When Hanae Mori by Shiseido was introduced in 1968, it marked an important cultural moment in both fashion and perfumery. The fragrance bore the name of Hanae Mori, the pioneering Japanese fashion designer whose refined aesthetic would eventually make her one of Japan’s most internationally recognized couturiers. Born in 1926, Mori rose to prominence during the post-war decades as Japan reestablished itself culturally and economically on the world stage. She became famous for blending the delicacy and symbolism of traditional Japanese design with modern Western couture techniques. Her signature motif—the butterfly—symbolized transformation, femininity, and freedom, themes that resonated strongly during the social changes of the late 1960s. By the time this fragrance appeared, Mori had already built a respected fashion house in Tokyo and was beginning to attract international attention, eventually becoming the first Japanese woman admitted to the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture in Paris in 1977.
The name “Hanae Mori” itself is Japanese. In simple pronunciation for English speakers it sounds like “HAN-eye MOH-ree.” In Japanese, the surname Mori (森) means “forest,” while the given name Hanae (花恵 or 花江) incorporates the character “hana,” meaning “flower.” Together, the name poetically suggests images of flowers within a forest, or blossoms emerging from nature. Even without knowing the literal meaning, the words evoke softness and grace—the rustling of leaves, delicate petals drifting in spring air, and the quiet beauty of a garden after rainfall. Such imagery perfectly aligns with the aesthetic Mori cultivated in her fashion: natural elegance, femininity, and a subtle sense of movement.
Launching a perfume under her own name was therefore a natural extension of her artistic identity. In the world of fashion, an eponymous fragrance serves as an olfactory signature—an invisible accessory meant to translate the designer’s vision into scent. For Mori, whose work celebrated nature and refinement, the perfume became a way to express Japanese sensibility through fragrance. The composition reflects what was often described as the Japanese taste for perfumes that are gentle, airy, and close to nature, rather than overwhelming or heavily opulent.
The perfume itself was classified as a fresh floral fragrance for women. It opens with a fresh, lightly aromatic floral top, suggesting the first breath of air in a blooming garden. The heart reveals a soft bouquet of rose and jasmine, two flowers long revered in perfumery for their romantic and luminous character. These are joined by mimosa, with its powdery honeyed softness; carnation, lending a slightly spicy clove-like warmth; and lily of the valley, whose crystalline green freshness evokes springtime purity. Together they form a verdant bouquet that feels almost watercolor-like—delicate and diffused rather than dense. The fragrance eventually settles into a powdery base, a gentle finish that suggests warm skin and freshly pressed silk. The overall impression is one of quiet elegance: flowers gathered from a shaded garden, arranged simply, and allowed to breathe.
The year 1968 was a particularly dynamic moment in fashion and culture. Globally, it was a period of transformation associated with the late 1960s cultural revolution—a time marked by youth movements, artistic experimentation, and the blending of global influences. In fashion, silhouettes were changing rapidly. The decade had introduced miniskirts, bold prints, and futuristic mod styles, yet there was also fascination with international aesthetics, including Japanese design. Designers were increasingly drawing inspiration from non-Western cultures, textiles, and philosophies of simplicity. Japanese fashion, with its emphasis on line, form, and restrained beauty, felt both exotic and modern to Western audiences.
In perfumery, the late 1960s represented a shift away from the heavy aldehydic florals and opulent orientals that had dominated earlier decades. Consumers were beginning to appreciate fragrances that felt lighter, greener, and more natural. Perfumes emphasizing fresh florals, herbal notes, and airy compositions became fashionable. Against this backdrop, Hanae Mori’s fragrance felt perfectly timed. Its emphasis on delicate blossoms and natural freshness aligned with the emerging desire for scents that felt clean, botanical, and modern.
For American consumers in particular, the name Hanae Mori carried an aura of sophistication and mystery. Japanese culture was widely admired for its artistry, craftsmanship, and sense of refinement. A perfume bearing such a name would have suggested something exotic yet elegant, conjuring images of silk kimonos, cherry blossoms drifting in the wind, and serene gardens framed by stone lanterns. Women of the late 1960s—especially those fascinated by international fashion—would likely have interpreted the fragrance as a symbol of cosmopolitan elegance.
