operatic, passionate, its rose drenched in fire and resin, while the 1998 version hums with gentler music—a honeyed sonnet of rose and vanilla, a kaleidoscope of warmth and light. Both are unmistakably Guerlain: timeless, romantic, and imbued with the spirit of perfumery as high art.


Nahema's parfum (extrait) was discontinued by January 2016.


2021 Reformulation:


Nahema Eau de Parfum was reformulated with modern ingredients and relaunched in 2021 as part of the Les Légendaires permanent collection of reissued classics — a curated line that preserves the house’s most iconic fragrances in modernized form while maintaining their distinctive Guerlain character. Introduced as part of Guerlain’s effort to safeguard its olfactory heritage, Les Légendaires gathers together the great perfumes that shaped the brand’s history — scents originally created by generations of Guerlain perfumers, from Aimé and Jacques to Jean-Paul and Thierry Wasser.
Each perfume in Les Légendaires represents a chapter in Guerlain’s artistic evolution. These include masterpieces such as Jicky (1889), L’Heure Bleue (1912), Mitsouko (1919), Shalimar (1925), Vol de Nuit (1933), Chamade (1969), and Nahema (1979), among others. By bringing them together under one unified collection, Guerlain honors their historical importance while updating their formulations to comply with modern safety and environmental standards.

The presentation of the Les Légendaires line reflects this balance between tradition and modernity. Each fragrance is housed in a streamlined version of the iconic “bee bottle”—first created in 1853 for Eau de Cologne Impériale—a symbol of Guerlain’s imperial heritage. The bottles are transparent, elegant, and embossed with the signature golden bees, emphasizing timeless craftsmanship.

While reformulations were necessary to meet IFRA (International Fragrance Association) guidelines and ensure ingredient sustainability, Guerlain’s in-house perfumer Thierry Wasser worked meticulously to preserve each perfume’s soul. Using both natural materials and advanced synthetics, he aimed to recreate the balance, texture, and emotional resonance of the originals. Thus, each Les Légendaires fragrance is at once familiar and newly luminous—a bridge between past and present.

In essence, Les Légendaires serves as Guerlain’s living archive: a gallery of olfactory icons, faithfully preserved yet adapted for a new generation. It invites perfume lovers to experience the house’s history as an evolving story of beauty, craftsmanship, and innovation—where every bottle carries the spirit of Guerlain’s nearly two centuries of artistry.


Fragrance Composition:


So what does it smell like? The 2021 reformulation of Nahema is classified as a floral chypre fragrance for women. 
  • Top notes: peach and passionfruit  
  • Middle notes: rose and hyacinth
  • Base notes: sandalwood and patchouli 

Scent Profile:


The 2021 reformulation of Nahema Eau de Parfum reimagines one of Guerlain’s most romantic and complex creations, distilling its opulent rose heart into a more contemporary, streamlined composition. Whereas the 1989 and 1998 versions painted Nahema as a baroque floral symphony—layered with aldehydes, resins, and a myriad of blossoms—the 2021 edition feels like the same story retold through a modern lens: cleaner lines, lighter brushstrokes, and a focus on radiance over density.

At first breath, peach and passionfruit shimmer like translucent watercolor. The peach, with its velvety flesh and honeyed juice, evokes a sun-warmed orchard in Provence—lush yet tender. Its natural lactones (especially γ-decalactone) lend a milky smoothness, blending sweetness with a hint of skin-like warmth. Passionfruit, by contrast, crackles with tartness and tropical brightness. Its aroma is rich in ethyl butyrate and other fruity esters that lend a vivid, almost effervescent freshness. This pairing recalls the earlier Nahema’s exotic opening but feels more abstract and polished—where the 1989 version had aldehydes bursting like champagne bubbles, the 2021 edition offers a restrained glow, suggesting freshness without the overt sparkle.

As the scent unfurls, the heart reveals rose and hyacinth, the very soul of Nahema. Guerlain’s rose—still Bulgarian and Turkish in inspiration—is smoother now, less honeyed and animalic than in vintage form. Modern extraction techniques and IFRA restrictions on certain natural components, such as damascenones, have softened its intensity, giving it a silkier, more transparent quality. The rose remains the centerpiece, though less opulent than the storm of blended rose essences, absolutes, and damascenones that defined both the 1989 and 1998 versions. The hyacinth lends its cool green floral note, rich in ocimene and benzyl acetate, a fresh counterpart to the rose’s warmth. In the 1989 formula, hyacinth was part of a grand bouquet—joined by jasmine, lilac, muguet, violet, and ylang-ylang—but here, it stands alone beside the rose, lending structure and a slightly dewy, crisp greenness.

The base of sandalwood and patchouli gives the fragrance its quiet depth. In vintage Nahema, this foundation was a tapestry of balsams, vanilla, styrax, and resins—sumptuous and sweet, wrapping the florals in a golden veil. In the 2021 edition, these heavy materials are pared away. The sandalwood—likely a blend of natural Australian sandalwood and synthetic sandalwood molecules like Javanol or Polysantol—retains a creamy woodiness without the milky richness of Mysore. The patchouli, fractionated for lightness, gives a dry, earthy counterpoint, anchoring the airy florals with modern precision rather than vintage weight.

