A sample pack for some scented detective work. Find out if you can detect hedione in the formulas of the perfumes in the selection having smelled the hedione molecules in the provided specimen.
Hedione is one of these aromachemicals that are in most formulas nowadays but which never gets mentioned directly in the list of notes. It's naturally a part of white florals (such as jasmine) metabolism but perfumers use it more for structure, reach and the volumizing effect rather than its faint floral/citrusy aroma.
The pack contains 7 x 1 ml samples:
- Sucre D’Ébène (Discontinued) by Pierre Guillaume Black CollectionMolecule added for transparent volume
- Bendito Beso by Beso BeachMolecule used for abstract volume
- Lava Rose (Discontinued) by Strangers ParfumerieMolecule added for the slow-mo effect
- Boutonnière no.7 (Discontinued) by ArquisteMolecule as part of a white flower metabolism
- Noiressence by J.U.SMolecule added to separate heavy layers
- PG30 Alphaora by Pierre Guillaume - Parfumerie GénéraleHedione as a silky curtain between notes
- +Hedione solution (10% strength) / Reference material
Read more about why these perfumes best illustrate the theme in the "Detecting hedione" editor pick.
This sample pack is available as a standalone product, and also was part of our year long subscription service.
All about this fragrance
Detecting hedione pack’s concept
This sample pack was created to help you identify hedione in the wild. Since hedione is rarely listed as a note even though it appears in many formulas, the selection was built around fragrances where its airy, floral-citrus structure and volumizing effect are likely to be felt rather than named. The result is a curated set for comparing how different perfumes use that same transparent brightness across marine, woody, spicy and white-floral styles.
A sample pack for some scented detective work. Find out if you can detect hedione in the formulas of the perfumes in the selection having smelled the hedione molecules in the provided specimen.
Hedione is one of these aromachemicals that are in most formulas nowadays but which never gets mentioned directly in the list of notes. It's naturally a part of white florals (such as jasmine) metabolism but perfumers use it more for structure, reach and the volumizing effect rather than its faint floral/citrusy aroma.
The pack contains 7 x 1 ml samples:
- Sucre D’Ébène (Discontinued) by Pierre Guillaume Black CollectionMolecule added for transparent volume
- Bendito Beso by Beso BeachMolecule used for abstract volume
- Lava Rose (Discontinued) by Strangers ParfumerieMolecule added for the slow-mo effect
- Boutonnière no.7 (Discontinued) by ArquisteMolecule as part of a white flower metabolism
- Noiressence by J.U.SMolecule added to separate heavy layers
- PG30 Alphaora by Pierre Guillaume - Parfumerie GénéraleHedione as a silky curtain between notes
- +Hedione solution (10% strength) / Reference material
Read more about why these perfumes best illustrate the theme in the "Detecting hedione" editor pick.
This sample pack is available as a standalone product, and also was part of our year long subscription service.
All about this fragrance
Detecting hedione pack’s concept
This sample pack was created to help you identify hedione in the wild. Since hedione is rarely listed as a note even though it appears in many formulas, the selection was built around fragrances where its airy, floral-citrus structure and volumizing effect are likely to be felt rather than named. The result is a curated set for comparing how different perfumes use that same transparent brightness across marine, woody, spicy and white-floral styles.