While the composition reflected the Japanese aesthetic of subtlety and natural beauty, it was also clearly designed to appeal to Western tastes. The floral notes—rose, jasmine, carnation, lily of the valley—were already beloved in European and American perfumery. By presenting these familiar flowers in a lighter, fresher arrangement, the perfume bridged two sensibilities: Japanese delicacy and Western floral tradition. In this sense, it functioned almost like Mori’s fashion itself—an elegant dialogue between East and West.
Within the context of perfumes available at the time, the fragrance was not radically avant-garde, but it possessed a distinctive identity. Many floral perfumes of the era leaned toward lush, romantic richness, whereas Hanae Mori emphasized clarity, freshness, and natural grace. This softer interpretation of florals anticipated the direction perfumery would increasingly take in the following decades, where transparency and airy floral structures became more common.
Ultimately, the perfume named Hanae Mori was more than simply a fragrance; it was an olfactory expression of a designer’s philosophy. The name evokes flowers in a forest, a place where nature unfolds quietly and beautifully. The scent mirrors that imagery: blossoms arranged with restraint, touched by greenery, and softened by powdery warmth. For women in 1968, wearing it would have felt like wearing a piece of modern couture—subtle, refined, and touched with the poetry of nature.
Fragrance Composition:
So what does it smell like? The original 1968 formula for Hanae Mori is classified as a fresh floral fragrance for women. It starts with a fresh flowery top, followed by a soft floral heart, layered over a powdery base. The scent is verdant and aromatic blend of delicate blossoms of rose and jasmine, mimosa, carnation and lily of the valley.
- Top notes: bergamot, lemon, rosewood, aldehyde, mimosa, spice note complex
- Middle notes: carnation, rose, clove buds, ylang ylang, lily of the valley, jasmine, orris, orchid
- Base notes: sandalwood, musk, cedar, oakmoss, civet, benzoin
Scent Profile:
The original 1968 Hanae Mori fragrance unfolds like a walk through a luminous garden at dawn, where petals are still cool with dew and the air carries both freshness and quiet warmth. It opens with a bright, almost sparkling freshness created by bergamot and lemon, two citrus oils that have long formed the radiant introduction to many classic perfumes. Bergamot, traditionally grown in the sun-drenched groves of Calabria in southern Italy, is prized because the region’s unique climate produces fruit with an especially fragrant rind rich in linalyl acetate and limonene. Its scent is elegant and slightly floral rather than sharply acidic, like the delicate aroma released when twisting a strip of citrus peel over a cup of tea. Lemon contributes a more effervescent brightness—clean, zesty, and mouth-watering—often sourced from Mediterranean orchards where the intense sunlight encourages the development of aromatic oils in the peel. Together they form the fragrance’s first breath: cool, sparkling, and gently uplifting.
Layered into this citrus brightness is rosewood, historically distilled from the wood of the Brazilian Aniba rosaeodora tree. Rosewood oil carries a soft, creamy floral scent reminiscent of rose and lavender combined, due largely to its high content of linalool, an aroma chemical also naturally present in many flowers. In perfumery, linalool gives a silky, transparent floral tone that helps bridge citrus notes into the floral heart. Alongside it appears a subtle shimmer of aldehydes, synthetic aroma molecules that became famous in twentieth-century perfumery for their ability to create an airy, luminous effect. Aldehydes can smell slightly waxy, sparkling, or reminiscent of fresh linen and cool metal. In a composition like this, they function almost like sunlight reflecting off petals, lifting the citrus and floral notes into something more radiant and diffusive.
The opening bouquet quickly reveals a soft golden note of mimosa, a flower beloved in perfumery for its powdery, honey-tinted fragrance. The finest mimosa absolute traditionally comes from the hills around Grasse in southern France, where the warm Mediterranean climate allows the delicate yellow blossoms of Acacia dealbata to flourish. Mimosa smells like a blend of almond powder, warm pollen, and sweet spring air. Because its scent is naturally soft and diffusive, perfumers often reinforce it with gentle aroma chemicals such as anisic aldehyde or heliotropin, which add creamy almond-powder nuances and help extend the flower’s delicate character. A subtle spice note complex threads through the top as well, hinting at warm clove-like facets that foreshadow the deeper floral heart.