The change in formula reflects both regulatory evolution and aesthetic preference. By 2021, Guerlain sought to preserve Nahema’s identity while adapting it to contemporary standards: IFRA limits on eugenol, hydroxycitronellal, and certain natural rose components necessitated reformulation. Simultaneously, modern perfumery trends favored lighter, more linear interpretations over dense, multi-layered compositions. Thus, the 2021 Nahema becomes more of a floral chypre than the original floral oriental—less sweet, less balsamic, and more radiant, emphasizing structure over sensuality.

In essence, the 1989 Nahema was a voluptuous symphony of roses bathed in balsamic light; the 1998 version a slightly pared, honeyed rose with tropical undercurrents; and the 2021 interpretation, a contemporary rose and hyacinth duet illuminated by peach and passionfruit. What remains constant is Nahema’s identity as Guerlain’s ode to the rose—each version a reflection of its era’s olfactory ideals, from baroque grandeur to modern refinement. The 2021 edition is lighter, more transparent, but still unmistakably Nahema: a rose reborn for a new century, her beauty refracted through crystal rather than silk.







Sillage 1907

Sillage by Guerlain, first launched in 1906 and arriving in the United States in 1907, was originally conceived as a men’s perfume—a rarity in an era when perfumery largely centered on women. Created by Jacques Guerlain, it was described in The Times-Democrat in 1913 as “a refined and lasting man’s perfume of the $3 series,” notable for being built upon an Oriental odorous wood that, according to the Guerlain family, grew only in a small and secretive district. Its importation was said to be a family secret passed down through generations, and the elder Guerlain himself declared that when the supply of this rare wood was exhausted, “there will be no more Sillage.” That sense of rarity, of something precious and fleeting, is woven into both the name and character of the fragrance.

The word “Sillage” (pronounced see-yazh) is French, meaning “wake” — the trail left by a ship as it moves through water, or, metaphorically, the trail of scent that lingers in the air when someone passes by. In perfume language, “sillage” later came to define a fragrance’s aura or projection — the invisible presence a perfume leaves behind. The name immediately conjures imagery of elegance in motion: a well-dressed gentleman striding through the Parisian boulevards, his scent trailing softly behind like silk unraveling in the wind. Emotionally, Sillage evokes grace, sensual confidence, and that intangible mystery that lingers long after the wearer is gone.

The perfume emerged during the Belle Époque, a period of optimism, artistic flourishing, and refinement in France. In 1906, Paris was alive with innovation — electric lights illuminated the boulevards, the first automobiles purred through the streets, and fashion was evolving toward freer silhouettes and luxurious textiles. Perfumery, too, was shifting: Guerlain’s contemporaries were beginning to explore oriental and ambery compositions, moving beyond simple floral waters toward deeper, more complex accords. For men, fragrance was still a sign of sophistication rather than vanity, and Sillage represented an evolution in masculine perfumery — less barbershop, more sensual, imbued with the Guerlinade’s signature warmth of vanilla, tonka, and woods.

Though first intended for men, Sillage soon found female admirers who appreciated its musky, floral-woody depth. The balance of white flowers laid over leather, musk, and the Guerlinade base gave it a gentle, luminous quality that transcended gender. Later editions introduced aldehydes in the top notes, lending a touch of shimmer and airiness to the otherwise rich composition — a refinement that mirrored the modernity of the early 20th century.

In the context of its time, Sillage stood apart. While many perfumes of the early 1900s celebrated pastoral florals or powdery vanities, Guerlain crafted a scent that embodied movement, sensuality, and longevity. It was at once elegant and elusive — a fragrance that whispered rather than shouted, whose beauty was found not in immediacy, but in the trail it left behind.


An excerpt from the publication, La Vielle Lumiere from 1909:
"Perfumery at that time was far from what it is now, and Guerlain was the promoter of the items that we ... his new creations: Jicky, Apres L'Ondee, Sillage, are fashionable TODAY."

 


Fragrance Composition:



So what does it smell like? Sillage is classified as a musky floral fragrance for women. White flowers over the Guerlinade accord with leather, musk and woodsy notes. Later editions included aldehydes in the top notes.
  • Top notes: aromatic notes, Egyptian jasmine, Calabrian bergamot, lemon, Tunisian orange, green hyacinth, heliotrope, lilac
  • Middle notes: Grasse jasmine, Bulgarian rose, Grasse rose, Zanzibar clove, tuberose, Nossi-Be ylang ylang lily of the valley, de Laire's Bouvardia base (ionone, rose, jasmine, and orange blossom), magnolia, mint, violet, orris 
  • Base notes: leather, spices, Abyssinian civet, Tibetan musk, ambergris, oakmoss, green resins, vanilla, Venezuelan tonka bean, Mysore sandalwood

  

Scent Profile:


Sillage by Guerlain unfolds like a story of luminous white petals drifting through a haze of musk and resin, a scent that feels both distant and intimately close — much like its name, sillage, the French word for “the trail left in the air as one passes by.” The perfume begins in a burst of aromatic freshness, where Calabrian bergamot glows with its distinctive sun-warmed bitterness. Calabrian bergamot is prized above all others for its complexity — a perfect balance of tart citrus and soft floral tones, rich in natural linalyl acetate and limonene, which give the fragrance its sparkling transparency. 

