Definition
Scent storytelling, also called narrative perfumery, describes a niche perfumery approach that builds each fragrance around a story: a place, a character, an era, a book, an emotion. The narrative precedes or accompanies the composition and frames the communication, in contrast with classic selective perfumery marketing built on luxury imagery, celebrity endorsement or the notes pyramid alone (source: Istituto Marangoni).
Origin and history
The approach spread in the 2000s alongside independent perfumery. Frédéric Malle opened the way in 2000 by signing his Éditions de Parfums with the perfumer's name. Histoires de Parfums, founded by Gérald Ghislain in 2000, pushed the idea further by titling its bottles with dates (1828, 1740, 1804) that point to historical figures (source: Histoires de Parfums).
The movement widened with D.S. & Durga (Brooklyn, 2007), an avowedly narrative house, and with Imaginary Authors (Portland, 2010), which takes the concept to its limit by pairing each bottle with a fictional novel, an invented author and a full back-cover synopsis.
Use in perfumery
Several narrative formats recur. Chapter titles and historical dates (Histoires de Parfums). Invented characters with detailed biographies (D.S. & Durga, Imaginary Authors). Travel destinations used as a collection through line (Memo Paris with Russian Leather, Italian Leather, Irish Leather). Literary or cinematic imaginaries, sometimes co-built with authors and illustrators.
The approach is sometimes criticized as marketing artifice when the story promises an atmosphere the composition does not deliver. Professional criticism draws a line between storytelling that clarifies the reading of a fragrance and storytelling that mainly inflates the product (source: Fragrantica).
Sources
- The Established, How perfume brands use storytelling to sell scents online (accessed 4 June 2026)
- Istituto Marangoni, Is storytelling the X-factor to stand out in the luxury perfume boom (accessed 4 June 2026)
- No Blind Buys, Imaginary Authors: The Literary Fragrance House Explained (accessed 4 June 2026)
- Fragrantica, Reflecting on Eternal Things: Storytelling (accessed 4 June 2026)