As the fragrance settles, the heart notes unfold into a lush yet refined bouquet. Carnation plays a central role here. Natural carnation absolute carries a fascinating dual character: floral yet distinctly spicy, often compared to clove and cinnamon. This effect comes from natural eugenol, the same aromatic compound found in clove oil. Because true carnation extract can be difficult to obtain in large quantities, perfumers frequently recreate its character using eugenol alongside floral molecules, giving the flower its recognizable warm spice. To enrich this effect, the perfume includes clove buds, historically harvested from Indonesia’s Maluku Islands. Their essential oil is intensely aromatic, releasing a warm, sweet heat reminiscent of dried spices in a wooden cabinet.
The heart blooms further with rose and jasmine, the twin pillars of classical perfumery. Rose, often sourced from Bulgaria’s famed Rose Valley or from Grasse, brings a rich, velvety aroma—fresh petals touched with honey and faint green facets. Bulgarian rose oil is especially prized because the region’s cool mornings and mineral-rich soil produce blossoms with a remarkable depth of fragrance. Jasmine, frequently cultivated in Grasse or in Egypt, contributes a narcotic, creamy floral richness. Its scent is complex: sweet, indolic, slightly fruity, and reminiscent of warm evening air in a garden. Jasmine absolute contains natural indoles, molecules that in small quantities give flowers a sensual, almost skin-like warmth.
Adding exotic depth is ylang-ylang, distilled from the star-shaped blossoms of the Cananga tree grown in Madagascar and the Comoros Islands. This tropical flower smells lush and creamy, like banana custard mixed with jasmine and spice. Its rich floral sweetness helps soften the sharper carnation notes. Lily of the valley introduces a contrasting freshness. Because the delicate bell-shaped flowers produce almost no extractable essential oil, their scent must be recreated synthetically. Molecules such as hydroxycitronellal and Lyral (historically used) reproduce its watery, green, slightly soapy aroma—the scent of cool spring air drifting through a garden of white bells. These synthetic accords lend the perfume its characteristic transparency and freshness.
Powdery elegance emerges through orris, derived from the aged rhizomes of the iris plant, particularly cultivated in Florence, Italy. Orris butter develops only after several years of drying, during which compounds called irones form and give the material its extraordinary fragrance: powdery, violet-like, and faintly woody. Orris adds the soft cosmetic powder effect that defines the perfume’s gentle base. Completing the heart is orchid, which, like lily of the valley, cannot yield a true essential oil. Its scent is therefore interpreted through a blend of creamy floral notes and soft vanillic molecules, creating the impression of velvety petals.
As the perfume dries down, the composition rests upon a warm and comforting base of woods, resins, and animalic notes. Sandalwood, traditionally from Mysore in India, is prized for its smooth, milky wood aroma with hints of cream and warm skin. True Mysore sandalwood contains high levels of santalol, the molecule responsible for its distinctive soft, almost buttery woodiness. Because natural Mysore sandalwood became rare and restricted, perfumers often augment it with synthetic sandalwood molecules that replicate and extend its creamy warmth.
Cedarwood, often sourced from Virginia cedar (Juniperus virginiana), contributes a dry, pencil-shaving woodiness that adds structure and clarity. Oakmoss, harvested from lichen growing on oak trees in European forests—especially in the Balkans—provides a deep green, earthy aroma reminiscent of damp bark and shaded woodland. Oakmoss historically formed the backbone of many classic perfumes, giving them a mysterious forest-like depth.
The base also contains benzoin, a fragrant resin from the Styrax trees of Southeast Asia, particularly Laos and Sumatra. Benzoin smells warm, balsamic, and slightly vanilla-like, lending a comforting sweetness that softens the woods. A touch of musk provides the impression of clean skin and warmth. Historically derived from animal sources, modern perfumery relies on synthetic musks such as galaxolide or muscone analogues, which recreate the soft, sensual warmth without animal extraction. Finally, a trace of civet adds subtle animalic richness. Natural civet, once obtained from the African civet cat, smells intense on its own but becomes smooth and radiant when diluted in perfume. Today, it is typically recreated synthetically through molecules like civetone, which provide a warm, slightly leathery sweetness that deepens floral notes.
