Quick answers
History
Pelargonium was composed in 2017 by independent perfumer Nathalie Feisthauer for Aedes de Venustas, the New York house founded in 2012 by Robert Gerstner and Karl Bradl around the Aedes Perfumery boutique. According to information shared by the house in June 2026, it was Feisthauer's first collaboration with the brand.
The brief was an exercise in re-seeing a familiar material. "My aesthetic inspiration was an old-school flower everyone thinks they know, even though no one really knows it," Feisthauer has said of the work. Rather than the bright red geranium of the garden, the composition turns to Pelargonium graveolens, whose botanical name means sweet-scented and whose leaves, distilled rather than the flowers, yield one of the most versatile essences in perfumery. It is the source of the rosy note long known as rose geranium.
Here the material is read less as fruity and more as balsamic, almost incense-like, set as the central motif of the composition. The press kit describes the building of the scent in painterly terms: a canvas of cool orris stretched on a cedar frame, then a dark smoky background of Haitian vetiver, guaiac wood and moss, lit by glints of green cardamom and the golden warmth of Calabrian bergamot. Carrot enriches the orris accord, ambery clary sage suggests the softness of velvety leaves, and a haze of musk smooths the edges.
Pelargonium was honored with the Russian FIFI Fragrance Award for Unique Niche in 2017, a recognition the house places alongside the Fragrance Foundation Award won by Iris Nazarena in 2014. The composition has since been transferred to the current Aedes bottle, the fluted glass flacon with peacock blue accents and a matte black insignia-stamped cap.
Olfactive pyramid
Pelargonium is built like a still life: a single material studied from every angle. Geranium sits at the heart, balsamic and incense-like rather than rosy, framed by cool orris and a dusky base of woods and moss. The notes below follow the materials disclosed by the house.
On skin the composition reads as an evolving work rather than a linear arc. The aromatic, incense-like opening gives way to the geranium and orris heart, which holds for several hours before settling into the woody, mossy drydown. Persistence is moderate to good for a green floral, with a quiet, skin-close trail in its later stages.
Olfactive profile
The olfactive profile of Pelargonium is green and balsamic rather than sweet. The geranium is treated for its dusky, almost smoky facets, and the surrounding orris, cedar and moss keep the register cool and sober. It is a composition of contrast and texture, where volume comes from the materials themselves rather than from sugar or musk overdose.
The distinctive signature is the re-reading of geranium as a serious, abstract material. Where the flower is often used as a fresh masculine note, Feisthauer pulls it toward incense and resin, building a unisex floral with a painterly, baroque sensibility that is recognizably part of the Aedes language.
Pelargonium reads like a Dutch Golden Age still life: a flower everyone thinks they know, painted in shadow and resin.
Key characteristics
When and where to wear
Pelargonium is a transitional-season green floral with enough resin and wood to carry cooler days. Its sober, balsamic character suits daytime and refined settings rather than statement evening wear.
Four wearing markers
Season fit
| Season | Fit | Critical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spring | ★★★★ | Excellent, the green facets read best in mild air. |
| Summer | ★★ | The balsamic woods can feel dense in real heat. |
| Fall | ★★★★ | Reference season, woods and moss come forward. |
| Winter | ★★★ | Comfortable, the resin gives it cold-weather body. |
Context fit
| Context | Fit | Wearing recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| Office | ★★★★ | Sober and unobtrusive, well suited to shared spaces. |
| Formal evening | ★★★ | Works, though it stays understated rather than loud. |
| Daytime city | ★★★★ | Preferred context, refined and quietly distinctive. |
| Gallery and culture | ★★★★ | Excellent, in keeping with the baroque brief. |
| Sport | ★★ | Mismatched with exertion. |
| Travel | ★★★ | Versatile, dose to taste. |
Similar perfumes
Five compositions share kinship with Pelargonium, through the serious treatment of geranium or through the cool, balsamic green register that defines it.
| Perfume | House · year | Why similar |
|---|---|---|
| Geranium pour Monsieur | Frederic Malle · 2009 | Dominique Ropion's minty geranium study, the modern reference for the material. |
| Sycomore | Chanel · 2008 | Dry vetiver and smoky woods, comparable cool green sobriety. |
| Geranium Odorata | Diptyque · 2014 | Aromatic geranium with green and spicy facets. |
| Iris Nazarena | Aedes de Venustas · 2014 | House sibling, a metallic orris with the same baroque sensibility. |
| Fat Electrician | Etat Libre d'Orange · 2008 | Vetiver and resin in a dusky, unisex green key. |
Common questions
Sources
- Official Aedes de Venustas press kit (June 2026) · Document available on editorial request
- Aedes de Venustas: official Pelargonium product page (accessed 27 June 2026)
- Fragrantica: Pelargonium notes pyramid and reviews (accessed 27 June 2026)
- Parfumo: Pelargonium reference page (accessed 27 June 2026)
- Fragrantica: Aedes de Venustas designer page (accessed 27 June 2026)
