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Almond Blossom

FLOWERS  /  floral · nutty · sweet
Almond Blossom
Almond Blossom perfume ingredient
CategoryFLOWERS
Subcategoryfloral · nutty · sweet
Origin
VolatilityHeart Note
BotanicalPrunus dulcis
AppearanceWhite to pink flowers (no commercial extract)
Odor StrengthMedium
Producing CountriesMediterranean
PyramidHeart

The flower of Prunus dulcis (sweet almond), opening in late winter before the leaves. No commercial floral extract — the 'almond blossom' note is a reconstruction built from benzaldehyde, heliotropin, anisaldehyde and ionones.

  1. Scent
  2. The Full Story
  3. Fun Fact
  4. Extraction & Chemistry
  5. In Perfumery

Scent

Almond blossom as reconstruction opens soft and faintly bitter — benzaldehyde carrying the canonical Prunus signature, heliotropin and anisaldehyde lifting the powdery-floral surface, ionones rounding the violet edge. The accord reads delicate, sweet, slightly cherry-stone, with a green calyx-and-stem trace from the flower's botanical context. It sits in the floral-gourmand register, fading on skin within the first half-hour.

Evolution over time

Immediately

Immediately

Bright and sweet floral notes dominate.
After a few hours

After a few hours

Nutty undertones begin to emerge.
After a few days

After a few days

Soft sweetness lingers with a gentle floral backdrop.

The Full Story

Almond blossom is the white-to-pale-pink flower of Prunus dulcis (sweet almond, Rosaceae). It opens in late winter — January to March across the Mediterranean and California — before the leaves emerge, on bare wood. The scent is faint when alive: powdery, sweet, faintly bitter-almond, with a green-grassy edge from the calyx and stem.

This note in Première Peau. Nuit Elastique. Sample all seven extraits in the Discovery Set.

In perfumery

There is no commercial almond-blossom absolute. The flower yields little to solvent extraction (yield around 0.01% concrete, too low for commercial viability) and the kernel oil — bitter almond essential oil (CAS 8013-76-1) — is a separate, distillable product from the seed, not the flower. Any 'almond blossom' note in fragrance is therefore a reconstruction built around benzaldehyde (CAS 100-52-7) [A] for the bitter-almond signature, heliotropin / piperonal (CAS 120-57-0) for the powdery-floral lift, anisaldehyde (CAS 123-11-5) for soft sweetness, and ionones for the violet-floral edge.

Versus bitter almond essential oil

The actual perfumery natural from almond is bitter almond essential oil — a steam distillate of the bitter-almond kernel (Prunus amygdalus var. amara), CAS 8013-76-1. It is dominated by benzaldehyde and originally contained hydrocyanic acid (from amygdalin hydrolysis), now removed by industrial processing. The flower and the kernel are different products.

Sources & Notes

[A] PubChem CID 240 — benzaldehyde, CAS 100-52-7, C₇H₆O. The defining bitter-almond aldehyde of Prunus. pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/240.

Did You Know?

Did you know?
In ancient cultures, almond blossoms were often associated with promise and hope.

Extraction & Chemistry

Extraction method: Steam distillation or solvent extraction of the blossoms

Molecular FormulaN/A - natural blossom
CAS NumberN/A - natural blossom
Botanical NamePrunus dulcis
IFRA StatusNo known restrictions
SynonymsPrunus amygdalus flower, Almond flower
Physical Properties
Odor StrengthMedium
AppearanceWhite to pink flowers (no commercial extract)

In Perfumery

In perfumery, Almond Blossom is a heart note, where it can shine in floral blends or gourmand compositions.

From the raw to the worn

This is what it becomes.