Together these ingredients form a fragrance that feels both airy and elegant. The citrus and aldehydes sparkle like morning light, the floral heart blooms with classical richness, and the base settles into a warm, powdery whisper of woods and skin. The result is a perfume that captures the spirit suggested by the name Hanae Mori—a poetic image of flowers unfolding quietly within a forest, delicate yet enduring.
Bottles:
One of the most enchanting aspects of the original Hanae Mori perfume was not merely the fragrance itself but the exquisite presentation that accompanied it. The perfume was housed in a small, carefully crafted box covered in Japanese floral silk, a material chosen not only for its beauty but also for its cultural resonance. Japanese silk has long been prized for its luminous sheen and delicate woven patterns, often featuring stylized blossoms that evoke the changing seasons. In this case, the silk covering transformed the perfume into something that felt less like a cosmetic product and more like a precious keepsake or a miniature treasure chest. Opening the box was itself a ritual: a tiny bone peg served as the closure, and with a gentle flick it released the lid, revealing the fragrance within. This simple yet elegant mechanism echoed the refined minimalism often found in traditional Japanese objects such as inrō cases or lacquer boxes. The effect was unmistakably feminine and intimate, reflecting Hanae Mori’s signature aesthetic—soft, graceful, and quietly luxurious.
Advertisements from the late 1960s and early 1970s emphasized both the fragrance’s elegance and its subtle sense of romance. A 1969 newspaper advertisement described it as “The exhilarating new ‘Breath of Love’ fragrance, Hanae Mori.” The phrase itself conjured something delicate and intimate—less a bold declaration than a whisper of perfume drifting in the air. The ad spoke of an “enchanting scent, worldly with an underlying delicacy,” suggesting that although the fragrance drew inspiration from Japan, it possessed an international sophistication that appealed to cosmopolitan women. The floral bouquet was highlighted—rose and jasmine intertwined with mimosa, carnation, and lily of the valley—creating what the advertisement called “a truly elegant fragrance.” At the time, the perfume was offered in several luxurious forms: one ounce of parfum for $45 and a half ounce for $25, while a lighter Pure Mist or aerosol Eau de Cologne was available for $12, making the scent accessible to women who preferred a more casual daily application.
Fashion magazines quickly embraced the fragrance as part of the growing fascination with Japanese design and culture. In 1969, Mademoiselle magazine noted that Shiseido had named the perfume after Hanae Mori, described as “Japan’s designing woman.” The magazine highlighted the modernity of the product’s presentation, particularly the aerosol Eau de Cologne, which reflected the technological optimism of the era. Aerosol fragrances had become fashionable during the late 1960s, offering a quick, fine mist that could be applied lightly and evenly—perfect for women who wanted a soft veil of scent rather than the heavier application associated with traditional perfume bottles.
By 1970, the fragrance had become closely associated with the allure of Japan itself. Harper’s Bazaar described it as an “indispensable traveling companion for any woman en route to Japan,” suggesting that the perfume captured something essential about the country’s aesthetic spirit. The magazine pointed readers toward Bergdorf Goodman’s cosmetics counter, where the fragrance could be discovered alongside luxury beauty products from around the world. The language used by the magazine emphasized the mystique surrounding Japanese culture at the time. Another Harper’s Bazaar feature referred to the perfume as “The Gentle Art of Japan as interpreted by Hanae Mori,” and spoke of *“the mystique of the Orient captured in Shiseido’s Hanae Mori fragrance.” For American consumers of the era, the perfume offered a sensory glimpse into a refined and poetic vision of Japan—one expressed through both scent and design.
image created by Grace Hummel/Cleopatra's Boudoir
By the mid-1970s the fragrance had firmly established itself in the international luxury market. A 1976 notice in New York Magazine invited readers to “Wear an original Hanae Mori,” emphasizing the designer’s growing reputation in fashion as well as fragrance. The scent was available in several forms, allowing women to experience it in different ways depending on occasion. A cologne spray cost around $12.50, while a stronger cologne concentration was priced at $20. The parfum, the most concentrated and luxurious form, reached $70 per ounce, reflecting both the prestige of the designer’s name and the complexity of the fragrance itself. Even everyday bath rituals could carry the scent, as large bars of Hanae Mori soap sold for $7.50, or three smaller bars for $10, allowing the perfume’s delicate floral character to linger on the skin.
