Glossary · Vocabulary

Vintage Perfume

A vintage perfume is a fragrance bottle from an earlier production era, typically sought by collectors and enthusiasts for the original or pre-reformulation formula it contains, valued for olfactive character no longer available in current production (Fragrantica community, Basenotes wiki, accessed 2026-05-27).

Definition

A vintage perfume may refer to a bottle produced decades ago (a literal antique), or informally to any bottle produced before a known reformulation. The term is used by collectors to specify that a bottle contains an earlier formula: "I have the 1990s vintage of this" means a pre-IFRA, pre-acquisition, or pre-redesign iteration (Basenotes wiki, accessed 2026-05-27).

Vintage collecting has grown significantly with the rise of online marketplaces and community knowledge sharing. Key vintage categories include pre-IFRA chypres and fougères, pre-acquisition niche bottles, and discontinued commercial perfumes.

In practice

Vintage perfumes carry risks: natural degradation of volatile materials over time (particularly aldehydes and citruses), oxidation, and evaporation through faulty seals. A vintage bottle should be stored away from light and temperature fluctuation and tested before purchase if possible.

Community resources for vintage identification include lot codes, batch codes, bottle design evolution databases, and box typography. The Osmothèque de Versailles preserves professionally stored vintage formula samples for historical study (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).

Sources

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