Perfumer · French perfumery

Olivier Cresp

Born in Grasse (France) in 1955 and a master perfumer at dsm-firmenich since 1992, Olivier Cresp signs Angel (Mugler, 1992, with Yves de Chiris), Light Blue (Dolce and Gabbana, 2001) and co-founded the niche house Akro Fragrances in 2018.
Born · 1955
Origin · France
Employer · dsm-firmenich
Main houses · Mugler, Dolce and Gabbana, YSL, Akro

Biography and career

Olivier Cresp was born in 1955 in Grasse (France), into a family that has lived in the town since the seventeenth century. His great-grandfather cultivated roses and jasmine for the local raw-material industry, and his grandfather traded natural ingredients on the Grasse market (dsm-firmenich perfumer profile, accessed 2026-05-24). His sister, Françoise Caron, is also a perfumer, signer of Eau d'Orange Verte for Hermès in 1979, and his son Sebastien works in the same craft (Fragrantica nose profile, accessed 2026-05-24).

Cresp began his career in 1975 in the United States at Biddle Sawyer in New York (United States), a supplier of natural raw materials, where he learned to handle absolutes and essential oils at industrial volume (Scentissime portrait, accessed 2026-05-24). He then composed at De Laire in France and at Quest International before joining Firmenich in 1992, at the age of 37. He has remained at Firmenich since, through its 2023 merger with DSM into dsm-firmenich, where he is one of the senior in-house master perfumers (Wikipedia entry, accessed 2026-05-24).

His first widely distributed signature comes in the same year he joins Firmenich. In 1992, with fellow Firmenich perfumer Yves de Chiris, Cresp signs Angel for Thierry Mugler, a composition built on patchouli, vanilla, helional and a string of edible accords (chocolate, caramel, praline). The pairing worked on the formula for more than two years. On release, Angel opened a new olfactive family in mainstream perfumery, the gourmand, which the Fragrance Foundation later cited as the reference point for the 1990-2010 generation of women's perfumes (Fragrance Foundation Lifetime Achievement citation, 2018).

Across his Firmenich career, Cresp has signed for Thierry Mugler, Dolce and Gabbana, Yves Saint Laurent, Dior, Estée Lauder, Paco Rabanne, Penhaligon's and a long list of other brands, most often as the lead signatory and sometimes as part of a perfumer team (Fragrantica nose profile, accessed 2026-05-24). He was named Master Perfumer at Firmenich in 2006 and Perfumer of the Year by the company in 2007. In 2012 the French Ministry of Culture made him Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres, and in 2018 the Fragrance Foundation awarded him the Lifetime Achievement Perfumer prize (The Perfume Society profile, accessed 2026-05-24).

Parallel to this mainstream production, Cresp opened a second chapter in 2018 with the launch of Akro Fragrances, a niche house co-founded with his daughter Anaïs Cresp and her partner Jack Miskelli. Olivier Cresp composes the formulas, Anaïs Cresp leads the creative direction, and the house publishes a tight collection built around named modern vices: coffee, tobacco, cannabis, chocolate, alcohol and sex (Fragrantica feature on Akro, 2018).

Olfactive signature

Olivier Cresp's olfactive signature is built around the gourmand register and its core raw material, patchouli. The 1992 formula for Angel placed a deep, almost camphorous patchouli at the center, then layered helional, ethyl maltol and vanilla on top to suggest cocoa, caramel and praline. The composition broke with the floral chypres and aldehyde florals that had structured women's mainstream perfumery for decades, and set a template that other perfumers extended through the 1990s and 2000s (Now Smell This perfumer profile, accessed 2026-05-24).

The writing sits inside the French perfumery tradition, in its Grasse industrial branch. Cresp learned to compose on the volumes and constraints of mainstream fine fragrance, where a single brief can move millions of units, and his hand is recognizable for the way it pushes one or two dominant accords to high concentration while keeping the structure stable. The same instinct produced Light Blue for Dolce and Gabbana in 2001, a Mediterranean citrus-floral built on Sicilian lemon, apple, jasmine and cedar that has remained a long-running pillar in summer perfumery (Fragrantica Light Blue entry, accessed 2026-05-24).

Cresp has also worked on darker oriental compositions. Black Opium for Yves Saint Laurent in 2014, co-signed with Nathalie Lorson, Marie Salamagne and Honorine Blanc, brought the gourmand idea to a coffee-and-vanilla register paired with white flowers, and became one of the highest-selling women's launches of the mid-2010s. Across the catalogue, the constants are a confident patchouli, a clear sweet axis when the brief allows, and the technical familiarity with high-dose formulation acquired across nearly five decades at the bench.

A Grasse-born master perfumer trained on the volumes of mainstream fine fragrance, who opened a new olfactive family with Angel in 1992 and reopened his work as an author with Akro in 2018.