The fragrance line itself was relatively concise yet elegant in its offerings. It included 1 oz and ½ oz bottles of Parfum, which contained the richest concentration of the scent. For a lighter application there was the 3.25 oz Eau de Cologne Pure Mist spray, a format designed to deliver a fine, airy cloud of fragrance. Another popular option was the 2 oz Aerosol Eau de Cologne spray, reflecting the modern convenience and technological novelty that appealed to consumers in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Complementing these perfumes were scented soaps, allowing the fragrance to become part of a woman’s daily toilette ritual.
Taken together, these elements—the silk-covered box, the delicate bone clasp, the poetic advertising language, and the elegant range of scented products—created an aura around Hanae Mori that extended far beyond the perfume itself. The fragrance was presented as a small piece of Japanese refinement translated into modern luxury, an object that appealed equally to the senses and to the imagination. Owning it meant possessing something that felt both exotic and graceful, a quiet expression of femininity inspired by the artistry of Japan and the couture vision of Hanae Mori herself.
Fate of the Fragrance:
The original version of Hanae Mori, first introduced by Shiseido in 1968, eventually disappeared quietly from the market, though the exact date of its discontinuation remains uncertain. What is known is that the fragrance was still being sold as late as 1991, more than two decades after its debut. This longevity suggests that the perfume maintained a loyal following for many years, continuing to appeal to women who appreciated its delicate floral composition and refined Japanese aesthetic. Unlike many fragrances that vanish quickly after their initial popularity fades, Hanae Mori appears to have enjoyed a relatively long life, gradually slipping out of production rather than being abruptly withdrawn.
By the late 1980s and early 1990s, however, the perfume world was changing rapidly. New fragrance styles—particularly bold oriental florals, fruity compositions, and powerful “statement” perfumes—began dominating the market. The subtle, airy floral character of the original Hanae Mori belonged more to the refined sensibilities of the late 1960s and early 1970s, when perfumes emphasizing freshness, elegance, and natural florals were fashionable. As tastes evolved toward stronger and more dramatic scents, quieter compositions such as this one often became overshadowed by newer trends. Additionally, changes in perfume manufacturing, including increasing ingredient regulations and the shifting priorities of fashion houses, sometimes led companies to discontinue older formulas that no longer fit modern marketing strategies.
For those who had worn it during its heyday, the disappearance of the original Hanae Mori likely felt like the closing of a small chapter in perfumery history. The fragrance had represented an elegant meeting of Japanese sensibility and Western floral tradition, capturing the designer’s vision of femininity expressed through softness and natural beauty. Its gentle bouquet of rose, jasmine, mimosa, carnation, and lily of the valley, resting on a warm base of woods and resins, embodied a style of perfumery that prized delicacy and harmony rather than intensity.
Although the original formula eventually faded from production sometime after 1991, its influence lingered in the continuing association between the designer and fragrance. Later perfumes bearing the Hanae Mori name would appear in subsequent decades, but they belonged to a different era of perfumery and reflected evolving tastes. The first Hanae Mori fragrance, however, remains remembered by collectors and perfume historians as a quietly elegant composition—one that captured the gentle poetry suggested by its name: flowers blooming softly within a forest.
1995 Version:
In 1995, nearly three decades after the original fragrance had first appeared, Hanae Mori returned to the world of perfumery with a renewed vision of her signature scent. The relaunch was created in partnership with Shiseido, the Japanese cosmetics company that had originally produced the perfume in 1968, and Cosmetique et Parfum International (CPI) of France, a firm experienced in bringing luxury fragrances to the international market. This collaboration symbolized a meeting of cultures similar to Mori’s fashion philosophy itself: the refinement and delicacy of Japanese aesthetics combined with the long tradition of French perfumery. The fragrance was introduced under the brand name Hanae Mori, strengthening the connection between the designer and her expanding global identity as both a couturier and lifestyle brand.
