Les Légendaires collection by Guerlain, iconic fragrances mosaic

House · French perfumery

Guerlain

Historic French perfume house founded in 1828 in Paris (France) by Pierre-Francois-Pascal Guerlain. Four generations of family perfumers signed Jicky (1889), Mitsouko (1919) and Shalimar (1925), foundational stages of French perfumery.
Founded · 1828, Paris (France)
Founder · Pierre-Francois-Pascal Guerlain
Status · LVMH group since 1994

History of the house

Guerlain was founded in 1828 in Paris (France) by Pierre-Francois-Pascal Guerlain, a perfumer-chemist from Abbeville in Picardy (France). His first boutique opened on rue de Rivoli at the Hotel Meurice, in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. He sold soaps, powders, cosmetics and bespoke compositions to an aristocratic clientele. In 1853, he composed the Eau de Cologne Imperiale for Empress Eugenie, wife of Napoleon III, which earned him the title of patented perfumer to Her Majesty and established the early reputation of the house (Guerlain official history, Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-22).

After the founder's death in 1864, his sons Aime Guerlain and Gabriel Guerlain took over the business. Aime led the olfactive direction and signed Jicky in 1889, the first composition to combine natural materials with synthetic molecules. Specialist fragrance press, alongside the Société Française des Parfumeurs, considers Jicky as the founding act of modern perfumery. Gabriel handled commercial administration (Wikipedia, Now Smell This Jacques Guerlain profile, accessed 2026-05-22).

From 1897 onward, Jacques Guerlain, Aime's nephew and the third perfumer of the house, composed a catalogue that became the reference of historic French perfumery. He signed L'Heure Bleue (1912), Mitsouko (1919), Shalimar (1925) and Vol de Nuit (1933). In 1921, he formalized the Guerlinade, the house signature accord built around half a dozen materials, which recurs across the major Guerlain compositions (Guerlain Creators page, Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-22).

The olfactive direction then passed to Jean-Paul Guerlain, Jacques' grandson, from the late 1950s. He composed Vetiver (1959), Habit Rouge (1965), Chamade (1969), Nahema (1979) and Samsara (1989), alongside a large body of masculine releases that extend the family tradition. He is the fourth and last Guerlain family perfumer to lead the house.

In 1994, the Guerlain family sold 58.9% of the capital to the LVMH group through Christian Dior, then the remaining shares in 1996. The house became a subsidiary of the world's leading luxury group, while keeping its Paris operations intact. Jean-Paul Guerlain progressively stepped back from creative direction and remained a consultant. In May 2008, Thierry Wasser, a Swiss perfumer trained at Firmenich, was named Director of Perfume Creation. He became the fifth in-house perfumer of the house and the first who does not belong to the Guerlain family, signing the majority of new releases since, including Tonka Imperiale (2010) within the L'Art et la Matiere collection (Luxury Tribune, Now Smell This Thierry Wasser profile, accessed 2026-05-22).

Notable perfumes

The Guerlain catalogue brings together over a thousand references across nearly two hundred years. The following eleven historic compositions structure the identity of the house.

YearPerfumePerfumerOlfactive family
1853Eau de Cologne ImperialePierre-Francois-Pascal GuerlainHesperidic cologne
1889JickyAime GuerlainAmbery fougere
1912L'Heure BleueJacques GuerlainFloral oriental powdery
1919MitsoukoJacques GuerlainFruity chypre
1925ShalimarJacques GuerlainOriental vanilla
1933Vol de NuitJacques GuerlainGreen woody
1959VetiverJean-Paul GuerlainWoody vetiver
1965Habit RougeJean-Paul GuerlainHesperidic oriental
1989SamsaraJean-Paul GuerlainFloral woody sandalwood
1999Aqua Allegoria (collection)Jean-Paul Guerlain and othersEau de toilette collection
2010Tonka ImperialeThierry WasserOriental gourmand

Jicky (1889) stands as the founding act of modern perfumery, combining bergamot, lavender, civet, vanilla and the synthetic molecules coumarin and vanillin within a single composition. Mitsouko (1919) defined the fruity chypre genre around peach, oakmoss and labdanum. Shalimar (1925) codified the oriental vanilla family with a base of bourbon vanilla, opoponax and incense, and remains one of the most cited French perfumes in international fragrance literature. Habit Rouge (1965) is widely cited as the first modern masculine to integrate the powdery vanillic codes that historic French perfumery had previously reserved for women's compositions. The Aqua Allegoria series, launched in 1999, opened a contemporary range of lighter eaux de toilette signed by several in-house perfumers.

