Quick answers
History
Grenadille d'Afrique is Alberto Morillas's tribute to African blackwood and its primal landscape, released by Aedes de Venustas in 2016, as confirmed by the house. It begins at the African blackwood tree, a rare, costly member of the rosewood family whose Latin name, Dalbergia melanoxylon, translates to black wood. The Ancient Egyptians, who called it h'bny, fashioned precious furniture from its heartwood; in Tanzania, the Makonde people, who know it as mpingo, carve it into prized Tree of Life sculptures.
Morillas turns the wood into an elegant olfactive sculpture. Run through from twigs to roots with aromatic, juniper-scented sap, the blackwood is built around a trunk of Haitian vetiver, whose facets of wood, smoke, earth and flint form the vertical axis that draws together the vegetal, animal and mineral notes. Sparkling bergamot captures the last rays of the sun, while a purple haze of lavender and violet spill powdery moonlight on the savannah; later, vanilla turned into combustible resin by ambery cistus labdanum exudes a balsamic warmth, and bleached wood, bark and sun-heated stone release the day's heat into the night, cooled by a breeze of musk.
Morillas describes his creation as fossilized wood rubbed in a vanilla accord, a strongly contrasted composition that sets its dark heart off with luminous notes. For the relaunch, Grenadille d'Afrique was transferred into the shared fluted bottle with peacock-blue accents and a matte black insignia cap.
Olfactive pyramid
The house lists the notes as a single palette. The reading below follows the development it describes, from a luminous top to the blackwood heart and a vetiver-and-resin base.
The official note list reads: African blackwood accord, vetiver, cistus labdanum, juniper, vanilla, white tea, bergamot, lavender and violet.
Olfactive profile
Grenadille d'Afrique is a stark, smoky woody composition in a mineral key, the darkest of the Morillas pair for the house. Where Palissandre d'Or is creamy and golden, Grenadille d'Afrique is dry, vertical and almost flinty, a black-wood sculpture lifted just enough by bergamot, lavender and violet to keep it luminous.
The distinctive trait is the contrast Morillas builds into it: a dark vetiver-and-blackwood heart set against bright, powdery top notes and a balsamic vanilla resin, so the scent reads as fossilized wood with a glow rather than a flat woody base.
Key characteristics
When and where to wear
The dry, smoky woods of Grenadille d'Afrique suit cool weather and considered settings. It is an evening and cold-season scent more than a bright daytime one, and the flinty vetiver core rewards skin contact, so a small dose carries. Heat can flatten the contrast it depends on.
Four wear references
Similar perfumes
Grenadille d'Afrique sits in the dry, smoky woods register, with neighbours among house siblings and wider niche woods.
| Perfume | House · year | Why close |
|---|---|---|
| Palissandre d'Or | Aedes de Venustas · 2015 | House sibling by the same nose, the lighter, creamier side of the wood pair. |
| Real Patchouly | Bois 1920 | A dry, earthy woody neighbour for wearers of the vetiver-and-wood register. |
| Santal 33 | Le Labo · 2011 | A modern woods reference for cross-shopping the contemporary niche shelf. |
Frequently asked questions
See also
Sources
- Official Aedes de Venustas press kit (June 2026) · Document available on editorial request
- Fragrantica: Grenadille d'Afrique (accessed June 27, 2026)
- Now Smell This: Aedes de Venustas Grenadille d'Afrique coverage (accessed June 27, 2026)
- Basenotes: Grenadille d'Afrique (accessed June 27, 2026)
Content built from the official Aedes de Venustas press kit, received in June 2026.