For this new version, the original composition required careful reinterpretation. The perfume landscape of the 1990s had changed dramatically since the late 1960s. Consumers were drawn to fragrances that felt brighter, more transparent, and often sweeter, reflecting the decade’s fascination with luminous florals, fruity accents, and smooth gourmand nuances. To adapt the classic scent to these modern preferences, the formula was reworked by the French perfumer Bernard Ellena, a respected figure in contemporary perfumery and the brother of the renowned perfumer Jean-Claude Ellena. Bernard Ellena approached the reformulation not as a complete reinvention but as a respectful modernization, preserving the spirit of the original fragrance while refining its structure so that it would feel lighter, clearer, and more compatible with contemporary tastes.
Reformulating a classic perfume is a delicate process. The perfumer must balance historical fidelity with modern expectations, ensuring that the fragrance retains its recognizable character while adjusting its proportions, texture, and diffusion. In the case of Hanae Mori, Ellena likely softened some of the heavier base notes and enhanced the brighter floral aspects of the bouquet. Advances in aroma chemicals and fragrance technology also allowed for cleaner, more diffusive interpretations of certain notes, particularly florals that in earlier decades might have been heavier or more densely blended. These refinements helped the perfume feel more luminous and wearable for a generation accustomed to the airy fragrances that dominated the 1990s.
The relaunch also reflected the broader transformation of Hanae Mori herself as a designer. By the mid-1990s, she had become an internationally celebrated couturier with boutiques in Tokyo, Paris, and New York, and her name carried significant prestige in both fashion and fragrance. Presenting the scent simply under the Hanae Mori brand name emphasized that the perfume was not merely a product but part of a larger aesthetic universe—one defined by elegance, femininity, and the designer’s enduring symbol, the butterfly.
Thus, the 1995 relaunch represented both continuity and renewal. While the original 1968 perfume had embodied the soft floral sensibility of its era, the reformulated version translated that identity for a new generation. Through the work of Bernard Ellena and the collaboration between Japanese and French fragrance houses, Hanae Mori’s signature scent was given new life—preserving its poetic spirit while allowing it to resonate with the evolving tastes of the late twentieth century.
Fragrance Composition:
So what does it smell like? The 1995 version is classified as a floral oriental fragrance for women.
- Top notes: bilberry, black currant, French wild strawberry, blackberry, blueberry
- Middle notes: rose, ylang ylang, peony, jasmine
- Base notes: sandalwood, Virginia cedar, Brazilian rosewood, Hawaiian almond tree
Scent Profile:
The 1995 relaunch of Hanae Mori introduced a fragrance that felt richer, more sensual, and more modern than the airy floral of 1968. Classified as a floral oriental, the composition opens with a cascade of dark, jewel-like berries that immediately create an impression of sweetness and color. The first breath reveals bilberry, a small wild berry related to the blueberry and native to northern European forests. Its scent is tart and slightly green, reminiscent of crushed purple fruit warmed by sunlight. In perfumery, bilberry notes are usually recreated through aromatic molecules that combine fruity lactones and berry-like esters, since the fruit itself does not yield a meaningful essential oil. These synthetics give the fragrance its vivid, jammy sparkle while preserving the illusion of freshly picked berries still cool from the forest shade.
Closely intertwined is black currant, often evoked through a famous aroma molecule called black currant bud absolute or recreated through compounds like cassis bases. The true material, historically produced in regions of Burgundy, France, smells intensely green, fruity, and slightly catty—like crushed leaves and ripe berries together. In small quantities it adds extraordinary realism and vibrancy to fruity accords. Alongside it appears French wild strawberry, a note cherished in perfumery for its soft, candy-like sweetness. The tiny alpine strawberries of France are prized for their concentrated aroma, which smells more fragrant and floral than larger cultivated berries. Because strawberries do not produce an essential oil suitable for distillation, perfumers build their aroma using molecules such as ethyl methylphenylglycidate, sometimes called the “strawberry aldehyde,” which recreates the luscious scent of ripe fruit. Blackberry and blueberry complete the top accord, forming a dark berry medley that smells juicy and slightly tart, like fruit compote simmering gently. These notes are also composed using synthetic fruity esters and lactones that create the sensation of fresh berries bursting on the skin.
