Glossary · History & Geography

Grasse

Grasse (Alpes-Maritimes, France) is a town considered the historic capital of French natural perfumery, whose microclimate and agricultural tradition have produced May rose, jasmine, tuberose, lavender, and mimosa for the industry since the seventeenth century, and which hosts the primary institutions of the French perfumery craft (UNESCO, accessed 2026-05-27).

Definition

Grasse today is both a working fragrance production center (IFF, Robertet, Chanel, Dior all source from or process materials here) and a cultural heritage site for the industry. Several niche houses use "Grasse-sourced" or "Grasse jasmine" as quality designators in their communications, reflecting the premium associated with the town's materials.

The tension between artisanal heritage and industrial scale is ongoing: May rose and jasmine from Grasse represent less than 1% of global supply of those materials, making "Grasse" a quality signal rather than a volume descriptor.

History and institutions

Grasse's perfumery tradition began in the sixteenth century when the tanning industry, long established in the town, diversified into scented gloves perfumed with local flowers. By the seventeenth century, the town had specialized almost entirely in the production of natural fragrance materials for Paris and international markets. Its altitude (333m), Mediterranean climate, and limestone soils create ideal conditions for aromatic plant cultivation (Wikipedia EN, Grasse, accessed 2026-05-27).

Grasse hosts the Musée International de la Parfumerie, the perfumery schools of ISIPCA's partnerships, and the headquarters or manufacturing facilities of major fragrance material producers including Chanel's Jasmine and May Rose supply chain (Chanel's acquisition of Mas de Sarrail rose fields in Grasse is publicly documented). UNESCO inscribed the "know-how related to perfume in Grasse" on its Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2018 (UNESCO, accessed 2026-05-27).

Sources

Published 2026-05-27 · Updated 2026-05-27 · Last fact check: 2026-05-27 · Osmetheca