The name Chypre de Paris would have conjured vivid images for early 20th-century women: the romance of faraway lands mingling with the cosmopolitan elegance of Paris. It evoked emotions of mystery, refinement, and worldliness, promising a scent that embodied both classical richness and modern glamour. The word chypre itself carried a sense of ancient opulence — sun-warmed woods, moss-covered groves, and aromatic herbs — but when paired with Paris, it implied a fragrance tailored for the modern woman of la Belle Époque.
The perfume’s release in 1909 came at the height of the Belle Époque (1871–1914), an era of optimism, cultural flourishing, and luxurious excess. Paris was the epicenter of fashion and art; Paul Poiret was revolutionizing women’s dress with free-flowing silhouettes, the Ballets Russes had begun to enchant audiences with its exoticism, and the idea of the modern woman — confident, cosmopolitan, and socially visible — was emerging. In perfumery, the turn of the century marked a transition from the sentimental floral bouquets of the Victorian period toward bolder, more abstract compositions that celebrated materials like leather, amber, and woods. Perfume was no longer merely a ladylike adornment; it became a symbol of identity and sophistication.
Although its name suggests a classical chypre, Chypre de Paris diverged from what would later become the modern chypre structure defined by Coty’s Chypre (1917). Instead of emphasizing a mossy, floral base built on oakmoss and labdanum, Guerlain’s interpretation was aromatic, spicy, and leathery — a reflection of early 20th-century tastes for textured and assertive scents. It may have carried notes of herbs, woods, and animalic leather, producing a dry, elegant warmth that mirrored the tailored fashions and bold spirits of its era.
For women of 1909, wearing a perfume called Chypre de Paris would have signified urban sophistication tempered with exotic intrigue. It suggested a woman equally at ease in a Parisian salon as in a daydream of ancient Cyprus — confident, sensual, and modern. In context, Guerlain’s Chypre de Paris was both a continuation of a historical perfumery tradition and a forward-looking creation that bridged the romantic past with the daring new aesthetic of the 20th century.
Fragrance Composition:
So what does it smell like? Chypre de Paris is classified as an aromatic spicy leather fragrance.
- Top notes: leather, spicy notes, lavender, bergamot, lemon
- Middle notes: jasmine, orange blossom, rose, ylang ylang, orris, nutmeg
- Base notes: calamus, opoponax, patchouli, Peru balsam, oakmoss, vanilla, musk and civet
Scent Profile:
Chypre de Paris unfolds like a sensory journey through early 20th-century luxury — a tapestry of natural essences and emerging synthetics woven together with Jacques Guerlain’s precise, sensual hand. Classified as an aromatic spicy leather fragrance, it evokes the texture of finely tanned leather gloves, the warmth of polished woods, and the languor of sunlit Mediterranean gardens. To experience it note by note is to trace its evolution from the brightness of the morning air to the dim glow of evening embers.
The perfume opens with the commanding scent of leather, smooth and animalic, recalling the supple gloves and travel trunks that symbolized refinement in Guerlain’s Paris. This leather effect was achieved not from true leather itself but through accords built with birch tar, castoreum, and isobutyl quinoline—materials that together conjure the smoky, slightly bitter aroma of well-worn hide. The addition of spicy notes — likely clove, cinnamon, or perhaps a whisper of black pepper — warms the sharpness of the leather, adding depth and a tactile sensuality.
Then comes lavender, its essence distilled from the sun-baked fields of Provence, lending a brisk, aromatic counterpoint. French lavender is particularly prized for its balance of linalool (which imparts its clean, camphorous clarity) and linalyl acetate (which adds sweetness and roundness). The bergamot, likely sourced from Calabria, infuses the blend with an elegant citrus radiance, its volatile limonene and linalool molecules imparting effervescence and lift. A hint of lemon sharpens this effect — a flash of sunlight cutting through the smoke of leather — its aldehydes heightening the perfume’s sparkling first impression.
As the fragrance warms on the skin, the heart blossoms into a floral symphony that reveals Guerlain’s gift for balance and nuance. Jasmine, likely from Grasse, contributes its narcotic sweetness, rich in benzyl acetate and indole, lending both luminosity and a subtle, animalic undertone. Orange blossom, drawn from the bitter orange trees of Neroli, shimmers with honeyed freshness, a delicate interplay of linalool and nerolidol that lends a clean yet sensual transparency.
As the fragrance warms on the skin, the heart blossoms into a floral symphony that reveals Guerlain’s gift for balance and nuance. Jasmine, likely from Grasse, contributes its narcotic sweetness, rich in benzyl acetate and indole, lending both luminosity and a subtle, animalic undertone. Orange blossom, drawn from the bitter orange trees of Neroli, shimmers with honeyed freshness, a delicate interplay of linalool and nerolidol that lends a clean yet sensual transparency.