Key characteristics

Signature materials
Patchouli, vanilla, ethyl maltol, helional, coffee accord, white flowers
Favored families
Gourmand oriental, floral fruity, Mediterranean citrus, coffee-vanilla oriental
Recurring accords
Patchouli with caramelized notes, sweet musk on white flowers, dry citrus on cedar
Distinctive feature
Opened the contemporary gourmand family with Angel in 1992, rooted in the Grasse French perfumery tradition

Notable perfumes

Olivier Cresp's body of work spans nearly five decades, from his early mainstream commissions to the Akro Fragrances catalogue. The selection below lists eight compositions whose launch year and signature are cross-checked on Wikipedia EN, Fragrantica, Parfumo and the official dsm-firmenich perfumer page (all consulted 2026-05-24).

YearHousePerfumeOlfactive family
1992Thierry MuglerAngel (co-signed Yves de Chiris)Gourmand oriental
2001Dolce and GabbanaLight BlueFloral fruity, Mediterranean citrus
2007DiorMidnight Poison (co-signed Jacques Cavallier, François Demachy)Woody chypre
2008Paco RabanneBlack XS for Her (co-signed)Floral fruity
2013Estée LauderModern Muse (co-signed Harry Fremont)Floral woody musk
2014Yves Saint LaurentBlack Opium (co-signed Nathalie Lorson, Marie Salamagne, Honorine Blanc)Coffee gourmand
2018Akro FragrancesAwakeCoffee gourmand niche
2018Akro FragrancesSmokeTobacco oriental niche

Angel (1992) remains the composition most often named as the high point of his catalogue, the formula that opened the gourmand family and reshaped mainstream women's perfumery for two decades. Light Blue (2001) sits at the other end of the spectrum, a clean Mediterranean citrus-floral that became a long-running summer pillar and one of the best-selling Dolce and Gabbana women's perfumes (Wikipedia Light Blue entry, accessed 2026-05-24). Black Opium (2014), co-signed at YSL, extended the gourmand idea into a coffee-vanilla register. The Akro openings of 2018, Awake on coffee and Smoke on tobacco, mark the niche turn of his work.

Current work

Olivier Cresp continues to compose at dsm-firmenich as a senior master perfumer, with regular flanker work on the Black Opium line for Yves Saint Laurent. He is credited on Black Opium Nuit Blanche (2016), Black Opium Extreme (2021), Black Opium Illicit Green (2022, with Nathalie Lorson) and Black Opium Over Red (2024, with Honorine Blanc, Nathalie Lorson and Marie Salamagne), each formula extending the coffee-vanilla gourmand register of the 2014 original (Fragrantica entries, accessed 2026-05-24).

The Akro Fragrances chapter, opened in 2018, runs in parallel and gives a more authored framing to his work. The collection has grown from the founding trio (Awake, Smoke, Haze) to a wider line that keeps the vices brief, with formulas signed by Olivier Cresp and creative direction by Anaïs Cresp. Akro is sold in selective niche retail in Europe, the United Kingdom and North America (BeautyMatter feature on Akro, accessed 2026-05-24).

Cresp also takes part in the public life of the profession, with talks, interviews and mentoring of younger perfumers. In 2018, the Fragrance Foundation in New York (United States) awarded him the Lifetime Achievement Perfumer prize, citing the 1992 Angel formula and the body of work that followed (Fragrance Foundation honoree page, accessed 2026-05-24).

Frequently asked questions

Five questions that come up repeatedly about Olivier Cresp, his training and his catalogue, with their factual answers.

Where was Olivier Cresp born?01
In Grasse (France) in 1955, into a family rooted in the town since the seventeenth century. His sister Françoise Caron is also a perfumer, signer of Eau d'Orange Verte for Hermès in 1979.
Who does Olivier Cresp work for?02
For dsm-firmenich, the Swiss composition house he joined as Firmenich in 1992. He was named Master Perfumer in 2006. He had previously composed at Biddle Sawyer in New York (United States), De Laire and Quest International.
What is Olivier Cresp's most famous perfume?03
Angel for Thierry Mugler in 1992, co-signed with Yves de Chiris. The composition opened the contemporary gourmand olfactive family and shaped mainstream women's perfumery from 1992 into the 2010s.
What is Akro Fragrances?04
The niche house co-founded in 2018 by Olivier Cresp, his daughter Anaïs Cresp and Jack Miskelli, built around named modern vices (coffee, tobacco, cannabis, chocolate, alcohol, sex). Olivier Cresp signs the formulas, Anaïs Cresp leads the creative direction.
Did Olivier Cresp sign Black Opium for YSL?05
Yes, as one of four co-signatories. Black Opium (Yves Saint Laurent, 2014) is credited to Nathalie Lorson, Marie Salamagne, Olivier Cresp and Honorine Blanc. The composition is a coffee-vanilla gourmand built on white flowers and patchouli (Fragrantica entry, accessed 2026-05-24).

See also

Four Osmetheca resources to extend the reading on Olivier Cresp, his houses and his contemporaries in French perfumery.

Sources

Published 24 May 2026 · Updated 24 May 2026 · Last fact check: 24 May 2026 · Osmetheca