The 50ml bottle on your dresser represents 6 months of work across 4 continents. Here’s the full journey from flower field to finished fragrance.
Stage 1 — Sourcing the raw materials
Every fragrance starts with raw materials — flowers, citrus, wood, resin, animal secretions (increasingly synthetic). Key sourcing hubs:
- Grasse, France — the jasmine and rose capital
- Bulgaria — the world’s best rose oil
- India (Kannauj, Uttar Pradesh) — traditional attars, mitti attar, rose
- Indonesia/Vietnam — agarwood for oud
- Mediterranean — citrus oils
Stage 2 — Extraction
Getting scent out of raw materials uses 4 main methods:
| Method | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steam distillation | Flowers, herbs, woods | Traditional, inexpensive | Some delicate notes get destroyed by heat |
| Solvent extraction | Delicate flowers (jasmine, tuberose) | Preserves delicate notes | Leaves solvent traces |
| CO2 extraction | Modern luxury extracts | Clean, full scent profile | Expensive equipment |
| Enfleurage | Extremely delicate flowers | Gentlest method | Rare — mostly historical |
Stage 3 — Composition (the perfumer’s work)
A master perfumer (“nose”) blends 30–200 individual ingredients to create a finished fragrance. They work in a studio called an organ (because it looks like one — rows of small bottles). Compositions are written in formulas, tested, adjusted, and tested again over weeks or months. A single commercial perfume can take 1–5 years to develop.
Stage 4 — Maceration and aging
After blending, the concentrate is mixed with alcohol and water, then left to macerate for 2–12 weeks. This aging process lets the molecules bond and integrate — a freshly-blended perfume smells disjointed; a properly aged one smells harmonious. Premium houses age up to 6 months. Florencia ages 4–6 weeks, which is the sweet spot for affordable EDPs.
Stage 5 — Filtration, bottling, packaging
- Filtration: Removes any undissolved particles for clarity
- Batch testing: Every batch is tested for consistency against a reference sample
- Bottling: Usually done in climate-controlled rooms under nitrogen to prevent oxidation
- Batch coding: Each bottle gets a batch number for traceability
- Packaging: Glass bottle + atomiser + outer box + safety sealing
Natural vs synthetic — the modern blend
Every modern perfume uses a mix of naturals and synthetics. Synthetics are not “fake” — they’re molecules designed in labs that often perform better, last longer and are more ethical than the naturals they replace (ambergris from whales, musk from deer, civet from cats). The best perfumes are blends of natural and synthetic, each playing to their strengths.
How Florencia makes perfume
Florencia’s production process:
- Ingredient sourcing: High-grade fragrance oils from established Indian and international suppliers, IFRA-certified
- Blending: Formulas inspired by designer fragrances, adjusted for Indian climate performance
- Maceration: 4–6 weeks aging for molecular harmony
- Bottling: Done at our Bangalore facility with batch coding
- Quality control: Each batch tested against reference standard before release
FAQs
How long does it take to make a perfume?
1–5 years for the composition, then 2–12 weeks maceration per batch.
Are synthetic fragrances worse than natural?
Not inherently. Many synthetics are safer, longer-lasting, and more sustainable than the naturals they replace.
Why does perfume need to age?
Maceration lets molecules bond. A freshly mixed perfume smells disjointed; a properly aged one smells unified.
Can I make perfume at home?
You can blend oils, but professional production requires precise alcohol ratios, filtration and aging. Skin-safe home-made perfumes are hard to achieve.
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Taste the process
Every Florencia bottle is batch-coded, macerated 4–6 weeks and built from IFRA-compliant ingredients.