Lavender fields in Provence

Encyclopedia · Olfactive families

Aromatic family

The aromatic family covers perfumes built around Mediterranean aromatic plants: lavender, rosemary, sage, basil, thyme, mint, fennel, anise. A close cousin to fougere, recognized as standalone by the Société Française des Parfumeurs in 2010.
Classification · SFP, 2010 revision
Origin · Mediterranean
Sub-families · 5 contemporary

Definition and place in classification

The aromatic family covers, in the olfactive classification of the Société Française des Parfumeurs (SFP), perfumes built around Mediterranean aromatic plants: lavender (Lavandula angustifolia), rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis), clary sage (Salvia sclarea), basil (Ocimum basilicum), thyme (Thymus vulgaris), mint (Mentha piperita, Mentha viridis), fennel, green anise and star anise (badian), marjoram, tarragon and hyssop. All of these materials are obtained by steam distillation of leaves, flowering tops or seeds of culinary and medicinal herbs (Fragrantica, Aromatic notes; SFP classification, accessed 26 May 2026).

The aromatic family is one of the most recent in the SFP classification, recognized in the 2010 revision and consolidated in 2017. Before 2010, most perfumes today classified as aromatic were filed under aromatic fougere or aromatic hesperidic, subcategories of the fougere and hesperidic families. Standalone status was driven by the emergence in the 2000s and 2010s of compositions where aromatic plants were the main subject, without a fougere signature or a dominant citrus axis (Now Smell This; Persolaise, accessed 26 May 2026).

The distinction with the fougere family is subtle but essential. Fougere is built on a triadic signature accord (lavender-coumarin-oakmoss). The aromatic family is freer: it uses aromatic plants without requiring the fougere accord. A lavender-basil-rosemary composition without coumarin or oakmoss reads aromatic, not fougere. This flexibility has fostered diverse niche aromatics, from Mediterraneo by Acqua di Parma (basil-cedar) to Pour Monsieur by Chanel (lavender-coriander-geranium).

Olfactive profile

Aromatic writing rests on three founding markers: dominant aromatic plants at the heart, herbaceous-camphoraceous character, and medium volatility. None of these markers alone is sufficient; the combination defines the profile.

The dominant aromatic plants at the heart is the central marker. An aromatic composition must have at least two to three herbs at a dominant heart, none subordinated to another type of material. If lavender is placed at the service of a floral (Diorissimo in the background), the composition is not aromatic. If it is placed at the service of a fougere (Pour un Homme by Caron), neither. For the composition to read aromatic, the herbs must be the subject and the rest of the composition their support.

The herbaceous-camphoraceous character is the second marker. Aromatic plants share a common olfactive profile: camphoraceous molecules (eucalyptol, camphor, borneol, alpha-pinene), green herbaceous notes, slight astringency. This camphoraceous-herbaceous profile sets aromatic apart from other fresh families: hesperidic evokes zest, floral evokes flower, aromatic evokes foliage and stem.

The medium volatility is the third marker. Aromatics do not fade as fast as hesperidic compositions (2 to 4 hours) nor last as long as woody compositions (12 hours and more); their typical longevity sits between 4 and 7 hours on skin. This intermediate volatility makes them especially suited to daytime, office and outdoor summer wear: tenacious enough not to vanish after an hour, light enough not to overwhelm the environment.

The aromatic family is the most geographically situated: one hears the South immediately, the maquis, the cuisine of summer. No other family carries a landscape as fully.According to Persolaise and Now Smell This, the aromatic register reads as the signature of Mediterranean perfumery

Key characteristics

Dominant materials
Lavender, rosemary, clary sage, basil, thyme, mint, fennel, anise, marjoram, tarragon, hyssop, often paired with citrus at the top and cedar or vetiver at the base
Typical longevity
4 to 7 hours on skin. Longer with aromatic-woody compositions (8 to 10 hours).
Preferred seasons
Spring and summer above all. Mid-seasons indoors. A few warm aromatics (Yatagan) hold up in winter.
Audience
Historically masculine (in the wake of fougere). Increasingly unisex in contemporary niche perfumery.

Composition and sub-families

The aromatic family has diversified into five sub-families that English-language references recognize as distinct. Each rests on a specific accord pairing aromatic plants with a complementary register at the top or base (Fragrantica accords index, accessed 26 May 2026).

Sub-familyDominant axisEmblematic perfume
Fresh aromaticLavender, mint, rosemary at the bright openingPour Monsieur (Chanel, 1955)
Aromatic hesperidicHerbs with citrus at the top (hesperidic border)Eau Sauvage (Dior, 1966)
Aromatic woodyHerbs with cedar, vetiver at the baseVetiver (Guerlain, 1959)
Aromatic spicyHerbs with cumin, cardamom, pepperYatagan (Caron, 1976)
Aromatic marineHerbs with calone, ozonic notesAcqua di Gio (Armani, 1996)

These sub-families are not watertight. Sauvage by Dior (2015) sits between fresh aromatic and modern ambery fougere. L'Eau d'Issey Pour Homme (Issey Miyake, 1994) plays at the fresh aromatic / marine aquatic boundary. The taxonomy serves as a compass, not a cage.

Beyond the sub-families, the aromatic register is built on a small number of recurrent natural materials. Lavender from Provence (France) and the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence is the cornerstone, with linalool and linalyl acetate as principal odorants. Rosemary from Spain and Tunisia brings a sharper camphoraceous edge (1,8-cineole). Clary sage from Russia and France adds a tea-like, slightly winy facet. Basil from the Comoros and Egypt provides a green-anisic top, while peppermint from Washington State (USA) and India contributes menthol-driven freshness (Steffen Arctander, Perfume and Flavor Materials of Natural Origin; Robertet technical sheets, accessed 26 May 2026).

