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Mimosa in Perfumery, The Golden Winter Flower of the Riviera
Heart Note / floral · powdery · sweet
Mimosa
Category
Heart Note
Subcategory
floral · powdery · sweet
Origin
Natural (France, Cote d'Azur, Grasse; Australia, North Africa)
Volatility
Medium to Low
Botanical
Acacia dealbata Link
A powdery, honey-sweet floral with a distinctive violet-almond-hay character. Mimosa absolute from Grasse is one of perfumery's most evocative naturals, conjuring the Cote d'Azur in golden winter light.
Top: fresh, slightly green, powdery-sweet. Heart: rich, honeyed-floral, waxy-sweet, warm and enveloping. Base: woody, slightly animalic warmth with a cassie-like depth. The overall impression is of sunlit, golden warmth, powdery yellow flowers on a Mediterranean hillside.
Scent Evolution
Immediately
Immediately
Powdery, slightly green, almondy, a soft yellow floral with a cucumber-like freshness
After a few hours
After a few hours
Warm, honeyed, powdery depth. The almond quality intensifies, becoming almost gourmand
After a few days
After a few days
A gentle, powdery, faintly sweet trace, spring sunshine captured in a molecule
The Full Story
Mimosa, specifically Acacia decurrens and related species, produces one of perfumery's most underappreciated absolutes. An Australian native brought to southern France as an ornamental tree in the early 19th century (where it is known as 'Sydney Black Wattle'), mimosa now grows abundantly along the Côte d'Azur, where its fluffy yellow flower clusters are harvested in late winter for extraction.
The concrète, obtained by petroleum ether extraction of the flowers and twig-ends, is a hard, pale yellow, wax-like mass with a sweet-woody, fatty, deep-floral scent and a distinctive waxy, almost honey-like sweetness. The absolute, washed from the concrète with alcohol, is a very viscous, amber-colored liquid that resembles fresh honey in appearance. Its scent is very rich, floral-woody, slightly green, and resembling cassie absolute to a degree, but sweeter and more natural in its flower-like character.
What makes mimosa absolute remarkable in practice is not its own character alone but its ability to transform everything around it. In amounts of 0.5 to 2 percent in a soap perfume, this single material can make the difference between a flat, common odor and a radiant, natural, deep, intriguingly interesting fragrance. The absolute rounds off the harsh edges of synthetics, lifts natural materials into a richer register, and imparts a radiance that is genuinely astonishing for its modest concentration.
Mimosa blends perfectly with ionones, heliotropine, anisyl alcohol, phenylethyl alcohol, ylang-ylang oil, and countless other floral and powdery materials. Annual production of the concrète fluctuates between 200 kilos and about one ton, depending on demand and frost damage, a heavy frost in early 1956 killed all the mimosa trees in parts of southern France, leaving the industry without supply for nearly two years.
Fun Fact
Did you know?
In Russia, mimosa is the traditional flower given on International Women's Day (March 8). Every year, approximately 80 million mimosa stems are sold in Russia for this single holiday, making it the largest consumer of cut mimosa in the world.