Olfactive signature

The Guerlain olfactive signature is organized around an internal accord, the Guerlinade, formalized by Jacques Guerlain in 1921. It is a base accord rather than a perfume of its own, traditionally built on six materials: bergamot, rose, jasmine, iris, tonka bean and vanilla, sometimes extended with civet in older formulas. This aromatic base runs as a connective thread through Jicky, L'Heure Bleue, Shalimar, Mitsouko, Vol de Nuit and their descendants. It gives the house a recognizable olfactive timbre even to an untrained nose (Guerlain official history, Wikipedia, Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-22).

Beyond the Guerlinade, the house has held several stable stylistic positions across two centuries. Bourbon vanilla is used in generous doses, particularly in Shalimar, which set the global code for the material. Iris, a cold and costly material, structures powdery compositions such as L'Heure Bleue. Hesperidic notes open nearly every Guerlain perfume, a direct inheritance from the Eau de Cologne Imperiale of 1853. Balsamic resins, tonka beans and Peru balsam give the bases the warm density that distinguishes Guerlain from Chanel or Caron.

Within the cartography of historic French perfumery, Guerlain stands alongside Houbigant, Caron and Coty as a foundational house. Three olfactive families were anchored in the catalogue: the modern fougere with Jicky, the fruity chypre with Mitsouko, and the oriental vanilla with Shalimar. These three compositions are routinely listed among the absolute classics of twentieth-century French perfumery in English-language fragrance criticism (Persolaise, Now Smell This, Smithsonian Magazine, accessed 2026-05-22).

A historic French perfume house held by four generations of family perfumers, anchored in Paris and recognized by the Guerlinade signature.

Key characteristics

Signature materials
Bourbon vanilla, iris, tonka bean, bergamot, rose, jasmine
Signature accord
Guerlinade, base accord formalized in 1921 by Jacques Guerlain
Structuring families
Fougere, fruity chypre, oriental vanilla
Distinctive trait
Four generations of family perfumers, historic French perfumery, absolute classics of the 20th century

Frequently asked questions

When was Guerlain founded?01
Guerlain was founded in 1828 in Paris (France) by Pierre-Francois-Pascal Guerlain, a perfumer-chemist from Picardy. The first boutique opened on rue de Rivoli, in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, at the Hotel Meurice. The house is one of the oldest French perfume houses still in continuous operation, with close to two hundred years of history.
Who is the current Guerlain perfumer?02
Thierry Wasser, a Swiss perfumer, has been Director of Perfume Creation at Guerlain since May 2008. He succeeded Jean-Paul Guerlain, the last family perfumer, and is the fifth in-house perfumer of the house, the first who does not belong to the Guerlain family. Before Guerlain, he worked at Firmenich.
Is Guerlain an independent house?03
No. Guerlain has belonged to the LVMH group since 1994, when the family sold 58.9% of the capital through Christian Dior, then the remaining shares in 1996. The house keeps its Paris headquarters and its in-house perfumer, but has not been a family-owned or independent house for thirty years.
What is the Guerlinade?04
The Guerlinade is the internal signature accord of Guerlain, formalized in 1921 by Jacques Guerlain. It combines bergamot, rose, jasmine, iris, tonka bean and vanilla, sometimes extended with civet. It is not a perfume on its own but a base thread that recurs through Jicky, L'Heure Bleue, Shalimar, Mitsouko and Vol de Nuit.

Sources

Published 22 May 2026 · Updated 22 May 2026 · Last fact check: 22 May 2026 · Osmetheca