Quick answers
Biography and career
François Demachy was born in 1949 in Cannes and grew up in Grasse (Alpes-Maritimes, France), the historic capital of French perfumery. His father ran a pharmacy there; Edmond Roudnitska, signer of Diorissimo (1956) and Eau Sauvage (1966) for Christian Dior, was a close neighbor and customer. The young Demachy benefited from a rare olfactive mentorship from his teenage years onward.
Throughout his adolescent summers, he interned in the raw material warehouses, ateliers and factories of Grasse. After studies in chemistry and pharmacy, he attended the perfumery school of Charabot in Grasse in the early 1970s, where he stayed five years. He then joined Chanel, where he held the position of director of perfumery and cosmetics development for twenty-two years, working alongside the creation teams of Chanel, Ungaro, Bourjois and Tiffany.
In 2006, François Demachy joined the LVMH group as director of perfumery development for the cosmetics division, and was appointed the same year as olfactive creation director at Parfums Christian Dior. He stayed in the role for fifteen years, until his retirement in 2021. Francis Kurkdjian, founder of Maison Francis Kurkdjian, succeeded him in September 2021 as Dior perfume creation director, by decision of the LVMH group.
During his Dior tenure, François Demachy helped structure the house perfumery culture around the Dior gardens in Grasse: May rose, grandiflorum jasmine, tuberose. He was also the subject in 2020 of the documentary Nose by Clément Beauvais and Arthur de Kersauson, which follows the creation of a Dior perfume from the fields of Grasse to the final flacon.
Notable perfumes
François Demachy's body of work at Dior covers about fifteen years and several very different lines: the exclusive luxury of La Collection Privée, the commercial writing of Sauvage, the Roudnitska tribute of Eau Sauvage Parfum. The selection below lists six key compositions.
| Year | House | Perfume | Olfactive family |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Dior | La Collection Privée Christian Dior | Ten exclusive perfumes |
| 2010 | Dior | Mitzah | Spiced honeyed oriental |
| 2011 | Dior | Dior Homme Intense | Powdery iris woody |
| 2012 | Dior | Eau Sauvage Parfum | Hesperidic woody myrrh |
| 2015 | Dior | Sauvage | Fresh aromatic woody |
| 2017 | Dior | J'adore L'Or | Floral rose jasmine absolute |
Olfactive signature
François Demachy represents the contemporary Grasse school in its Dior version. His signature revolves around the legibility of the accord, the restrained gesture and a generous use of the natural materials cultivated in the Dior gardens. This school inherits directly from Edmond Roudnitska, the explicit mentor of Demachy, and from the conception of perfumery as a demanding minor art.
The most explicit tribute gesture is Eau Sauvage Parfum (2012), composed for the forty-fifth anniversary of the original Eau Sauvage by Roudnitska (1966). Demachy revisits the hesperidic hedione structure but enriches it with myrrh, vetiver, oakmoss and patchouli. Critics read the result as an intelligent re-reading, neither copy nor break, anchoring the Roudnitska lineage inside Dior modernity.
The other side, more commercial, is Sauvage (2015), a fresh aromatic woody built around a bergamot, Ambroxan and pepper accord that became one of the largest commercial successes of the 2010s. The composition takes on a more direct, more immediately wearable, broader writing than Eau Sauvage Parfum. Specialist criticism remains divided on this double writing, but recognizes the technical mastery on both registers.
Inside La Collection Privée Christian Dior, launched in 2010, Demachy works with a much wider palette. Mitzah (spiced honeyed oriental, a tribute to the muse Mitzah Bricard), Leather Oud (leather-oud), Vetiver (classical Grasse vetiver), Granville (green chypre tied to Christian Dior's childhood home in Normandy), New Look 1947 (chypre floral homage to the New Look): the collection builds an autobiographical narrative of Christian Dior through ten compositions. Demachy assumes a freer, more narrative writing, closer to the niche model than to the commercial Dior model.
A French perfumery of the Grasse school, attached to natural materials and to the legibility of the accord, direct heir of Edmond Roudnitska.
Key characteristics
Frequently asked questions
Ten questions that come up repeatedly about François Demachy and his work for Dior, with their factual answers.
See also
Three Osmetheca resources to extend the reading on François Demachy, his work for Parfums Christian Dior and his lineage from Edmond Roudnitska.
Sources
- Wikipedia: François Demachy (accessed 15 June 2026)
- The Fragrance Foundation: François Demachy (Lifetime Achievement Perfumer)
- Fragrantica: François Demachy, nose profile
- Parfumo: François Demachy, perfumer profile
- The Hollywood Reporter: Francis Kurkdjian succeeds François Demachy at Dior (2021)
- Now Smell This: reviews of Demachy compositions
- Persolaise: review of Sauvage by Christian Dior (Demachy, 2015)