Lemon joins it, sharper and brighter, while Tunisian orange adds a sweet, honeyed fullness, warmer and rounder than the austere bergamot. The first breath feels like a Mediterranean garden kissed by morning light. Threaded through this brilliance is Egyptian jasmine, its scent lush and narcotic, filled with indoles that shimmer with animalic depth. Lilac and heliotrope soften the opening — lilac airy and nostalgic, heliotrope powdery and almond-like, a tender link between freshness and warmth. Green hyacinth lends a sharp, sappy contrast — its galbanum-like greenness evokes crushed stems, grounding the early bloom in realism.

As the perfume settles, Grasse jasmine and Grasse rose take center stage, their richness unmistakable — denser, more velvety, and sun-soaked than their counterparts grown elsewhere. Grasse’s microclimate and chalky soil coax a buttery sweetness and deep floral nuance out of each blossom, their petals steeped in natural compounds like benzyl acetate and phenethyl alcohol, which impart that unmistakable Guerlain floral warmth. Bulgarian rose layers in a darker tone — damascenone-rich, with hints of raspberry and wine — while tuberose contributes its creamy, intoxicating bloom, both carnal and cool. 

The inclusion of Nossi-Bé ylang-ylang, sourced from Madagascar’s famed “Perfumed Island,” adds exotic goldenness — high in benzyl benzoate and methyl salicylate, lending a custard-like depth that melts into the composition’s sensual heart. Around them, violet and orris whisper their silken powder, built from ionones that bridge floral opulence with delicate woodiness. Magnolia and lily of the valley brighten this velvety core with pearly light, while a trace of mint lends a fleeting cool breath, a momentary lift before the fragrance deepens again.

One of the perfume’s most historically intriguing ingredients is De Laire’s Bouvardia base — an early 20th-century perfumery accord blending ionone, rose, jasmine, and orange blossom. It was a masterful creation designed to amplify the radiance of natural florals, lending a velvety fullness and an almost tactile roundness to the bouquet. This was one of the great technical triumphs of perfumery’s early modern era — the use of synthetics to magnify and extend natural beauty, to let a single jasmine petal seem eternal.

As the perfume dries down, the base reveals its true opulence — a soft leather accord threaded with spices, oakmoss, and ambergris. The leather is supple and smooth, evocative of fine gloves rather than tanned hide, merging with Abyssinian civet and Tibetan musk to create a sensual hum of warmth. Natural civetone and muscone molecules lend the blend a shimmering animalic vibration — intimate, human, yet refined. 

Green resins lend balsamic density, while ambergris — rare and radiant — diffuses with its salt-warmed sweetness, creating the illusion of perfume that glows from within. The creamy Mysore sandalwood brings balance: its rich, milky woodiness, high in santalol, wraps everything in a soft, meditative calm. Finally, Venezuelan tonka bean and vanilla finish the composition in a gauzy sweetness — coumarin from the tonka bean mingling with vanillin to create that signature Guerlinade trail: soft, powdery, luminous, and infinitely human.

In Sillage, every element — from the sparkle of bergamot to the velvet of rose and the whisper of musk — exists to create an aura rather than a scent. It is less something worn and more something inhabited; a breath of memory and light that seems to linger even after one has gone.
  


Bottles:



Sillage was presented in a series of exquisite bottles that perfectly captured both the grandeur and sophistication of Guerlain’s early 20th-century aesthetic. The Empire flacon, created by Pochet et du Courval for the parfum, was its most distinguished presentation — a vessel of neoclassical grace and opulence. The design drew inspiration from the "Winter Circus" (Cirque d’Hiver), a Parisian landmark known for its lavish performances and fashionable clientele. In this context, the bottle became more than a perfume container — it was a theatrical object, evoking the glittering world of Belle Époque society. Its refined silhouette and architectural precision mirrored the Empire style’s fascination with symmetry, grandeur, and imperial symbolism. The polished glass, heavy in the hand, conveyed the permanence and luxury of Guerlain’s craft. It felt as though the perfume inside — elegant, musky, and radiant — was the olfactory counterpart to the opulent nights spent beneath the gilded dome of the Parisian circus.

Sillage was also presented in the Louis XVI bottle, another hallmark of Guerlain’s early design language. This bottle echoed the elegance of 18th-century French refinement — a period often referenced by the house for its association with craftsmanship, delicacy, and grace. Its clean, classical lines and restrained embellishment reflected the sophistication of the era, complementing the perfume’s character: polished, cultured, and enduringly French.