History

Aromatic plants have been used in cosmetics and perfumery since Antiquity. Romans and Greeks used them extensively in scented oils, baths and ointments. Provence and Southern Italy have been, since the Middle Ages, the two main production basins for lavender, rosemary and sage, first for monastic pharmacopoeia and then for industrial perfumery from the nineteenth century onward (Wikipedia, History of perfume; Givaudan corporate history, accessed 26 May 2026).

The modern aromatic family has no single founding date comparable to Fougère Royale (1882) for fougere or to Chypre (1917) for chypre. It gradually emerged from the fougere family between the 1950s and the 1990s, as compositions broke free from the lavender-coumarin-oakmoss accord and started exploring herbs in their own right.

Three milestones structure this autonomization. The first is Pour Monsieur by Chanel (1955, Henri Robert), a fresh aromatic lavender-coriander-geranium that stood apart from classical fougeres by avoiding a coumarin signature. The second is Vetiver by Guerlain (1959, Jean-Paul Guerlain), a green aromatic-woody centered on vetiver and tobacco, often cited as the foundational aromatic-woody. The third is Eau Sauvage by Dior (1966, Edmond Roudnitska), an aromatic-hesperidic that combined bergamot, lemon and rosemary with the captive molecule Hedione, opening a new register for masculine perfumery (Osmothèque archives; Persolaise, accessed 26 May 2026).

Two further compositions consolidate the family. Polo by Ralph Lauren (1978, Carlos Benaim) bridges aromatic-fougere and woody chypre, with pine, leather and herbs at its core; it is cited as a transitional reference between fougere and aromatic (Fragrantica perfumer pages, accessed 26 May 2026). Eau d'Hadrien by Annick Goutal (1981, Annick Goutal and Francis Camail) installs the Mediterranean aromatic woody with cypress, cedar, citron and Sicilian lemon. Acqua di Gio by Giorgio Armani (1996, Alberto Morillas) consolidates the aromatic-marine variation, combining calone, rosemary and bergamot in one of the best-selling masculine perfumes of the late twentieth century.

Contemporary niche perfumery has cemented the family's standalone status from the 2010s onward. Encens Mythique (Armani Privé, 2014), Herba Fresca (Guerlain), the fresh waters of Atelier Cologne and several creations by Diptyque play the aromatic card openly without reference to fougere. This recognition is what led the SFP to acknowledge aromatic as a standalone family in the 2010 revision.

Notable perfumes featuring aromatic herbs

Five compositions consistently return in the specialist press as benchmarks for the aromatic register. The selection spans 1959 to 1996 and covers aromatic-woody, fresh aromatic, aromatic-hesperidic, aromatic-fougere transition and aromatic-marine.

YearHousePerfumeRole of aromatic herbs
1959GuerlainVetiverJean-Paul Guerlain. Aromatic woody, vetiver and tobacco with herbal accents; reference aromatic-woody.
1966DiorEau SauvageEdmond Roudnitska. Aromatic hesperidic with bergamot, rosemary and the Hedione captive; foundational modern masculine.
1978Ralph LaurenPoloCarlos Benaim. Aromatic-woody-chypre, pine and leather; transitional reference between fougere and aromatic.
1981Annick GoutalEau d'HadrienAnnick Goutal and Francis Camail. Mediterranean aromatic woody with cypress, citron and cedar.
1996Giorgio ArmaniAcqua di GioAlberto Morillas. Aromatic-marine with rosemary, bergamot and calone; commercial milestone of the late twentieth century.

Neighboring families

The aromatic family shares blurred boundaries with three olfactive families that borrow some of its markers without belonging to the same register. Distinguishing these neighboring families blind requires attention to the exact role of the herbs in the pyramid.

Neighboring familyWhat it sharesWhat sets it apart
Fougere familyLavender at the heart, pyramidal structureBuilt on the mandatory fougere accord (lavender-coumarin-oakmoss). Aromatic does without the coumarin and the oakmoss.
Hesperidic familyFreshness, citrus at the topCentered on pure citrus, with no herbs at a dominant heart. The hesperidic opening may be shared, but the heart differs.
Marine aquatic familyFresh character, occasional green notes, basilBuilt on calone and marine accords, with no herbaceous heart. The freshness is aqueous, not vegetal.

Several perfumes sit at the borders between aromatic and a neighboring family. L'Eau d'Issey Pour Homme navigates between aromatic and marine aquatic. Eau Sauvage by Dior (1966) plays at the aromatic-hesperidic-floral border. Sauvage by Dior (2015) explores the modern aromatic-ambery-fougere boundary.

Frequently asked questions

What is the aromatic family?01
An SFP family centered on Mediterranean aromatic plants: lavender, rosemary, sage, basil, thyme, mint, fennel, anise. A close cousin to fougere, recognized later in the 2010 revision.
What sets aromatic apart from fougere?02
Fougere is built on a mandatory triadic accord (lavender-coumarin-oakmoss). The aromatic family is freer: it uses aromatic plants without requiring the fougere accord.
Why is the aromatic family more recent?03
Recognized by the SFP only in the 2010 revision. Before that date, compositions today classified as aromatic were filed under aromatic fougere or aromatic hesperidic.
Which perfume best exemplifies the aromatic family?04
Vetiver by Guerlain (1959, Jean-Paul Guerlain) as aromatic woody benchmark. Eau Sauvage by Dior (1966, Edmond Roudnitska) for aromatic hesperidic. Acqua di Gio by Armani (1996, Alberto Morillas) for aromatic marine.
Is the aromatic family masculine?05
Historically yes, in the wake of fougere. Today largely unisex in contemporary niche perfumery.

Sources

Published 26 May 2026 · Updated 26 May 2026 · Last factual review: 26 May 2026 · Author: Osmetheca