Go back
Go back

French Lover

by Pierre Bourdon
A green and wild woody scent, like a damp forest. French Lover showcases a very natural, almost raw green woody note, like a damp forest after the rain. The fragrance evokes the impression of dense vegetation, with roots, trunks, and earth, something alive and a little wild.
Capacity 100ml
258,33€
Regular price 258,33€
Familles olfactives
Boisée
Boisée
Musquée
Ambrée
Aromatique
Notes de tête
  • Ferula gummosus
  • Juniper
  • Pepper
  • Violet leaf
  • Pink pepper
Notes de cœur
  • Angelica
  • Cedar
  • Frankincense
  • Orris root
Notes de fond
  • Vetiver
  • Oakmoss
  • White Musk
  • Amber

Occasions
  • Daily
  • Professional
  • Elegant outing
Sillage
Powerful
The Fragrance

French Lover opens with a green and aromatic freshness, almost cold, reminiscent of leaves and damp air. Then the wood takes over, with a dry, slightly spicy, and somewhat earthy facet, very textured, almost rough. Over time, the fragrance becomes darker and deeper, like a forest closing in, with a dense woody sensation that lingers on the skin. The whole maintains a real tension between freshness and depth. It is a very distinct, natural, and assertive woody fragrance, which plays more on materiality and atmosphere than on softness.

The brand

Frédéric Malle Editions de Parfums was born in 2000 from a simple and radical conviction. Frédéric Malle, grandson of the founder of Parfums Christian Dior, former evaluator at Givaudan, trained in art history and photography, started with a simple observation: the world's greatest perfumers work in the shadows, constrained by marketing briefs, limited budgets, and imposed deadlines. No one knows their names. He decided to reverse this logic. His model is not a perfume house. It is a publishing house, modeled on the literary world. Frédéric Malle chooses his authors, gives them total carte blanche, no brief, no time constraints, and signs each bottle with the name of its creator. Dominique Ropion, Jean-Claude Ellena, Maurice Roucel, Olivia Giacobetti, Pierre Bourdon: some of the most respected noses in the industry, who for the first time could compose without compromise and publicly claim their work. Portrait of a Lady, Carnal Flower, Musc Ravageur have become absolute references in contemporary perfumery. The bottle follows the same philosophy: neutral, refined, minimalist, designed so that nothing distracts from the perfume and its author. No muse, no advertising campaign. The house's reputation was built by word-of-mouth and the power of the fragrances themselves. A house that changed an entire industry's perception of its own craft.

You might also like...