By 1923, Guerlain expanded the offering by introducing Sillage in the Goutte flacon for the eau de toilette version. The Goutte — meaning “drop” — was one of Guerlain’s most recognizable designs, known for its soft, teardrop shape and rounded shoulders. This bottle, simpler yet still elegant, was perfectly suited to the lighter concentration of the fragrance. It spoke to a new generation of wearers in the 1920s — modern women seeking freshness and fluidity, yet still desiring the timeless refinement that Guerlain represented.

Together, these three presentations — Empire, Louis XVI, and Goutte — tell the story of Sillage not only as a perfume but as an evolving reflection of Parisian luxury and taste. Each flacon captured a different facet of Guerlain’s identity: the Empire’s theatrical grandeur, the Louis XVI’s classical purity, and the Goutte’s modern elegance. In their glass forms, one sees the passage of eras, yet all share the same thread of artistry that defines Guerlain’s enduring legacy.








Fate of the Fragrance:


 Discontinued at an unknown date, it was still available for sale in 1941.

Quand Vient l'Ete 1910

Quand Vient L’Été — pronounced "Kahn Vee-ohn Lay-tay" — translates from French to “When Summer Comes.” The name alone is an invitation into warmth and sunlight, evoking the languid sweetness of long afternoons, golden light filtering through leaves, and the perfume of sun-warmed skin touched by flowers and grass. Guerlain’s choice of name reflects both poetry and optimism — a celebration of renewal and sensual ease after the gentility of spring. In keeping with Jacques Guerlain’s instinct for emotion through scent, Quand Vient L’Été is not just a perfume but a feeling: the first sigh of summer, the promise of lightness after restraint.

When it was launched in 1910, France stood at the height of the Belle Époque, an era of beauty, artistry, and cultural confidence that shimmered with progress and pleasure. Paris was a world capital of elegance — a place of cafés and salons, of dancers at the Moulin Rouge and fashionable promenades through the Tuileries Gardens. Women’s fashion, designed by couturiers like Paul Poiret, had begun to free itself from corsetry, embracing more fluid, oriental-inspired silhouettes. Hats were broad, gowns were draped in lighter fabrics, and perfumes began to reflect this new ease — moving away from the heavy animalics of the 19th century toward lighter, more impressionistic compositions. Within this world of flourishing art and self-expression, Quand Vient L’Été captured a modern spirit — sophisticated yet relaxed, radiant yet intimate.

To the women of that time, a perfume called Quand Vient L’Été would have conjured visions of sunlit leisure and the newfound independence that came with travel and the outdoors. The name evoked the sensual pleasures of the Riviera, the scent of warm tobacco drifting from café terraces, the sweetness of fresh-cut blooms carried on the wind. In an age when women were beginning to claim moments of freedom — cycling through parks, picnicking by the Seine, holidaying by the sea — Guerlain’s summer fragrance would have symbolized a new kind of femininity: graceful, modern, and self-assured.

If one were to interpret the phrase Quand Vient L’Été in scent, it might open with a burst of sun-drenched brightness — perhaps citrus, hay, or mimosa, touched with the aromatic greenness of herbs warmed by the sun. The heart would bloom with soft floral notes — jasmine, rose, or heliotrope — radiant yet gently powdery, reminiscent of skin perfumed by garden air. Threaded through it might be a whisper of tobacco, not smoky but sweet — the golden, honeyed aroma of cured leaves, suggestive of warmth and depth. This tobacco note, softened by florals and Guerlain’s signature vanillic base, would have made the fragrance distinct for its time, balancing freshness with sensuality — a foreshadowing of the oriental-floral style that Guerlain would later perfect in L’Heure Bleue (1912) and Mitsouko (1919).

 

In the landscape of early 20th-century perfumery, Quand Vient L’Été would have been innovative yet refined. While other houses still leaned toward straightforward florals or simple colognes, Jacques Guerlain was already exploring mood and atmosphere — translating light, temperature, and emotion into scent. The presence of a tobacco nuance, softened by flowers and the creamy undertone of Guerlain’s Guerlinade accord, would have distinguished it as both sensuous and intellectual — a perfume that captured the poetry of a moment, the shimmering stillness when the air grows heavy with summer.

Ultimately, Quand Vient L’Été embodied more than a season — it was an ode to sunlight, freedom, and quiet happiness. It evoked the scent of a warm afternoon after rain, the memory of laughter on a terrace, and the golden glow of a time when life itself felt like an endless summer.



Fragrance Composition:



So what does it smell like? Quand Vient L’Été is classified as a floral tobacco fragrance for women.
  • Top notes: honey, jasmine, mint, lemon, bergamot
  • Middle notes: jasmine, rose, heliotrope, ylang ylang, clove, orchid, leather, hay
  • Base notes: orris, civet and vanilla

Scent Profile:


The first impression of Quand Vient L’Été unfolds like the moment when sunlight pierces through the last veil of morning mist — golden, fragrant, and alive. The perfume begins with a bright shimmer of lemon and bergamot, their oils cold-pressed from the rinds of fruit grown along the Calabrian coast. Calabrian citrus has a particularly vivid quality — its aroma sparkling and crystalline — due to the high concentration of limonene and citral, natural molecules that give their effervescence a tangy luminosity. 