Rose, velvety and slightly spicy, bridges the gap between the floral and the leathery, while ylang-ylang—harvested from the Comoros Islands—adds a creamy, tropical languor. Its unique composition of benzyl salicylate and p-cresyl methyl ether gives the heart a smooth, narcotic quality that blends seamlessly with the cool, powdery orris root. Derived from the rhizomes of the Florentine iris, orris lends its subtle violet-woody nuance, rich in ionones that give the perfume its haunting, cosmetic-like softness. Nutmeg, from the East Indies, punctuates this floral heart with warm spice, its myristicin and safrole molecules lending a sweet, resinous heat that lingers and deepens the transition toward the base.
In the drydown, Chypre de Paris becomes shadowy and intimate, resting on a foundation of resins, mosses, and musks. The presence of calamus, a warm, woody-sweet root, brings an earthy bitterness reminiscent of damp reeds along a riverbank. Opoponax, or sweet myrrh, harvested from Somalia, introduces a resinous, balsamic warmth, its complex mixture of sesquiterpenes and furanoids imparting a soft amber glow.
In the drydown, Chypre de Paris becomes shadowy and intimate, resting on a foundation of resins, mosses, and musks. The presence of calamus, a warm, woody-sweet root, brings an earthy bitterness reminiscent of damp reeds along a riverbank. Opoponax, or sweet myrrh, harvested from Somalia, introduces a resinous, balsamic warmth, its complex mixture of sesquiterpenes and furanoids imparting a soft amber glow.
Patchouli, likely sourced from Indonesia, grounds the composition with its inky, camphorous depth; rich in patchoulol and norpatchoulenol, it provides both structure and sensuality. Peru balsam, from El Salvador, adds a silky, vanillic sweetness with undertones of cinnamon and amber, while oakmoss contributes its defining chypre character — earthy, damp, and green. Containing evernyl and atranol, natural oakmoss binds the elements together, adding complexity and an almost tactile mossy texture.
Finally, vanilla, musk, and civet create the lingering trail that defines Guerlain’s sensual signature. The vanilla, derived from Madagascar pods, rounds the base with comforting warmth through its vanillin content, while a trace of synthetic vanillin amplifies its creaminess. The musk accord — originally derived from the musk deer but recreated synthetically by the early 20th century — lends a soft, skin-like radiance, amplifying the perfume’s warmth and depth. The addition of civet, sourced from the civet cat, provides an animalic purr — intimate, slightly dirty, and profoundly human — binding the florals and resins into one living, breathing whole.
To smell Chypre de Paris is to inhale the turn of a century: a world suspended between natural opulence and modern chemistry, between the elegance of tradition and the boldness of invention. Each ingredient tells its own story — of earth, flower, and animal — yet under Jacques Guerlain’s hand, they merge into something ineffably Parisian: mysterious, refined, and alive with warmth.
Finally, vanilla, musk, and civet create the lingering trail that defines Guerlain’s sensual signature. The vanilla, derived from Madagascar pods, rounds the base with comforting warmth through its vanillin content, while a trace of synthetic vanillin amplifies its creaminess. The musk accord — originally derived from the musk deer but recreated synthetically by the early 20th century — lends a soft, skin-like radiance, amplifying the perfume’s warmth and depth. The addition of civet, sourced from the civet cat, provides an animalic purr — intimate, slightly dirty, and profoundly human — binding the florals and resins into one living, breathing whole.
To smell Chypre de Paris is to inhale the turn of a century: a world suspended between natural opulence and modern chemistry, between the elegance of tradition and the boldness of invention. Each ingredient tells its own story — of earth, flower, and animal — yet under Jacques Guerlain’s hand, they merge into something ineffably Parisian: mysterious, refined, and alive with warmth.
From our friend Monsieur Guerlain: " Frédéric Sacone tells us that Jacques Guerlain reused Chypre de Paris to make his Cuir de Russie in 1935. Upon researching the handwritten formula for Cuir de Russie, Frédéric Sacone found out that it lists Chypre de Paris, as well as Mitsouko, among its ingredients."
Evening Star, 1913:
Evening Star, 1913:
"Mere names of perfumes give no idea," said Zinda Brozia. "You must smell them. As many makers, so there are as many "'chypres'. There is no such perfume, though Walter Scott mentions it, and Houbigant had a 'cypris" in 1775. Guerlain has a 'cyprisine' and a 'chypre de Paris'. The original 'Chypre' was a very successful mixture of Atkinson, years ago; and as he did not protect the name, everybody took it up. Now Guerlain's 'Chypre de Paris', although of the cheap $1.20 series, is a sum total of perfume value, distinction and lasting qualities. I imagine it would be impossible to repeat, hein?"
Bottles:
Presented in the Carre flacon.




















