You spray a fragrance on your wrist, smell something bright and immediate, decide you love it — and then an hour later it smells completely different on your skin. This is not a defect. It is the design. Fragrance is not a static thing. It evolves, in three acts.
Top notes: the opening impression
Top notes are the first thing you smell when you apply a fragrance — and the first to disappear. They are typically light, fresh, and volatile: citrus, green tea, basil, bergamot, light florals. They evaporate within 15–30 minutes, leaving behind the more complex layers beneath.
The mistake most people make: they test a fragrance, love the top note, buy it, and discover they don't love what it becomes. Never decide on a fragrance within the first ten minutes. Wait for the heart.
Heart notes: who the fragrance really is
Heart notes emerge as the top notes fade, and they form the true identity of the fragrance. They last 2–4 hours and make up the largest proportion of the formula. Jasmine, rose, ylang-ylang, cardamom, iris, geranium — these are classic heart note materials: rich, rounded, and complex.
The heart is the character of a fragrance. It is what people will identify when they say "that scent reminds me of you." Wear a fragrance for at least 30 minutes before deciding whether it is yours.
Base notes: what stays
Base notes are the foundation — the slowest to emerge and the longest to linger. They fix the fragrance to the skin and determine how long the entire composition lasts. Common base notes: oud, sandalwood, vanilla, musk, amber, vetiver, cedarwood.
A fragrance with a strong base note will still be detectable on skin at the end of the day. On clothing, it may last days. This is why oud and vanilla-based fragrances feel like they go deeper than lighter, citrus-led scents — they are designed to stay.
How to read a fragrance description
When a fragrance lists notes, they are typically presented in order of appearance: top → heart → base. Our N° fragrance system lists these for every collection. Understanding the structure helps you predict how a fragrance will evolve and whether the base — the note that will be with you longest — is one you want to live in.
Why skin chemistry changes everything
The same fragrance develops differently on different skin because your skin's natural pH, oils, and warmth interact with the molecules in the formula. A sandalwood-heavy base might feel warm and intimate on one person's skin, and sharper and more resinous on another's. This is why fragrance testing on skin — not paper — is essential.
Building a fragrance wardrobe
Once you understand note structure, you can build intentionally: a light, citrus-heart fragrance for mornings; a deeper, oud-vanilla for evenings. The ritual wardrobe is not about having many fragrances. It is about having the right ones for each version of your day.