The citrus is softened by the nectarous warmth of honey, a natural bridge between gourmand sweetness and floral depth. Here, the honey feels golden and sun-thick, evoking bees moving lazily between blossoms in high summer. The note is enhanced by a hint of methyl anthranilate, a molecule naturally present in orange blossoms and jasmine, which lends an almost grape-like lushness that blends seamlessly with the honeyed tones. Threaded through the brightness is a cool whisper of mint, a breeze over the warmth, containing menthol and carvone — refreshing compounds that sharpen the senses and give structure to the otherwise languid opening.

As the fragrance warms on the skin, the heart blooms into a complex tapestry of floral and animalic tones. Jasmine dominates — not the delicate tea-like jasmine of China, but the richer, narcotic Jasmin sambac from India, known for its indole-rich complexity. Indole, a naturally occurring compound found in white flowers, gives jasmine its sensual depth — an almost skin-like warmth beneath its petal softness. In Quand Vient L’Été, this jasmine is deepened by rose, likely a Bulgarian or Turkish variety, whose damascenone molecules add a fruity, honeyed undertone, enhancing the sense of ripeness. 

Ylang-ylang, distilled from the flowers of trees grown in the Comoros or Madagascar, unfurls like molten gold — creamy, exotic, and faintly spicy, rich in benzyl acetate and linalool, which together create a narcotic, solar radiance. Heliotrope lends a tender, powdery sweetness, its almond-like aroma derived from naturally occurring heliotropin (piperonal), which bridges the transition between the floral heart and the creamy base to come.

There is an unusual tension in the middle — a suggestion of clove and hay, balancing warmth with dryness. Clove, distilled from the dried flower buds of the Syzygium aromaticum tree, contributes eugenol — a spicy, medicinal molecule that warms the florals and underscores the faintly leathery quality that follows. 

The hay note, evoking sun-cured grasses, introduces coumarin, one of perfumery’s earliest and most beloved aroma chemicals. Found naturally in tonka bean and sweet clover, coumarin imparts a dry, honeyed warmth that conjures fields baking under the July sun. A subtle trace of leather appears, faint and supple, echoing the scent of gloves and sun-warmed saddles, grounding the airy floral tones in something tactile and sensual.

The base of Quand Vient L’Été settles into a languid, dusky warmth. Orris, derived from the rhizome of the iris plant and aged for years before distillation, brings an exquisite, powdery smoothness — a fusion of violet, suede, and soft earth. Its main constituents, ionones and irones, create a serene, nostalgic quality — a reflection of light on pale silk. Into this comes vanilla, likely from Madagascar, its vanillin sweetness deepened by natural balsamic resins. Vanilla lends a comfort and familiarity that wraps the earlier floral and honeyed notes in a golden haze. 

The faintly animalic civet, once obtained from the civet cat but now replicated synthetically, hums softly beneath — a note of warmth and intimacy that enhances the natural muskiness of the skin. Synthetic civetone, the primary molecule used to reproduce this effect, gives the base its roundness and sensuality without the harshness of the natural extract.

As the perfume evolves, every element seems to shimmer between sunlight and shadow, warmth and air, innocence and seduction. The interplay of honeyed sweetness, sunlit florals, dried hay, and animal warmth feels both nostalgic and alive — as if capturing the memory of summer as it is happening. Quand Vient L’Été smells like the air just before dusk on a long golden day — when the flowers have grown sleepy in the heat, the fields hum with hidden life, and the sky carries the promise of another warm morning to come.



Bottles:



Presented in the Fleuri flacon (parfum), the quadrilobe flacon (parfum) and the Goutte flacon (eau de toilette) starting in 1923. Also presented in the Persane/Mauresque flacon, created by Pochet et du Courval in 1910. Based on a 17th century Persian or Moorish perfume flacon in the Guerlain family collection. This flacon was also used for other Guerlain perfumes.


Photo by ellenaa

photo by ebay seller trust8909



 Photo from dgaudit


photo by ebay seller trust8909






Fate of the Fragrance:



Quand Vient L’Été was eventually discontinued, though the precise date of its withdrawal from Guerlain’s catalogue remains uncertain. Archival mentions confirm that it was still being sold as late as 1953, a testament to its quiet endurance and the affection it inspired long after its debut in 1910. For over four decades, it lingered within Guerlain’s repertoire like a cherished seasonal memory—resurfacing each summer to evoke golden sunlight, honeyed warmth, and the languid ease of long days beneath a blue Parisian sky.

