Definition
A fresh batch is a bottle from a recent production run, as opposed to one that has spent months or years in a warehouse or on a shelf. The distinction is read from the batch code, the lot code printed under the bottle or on the box, which, through dedicated databases, allows the manufacturing date to be estimated. A recent lot is not, however, mechanically better than an older one.
The quest for the fresh batch belongs to a culture of informed enthusiasts, keen to secure a juice that has neither evaporated nor turned. It is a collector's reflex as much as a real requirement, and its reach deserves to be kept in proportion.
Where Differences Between Batches Come From
Two lots of the same perfume can differ slightly, with no official reformulation. Natural raw materials vary with climate, soil, and harvest, so a rose absolute or a patchouli will never have quite the same profile from one year to the next. Maceration, the alcohol ratio, and the order of blending also introduce small variations. Add to that aging in the bottle: a juice exposed to light or heat can see its top notes weaken.
These differences exist, but they are most often minor. Perception itself fluctuates: mood, temperature, memory, and context weigh more on the impression of a lot than the lot itself. The batch code is in fact among the least decisive variables of what we actually smell.
Fresh Batch, Vintage, Reformulation: Do Not Confuse Them
Three ideas often collide in enthusiast talk, though they do not cover the same thing.
| Idea | What it is | Marker | Stake |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh batch | Recently produced lot | Recent batch code | Juice not aged in bottle |
| Vintage bottle | Old lot, original formula | Old batch code | Pre-restriction formula |
| Reformulation | Officially changed formula | Formula change | IFRA limits, cost, supply |
A fresh batch says nothing about the formula: it says only that the bottle is recent. A vintage bottle, by contrast, appeals for its formula from before certain restrictions, even if it has evolved a little over time. Reformulation is a change decided by the house, with no direct link to the freshness of a lot.
The Osmetheca View
The quest for the fresh batch is often a community myth. The idea that a recent lot is mechanically better rests on a shortcut: it confuses the freshness of the bottle with the quality of the formula. Yet one lot is not superior to another by its date alone. A recent juice can come out less successful than a six-month lot that has macerated perfectly, and many of the gaps blamed on batch codes come mostly from the variability of our own nose.
This does not mean storage is irrelevant. A mistreated bottle, left in the sun or the heat, loses its top notes: the real vigilance is about storage, not the hunt for the newest lot. To recognize this is to stop over-reading a printed code and return to what the skin tells us.
See Also
Sources
- Fragrantica, forums and entries, discussions on differences between batches, fragrantica.com.
- Basenotes, community threads on batch codes and storage, basenotes.com.
- Osmotheque de Versailles, documentary archive on the aging of juices.
- Turin, L. and Sanchez, T. Perfumes: The Guide, Viking, 2008 (perceived variability and reformulations).