Definition
Virginia cedar (Juniperus virginiana, family Cupressaceae) is native to eastern North America. Despite the common name "Eastern red cedar," it is a juniper, not a true cedar. The essential oil is obtained by steam distillation of the wood and sawdust. Its dominant aroma compounds include cedrol (the molecule responsible for the warm, woody, slightly ambery facet) and thujopsene (fresh, dry, wood-shavings). The olfactive profile reads as: fresh, dry, pencil-shavings, slightly resinous, with faint camphoraceous overtones (Wikipedia EN, accessed 2026-05-27).
Virginia cedar is sharper and fresher than Atlas cedar, which carries a warmer, more ambery character from the atlantone molecule unique to Cedrus atlantica.
Technical detail
Virginia cedar essential oil is commercially sourced primarily from the United States (Virginia, Tennessee, Texas). It is one of the most affordable cedarwood species and has no significant IFRA restrictions in fine fragrance categories. Its stability and cost make it a standard fixture in mainstream and niche woody compositions alike (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).
In composition, Virginia cedar sits in the base register with moderate tenacity. It pairs naturally with lavender (fougère structures), with oakmoss and labdanum (chypre base), and with sandalwood and vetiver in woody oriental accords.
Examples
- Fougère Royale (Houbigant, 1882, Paul Parquet): Virginia cedar as a structural base alongside lavender, coumarin, and oakmoss in the inaugural fougère (Basenotes wiki, accessed 2026-05-27).
- Bleu de Chanel (2010): cedarwood as the dominant base anchoring a fresh-woody aromatic structure widely referenced in niche wood compositions.
- Rose Wood (Comme des Garçons): cedar supporting a dry-woody rose in a niche context (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).