Its discontinuation likely coincided with the evolution of perfumery in the mid-20th century, when tastes shifted toward crisper aldehydic florals and modern chypres. Yet, Quand Vient L’Été represents a bridge between two eras—the romanticism of the Belle Époque and the emerging modernity of postwar France. Even in its absence, the name carries a wistful poetry: Quand Vient L’Été—“When Summer Comes.” The fragrance endures as a whisper of Guerlain’s early artistry, an olfactory memory of sun-warmed petals, sweet hay, and ambered air, echoing from a vanished summer that never entirely faded.


1998 Reissue:


In 1998, Quand Vient L’Été returned briefly from obscurity when Guerlain reissued it as a limited edition of only 2,500 bottles, each presented in the elegant Fleuri flacon, a design steeped in the house’s tradition of refined craftsmanship. This edition contained 75 ml of eau de toilette, a lighter interpretation that sought to capture the original’s golden warmth and nostalgic charm while adapting it to modern sensibilities. The reissue felt like a love letter to Guerlain’s heritage—a quiet nod to collectors and connoisseurs who cherished the grace and poetry of the house’s early works.

After its fleeting reappearance, the fragrance was again discontinued, fading once more into the archives. Yet its story did not end there. In 2005, Guerlain relaunched Quand Vient L’Été for a second time, hoping to rekindle the affection that had once surrounded it. The revival was short-lived, however, as it was withdrawn soon after, leaving behind only a few treasured bottles and the lingering memory of a scent that seemed forever tied to sunlight and fleeting beauty.

This pattern of disappearance and revival mirrors the very spirit of the perfume itself—a fragrance born to celebrate transience, the warmth of passing seasons, and the bittersweet nature of summer’s end. Each reissue served as a delicate reminder of Guerlain’s ability to evoke nostalgia through scent, reaffirming Quand Vient L’Été as one of the house’s most quietly poetic creations.

Guerlinade 1921

Launched in 1921, Guerlinade was both a fragrance and a statement of identity — a perfume that celebrated the very essence of the Guerlain style. Created by Jacques Guerlain, it took its name from the house’s famed perfumery accord of the same name, a harmonious blend of rose, jasmine, vanilla, and tonka bean that became the unmistakable signature woven through nearly every Guerlain creation. Pronounced simply as “gair-lin-ahd,” the word itself carries a distinctly French musicality — light, graceful, and elegant. It is derived from the family name “Guerlain” and the suffix “-ade,” implying a composition, melody, or refrain. In that sense, Guerlinade means “the song of Guerlain,” a poetic encapsulation of the brand’s olfactory language and artistic legacy.

The name conjures images of refinement, warmth, and continuity — a soft echo of familiarity that transcends time. One might imagine the word Guerlinade as the lingering aura of a woman’s perfume on silk gloves, or the memory of powder and flowers mingling in a mirrored boudoir. It evokes a feeling of comfort and sophistication — not ostentatious luxury, but something more personal, elegant, and enduring. To wear Guerlinade was to wear the very heart of the Guerlain house: an intimate expression of its craftsmanship and style.

The perfume debuted at a fascinating moment in history — the early 1920s, a period marked by transformation and modernity. Europe was emerging from the devastation of the First World War, and the Art Deco era was dawning, characterized by its streamlined elegance, bold geometry, and celebration of luxury after years of austerity. Women’s fashion, too, was undergoing a revolution: corsets were disappearing, hemlines were rising, and the liberated garçonne spirit was redefining femininity. Yet amid this newfound modernity, there remained a longing for tradition, beauty, and artistry — qualities that Guerlinade embodied perfectly.

In scent, Guerlinade was the distillation of the Guerlain family’s creative DNA — a floral oriental that balanced classic beauty with sensual warmth. The delicate freshness of rose and jasmine formed the heart of the fragrance, evoking purity, femininity, and grace. These floral notes were softened by the creamy sweetness of vanilla and tonka bean, rich in coumarin, which imparted the smooth, almond-like warmth that became synonymous with the Guerlain signature. The blend of floral, powdery, and ambery tones created a texture both tender and luxurious — like the touch of fine silk on skin.

For women of the time, a perfume called Guerlinade would have held particular meaning. The name itself, directly referencing the house’s identity, suggested something deeply personal and prestigious — a scent born from the intimate artistry of the Guerlain atelier. It represented heritage refined through innovation — a fragrance steeped in tradition yet perfectly suited to the modern woman of the 1920s: elegant, self-assured, and aware of her individuality.

Within the broader landscape of perfumery, Guerlinade aligned with the prevailing trend of floral orientals but distinguished itself through its subtlety and technical mastery. While other perfumers were beginning to experiment with bold synthetics and daring new accords, Jacques Guerlain used modern materials to refine and elevate the familiar, creating a composition that felt timeless rather than fashionable.

In essence, Guerlinade was — and remains — the olfactory soul of Guerlain: a hymn to harmony, warmth, and feminine grace. It captured the perfect balance between the natural and the composed, the intimate and the eternal — a scent that whispered of heritage, artistry, and the enduring beauty of French perfumery.



