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Lavender in Perfumery, True Provence vs Cheap Lavandin
Top Note / aromatic · herbal · fresh
Lavender
Category
Top Note
Subcategory
aromatic · herbal · fresh
Origin
Natural (France, Provence, Bulgaria, UK)
Volatility
High to Medium
Botanical
Lavandula angustifolia Mill. (true) · Lavandula x intermedia (lavandin)
Perfumery's most universally recognized note. True lavender from Provence (Lavandula angustifolia) differs dramatically from hybrid lavandin, the former is refined and complex, the latter is sharp and camphorous.
Top: fresh, herbaceous, slightly camphoraceous, immediately recognizable. Heart: soft, sweet-floral, woody-herbaceous with a clean, calming quality. Base: slightly balsamic, powdery-herbal warmth. High-altitude French lavender is sweeter and more floral; Dalmatian lavender has a spicier, woodier character.
The camphor fades. A warm, slightly sweet, herbal-woody softness remains
After a few days
After a few days
A faint, dry, herbal-woody trace, clean and calming
The Full Story
True lavender, Lavandula angustifolia, is the most important aromatic herb in European perfumery, anchoring everything from fine eaux de cologne to soap bases and household fragrances. The finest grades come from high-altitude plantations in Provence (above 800 meters) and the Dalmatian coast, where thinner air and intense sun produce an oil with exceptional linalyl acetate content, the ester primarily responsible for lavender's fresh, floral-herbaceous sweetness.
The plant is distilled by steam, typically field-distilled to minimize the time between harvest and extraction. Yield is relatively generous compared to rose or jasmine, but quality varies enormously. High-altitude French lavender is sweet, herbaceous, and cleanly floral. Low-altitude material tends more camphorous and harsh. Spike lavender (Lavandula latifolia), with its high camphor and eucalyptol content, is an entirely different oil, useful in soap, but rarely in fine fragrance.
Lavandin, a naturally occurring hybrid of true lavender and spike lavender, dominates commercial production by volume. It grows at lower altitudes, yields more oil per hectare, and costs a fraction of the true lavender price. In skilled hands, lavandin serves many of the same functions, but it lacks the rounded, sweet floral elegance that makes true lavender irreplaceable in high-end compositions.
In perfumery, lavender occupies the rare intersection of masculine and feminine: it is the heart of classic fougères (classic fougère compositions dating back to the late 19th century) and the signature of Provençal femininity alike. It blends naturally with bergamot, rosemary, clary sage, geranium, oakmoss, coumarin, and practically all the classic base materials.
Fun Fact
Did you know?
The word 'lavender' comes from the Latin 'lavare', to wash. Romans added lavender to their bathwater, making it literally the world's first bath product. The connection between lavender and cleanliness is 2,000 years old.
Top-to-heart aromatic note. Foundation of the fougere family. Creates clean, herbaceous, calming compositions. The most iconic masculine fragrance ingredient.