Fragrance Composition:



So what does it smell like? Guerlinade is classified as a floral oriental fragrance for women.
  • Top notes: aldehyde, Sicilian neroli, Calabrian bergamot, Tunisian hesperides, peach
  • Middle notes: white lilac, hyacinth, Egyptian jasmine, Egyptian rose, Grasse jasmine, Grasse rose, Moroccan orange blossom, French orris
  • Base notes: sage, Mayotte vanilla, Venezuelan tonka bean, almond, Haitian vetiver, Indonesian patchouli, Tibetan musk


I was able to obtain a sample from my good friend Alexandra Star, who has lots of rare antique Guerlain treasures in her etsy shop, Parfums de Paris. If you are interested in experiencing the deliciousness of Guerlinade, stroll on over to her shop and take a look around.  


Scent Profile:


To inhale Guerlinade is to experience the very soul of the House of Guerlain — a symphony of floral warmth and oriental sweetness that seems to breathe with life. Created by Jacques Guerlain in 1921, it opens like the soft flare of morning light — luminous, golden, and tenderly nostalgic. The first impression is a delicate radiance, a whisper of aldehydes sparkling in the air. These synthetic molecules, newly fashionable in early 20th-century perfumery, lend an ethereal brilliance to the composition — a gentle shimmer that lifts the natural ingredients, giving them space to bloom. They do not dominate but illuminate, like sunlight catching on silk.

Then, the citrus heart of the opening unfurls — Sicilian neroli, Calabrian bergamot, and Tunisian hesperides together create a dazzling interplay of freshness and warmth. The neroli, distilled from the blossoms of bitter orange trees along the Sicilian coast, has a honeyed, green brightness — rich in linalool and nerolidol, which lend it a creamy floral depth. Calabrian bergamot, grown in the sun-drenched groves of southern Italy, offers a perfectly balanced citrus note — not sharp but elegant, its linalyl acetate softening the edges into a velvety sparkle. The Tunisian hesperides bring a slightly deeper, more resinous citrus tone — sun-drenched and faintly aromatic, giving a sense of Mediterranean warmth. A hint of peach rounds out this luminous prelude, its velvety fruitiness both soft and inviting. The molecule gamma-undecalactone, responsible for peach’s creamy sweetness, introduces a human warmth — the suggestion of skin touched by sunlight.

The heart of Guerlinade is a breathtaking floral tapestry, where blossoms from across the world intertwine in exquisite harmony. White lilac and hyacinth form the cool, green-floral opening of the bouquet — fresh, dewy, and softly nostalgic, their molecules benzyl acetate and phenylethyl alcohol evoking the scent of early spring gardens. As these fade, the deeper florals unfold: Egyptian jasmine and Egyptian rose, with their lush and sultry warmth, contrast beautifully with their counterparts from Grasse in southern France. Egyptian jasmine, rich in indole and benzyl benzoate, has a fuller, more animalic sensuality, while Grasse jasmine — the legendary Jasmin grandiflorum cultivated for centuries in Provence — is fresher, lighter, and more refined. Similarly, the Egyptian rose is vibrant and spicy, whereas the Grasse rose, bathed in the gentle Mediterranean sun, is the epitome of classic French elegance — delicate, powdery, and romantic, rich in citronellol and geraniol.

Adding further nuance are Moroccan orange blossom and French orris. The orange blossom, grown in the fertile plains of Morocco, introduces a golden radiance — floral yet honeyed, underscored by its natural linalool and terpineol, which lend warmth and smoothness. French orris, extracted from the rhizomes of the Florentine iris after years of aging, brings a cool, powdery grace. Its ionones and irones give off the faint scent of violet and soft leather, linking the heart to the perfume’s velvety base. These florals together create a sensory impression of timeless femininity — the softness of silk, the calm glow of candlelight, the intimacy of a remembered scent.

As Guerlinade settles into its base, it transforms from floral luminosity to a warm, sensual embrace. The sweetness of Mayotte vanilla — sourced from the Comoros archipelago — unfurls with creamy depth. This island’s vanilla, rich in vanillin and heliotropin, carries a distinct warmth, softer and more floral than the Madagascan variety. It melds seamlessly with the Venezuelan tonka bean, whose coumarin adds a velvety, almond-like richness that forms the foundation of the famed Guerlain signature. The almond note enhances this sweetness further, echoing the comforting powder of tonka and the creaminess of vanilla, while the natural and synthetic coumarins work in harmony to give longevity and warmth — a perfect example of Guerlain’s mastery in blending nature with chemistry.

Balancing this indulgent sweetness are earthy and sensual counterpoints — Haitian vetiver, Indonesian patchouli, and Tibetan musk. The Haitian vetiver, prized for its dry, smoky clarity, lends sophistication and structure, grounding the composition with its complex mix of vetiverol and vetivone. Indonesian patchouli, aged to mellow its sharpness, contributes a dark, velvety richness — earthy yet refined, deepening the oriental tone. Finally, the Tibetan musk adds a lingering animalic softness, a whisper of warmth that fuses with skin, creating a sensual aura that endures. The inclusion of sage at the base introduces a subtle aromatic freshness, preventing the fragrance from becoming overly sweet and keeping its balance poised and elegant.

In its entirety, Guerlinade is a portrait of floral serenity wrapped in oriental warmth, an ode to Guerlain’s craftsmanship and artistic continuity. Every element — from the sparkling aldehydes to the sunlit florals and creamy resins — is woven with perfect precision, each note enhancing the next. It smells of continuity, of refinement passed down through generations, of beauty perfected yet never static. To smell Guerlinade is to experience Guerlain’s heartbeat — the fragrant embodiment of elegance, tenderness, and timeless French artistry.




Bottles:



Presented in the Lyre flacon (parfum) from 1921-1959, the quadrilobe flacon (parfum), the flacon Brun Fume starting in 1933, the Guerre flacon (parfum) from 1938-1945 and in the Amphore flacon (parfum) starting in 1955.










Fate of the Fragrance:


Discontinued, date unknown. Still sold in the 1950s.

1998 Reissue:


After decades of silence, Guerlinade returned in 1998 — not as a simple revival, but as a heartfelt homage to the House’s own soul. Jean-Paul Guerlain, the last of the family’s great perfumers, reimagined the legendary 1921 creation into something entirely new: a floriental eau de parfum, luminous yet enveloping, built upon the House’s mythical accord — the Guerlinade. This accord, often described as the “Guerlain essence,” is a secret blend of rose, jasmine, tonka bean, and vanilla that has perfumed every Guerlain fragrance since 1828. In this 1998 composition, Jean-Paul transformed that heritage into a personal and poetic statement — “my gift to women,” he said, “to be used and adorned, then to disappear.”

The story behind its creation feels almost dreamlike. Jean-Paul Guerlain confessed that he literally dreamed the scent — inspired by the handwritten formula books of his forebears, each page filled with the guarded recipes that defined nearly two centuries of French perfumery. Those fragile papers, locked away in Guerlain’s Paris archives, became the muse for a fragrance that would honor both the 200th birthday of founder Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain and the 170th anniversary of the House itself. What emerged was not an echo of the 1921 perfume, but an entirely modern reinterpretation — softer, rounder, and more introspective, with an unmistakable link to Guerlain’s historic DNA.

The fragrance itself opens with a delicate shimmer of bergamot, that quintessentially Guerlain citrus, balancing freshness and refinement. Its radiant opening is quickly softened by a heady bouquet of lilacs, Grasse rose, iris, jasmine, and linden, evoking the timeless grace of French gardens in full bloom. The lilac lends a nostalgic tenderness — airy and slightly powdery — while Grasse rose, the flower of perfumers, adds a velvety richness that feels both classical and comforting. Iris, with its cool, buttery smoothness, introduces that powdered elegance so emblematic of Guerlain, while jasmine brings warmth and sensuality. The linden blossom, often associated with the scent of Parisian springtime, gives a honeyed, golden touch — gentle and luminous.

At its heart lies the Guerlain signature — a luxurious accord of tonka bean, vanilla, jasmine, and orris, underscored by dark animalics and soft resins. The tonka bean from Venezuela infuses the blend with creamy coumarin sweetness, bridging the natural warmth of Mayotte vanilla, whose soft, almost floral quality rounds the fragrance into something intimate and tactile. The deeper notes — ambery resins and animalic undertones — whisper of sensuality and heritage, grounding the floral sweetness in something undeniably human and warm. This interplay between purity and depth, light and shadow, defines Guerlinade’s allure: a scent both ethereal and deeply emotional, modern yet timeless.

Presented as a limited edition flacon by Baccarat, the perfume was encased in an object as refined as its contents. Designed by Robert Granai, the bottle was inspired by a bronze Nepalese wedding vase once used to sprinkle rose water over guests — a gesture symbolizing blessing and good fortune. Its simple, elegant silhouette reflected the purity of Guerlain’s intent, while each presentation included a painted backdrop and an authenticity scroll, emphasizing the exclusivity of this commemorative release.

Only 50,000 bottles were produced worldwide — 3,500 for the United States and 300 for Canada — making it one of Guerlain’s most coveted modern rarities. Priced at $175 for 1.7 ounces, it was not just a perfume, but a piece of Guerlain’s living legacy: a scent that bridges the centuries, where the dream of its creator meets the soul of a dynasty. Guerlinade (1998) stands as a fragrant love letter — to women, to craftsmanship, and to the enduring poetry of the Guerlain name.


2005 Reissue:


It was relaunched in 2005 for the Les Parisiennes line.
  • Top notes: Calabrian bergamot, Tunisian hesperides
  • Middle notes: white lilac, hyacinth, rose and jasmine from Egypt and Grasse
  • Base notes: Mayotte vanilla, tonka bean and French iris.





Guerlain's Talc de Toilette

 Guerlain's Talc de Toilette was housed inside of a tin enameled in blue, off white and black.