As the fruit notes soften, the perfume blossoms into a luminous floral heart that restores the elegance associated with Hanae Mori’s earlier fragrance. Rose emerges first, its aroma velvety and romantic, reminiscent of petals unfolding in the morning light. The finest rose oil traditionally comes from the Bulgarian Rose Valley or from Grasse in southern France, where centuries of cultivation have perfected the harvesting of Rosa damascena. Bulgarian roses are especially prized because the region’s cool dawn climate allows flowers to retain their aromatic oils, producing a rich fragrance that combines honeyed sweetness with green freshness. Blended with the rose is ylang-ylang, distilled from tropical blossoms grown in the Comoros Islands and Madagascar. Its scent is lush and creamy, almost custard-like, with hints of banana and jasmine. Ylang-ylang’s richness helps smooth the transition from fruity sweetness into the deeper floral heart.
A soft, luminous freshness comes from peony, a flower that has no extractable essential oil and must be recreated through perfumery accords. Peony notes are often built from rose molecules such as phenethyl alcohol, combined with airy floral aldehydes to produce the sensation of delicate pink petals and cool spring air. The effect is sheer, watery, and graceful. Jasmine adds a sensual undertone, with its creamy, slightly indolic aroma that suggests warm evening gardens. High-quality jasmine absolute has traditionally come from Grasse or Egypt, where the flowers are harvested at dawn when their fragrance is strongest. Jasmine contains natural indole molecules that give the scent a subtle warmth reminiscent of skin, adding depth to the otherwise airy bouquet.
As the perfume settles into its base, the composition becomes warmer and more enveloping, embodying the oriental character described in its classification. Sandalwood provides the foundation. Historically the most prized sandalwood came from Mysore, India, where the slow-growing trees produced oil exceptionally rich in santalol, the compound responsible for its smooth, creamy woodiness. The aroma feels soft and almost milky, like polished wood warmed by sunlight. Complementing it is Virginia cedar, distilled from the wood of Juniperus virginiana trees in the United States. Cedarwood smells dry, clean, and slightly smoky, evoking the scent of freshly sharpened pencils or a cedar chest storing silk garments. It adds structure and clarity to the base.
The fragrance deepens further with Brazilian rosewood, once harvested from the Amazonian tree Aniba rosaeodora. Rosewood oil is famous for its exceptionally high linalool content, which gives it a delicate floral wood aroma—somewhere between rose petals and warm polished wood. Because of conservation concerns surrounding the tree, natural rosewood oil has become rare, and modern perfumery often uses synthesized linalool or rosewood accords to recreate its scent while preserving the forests. Finally, the base features Hawaiian almond tree, a note that introduces a subtle gourmand warmth. Almond accords are usually built using molecules such as benzaldehyde, which smells unmistakably like marzipan or crushed almond kernels. This creamy sweetness blends beautifully with sandalwood and cedar, giving the drydown a comforting softness.
Together these elements create a fragrance that feels simultaneously modern and romantic. The opening berries sparkle like dark jewels, juicy and vibrant; the floral heart unfolds with classic elegance; and the base settles into a warm, creamy embrace of woods and almond sweetness. The interplay between natural materials and carefully chosen aroma chemicals allows the perfume to achieve both realism and longevity—synthetic molecules amplifying delicate natural notes while maintaining clarity and radiance. The result is a fragrance that reflects the 1990s fascination with fruity florals and sensual oriental warmth, yet still carries the graceful femininity that has always been associated with the name Hanae Mori.
Bottle:
The new bottle's glass top was designed to resemble the folded wings of a butterfly.
Hanae Mori Haute Couture:
The fragrance Hanae Mori Haute Couture, introduced in 1998 in collaboration with Shiseido Cosmetics, was conceived as an olfactory expression of the designer’s most refined creations—those garments produced in the rarefied world of couture, where every detail is deliberate and every element exists in perfect balance. Classified as a soft aldehydic fruity floral, the perfume unfolds with an airy elegance that mirrors the sensation of silk brushing against the skin or the whisper of chiffon in motion. Its composition balances luminous freshness with creamy florals and a graceful, powdery base, creating a scent that feels polished, luminous, and quietly luxurious.
It is classified as a soft aldehydic fruity floral fragrance for women.
- Top notes: bergamot, coriander, aldehydes
- Middle notes: jasmine, tuberose, gardenia, narcissus, lily of the valley
- Base notes: iris, sandalwood
Scent Profile:
The fragrance opens with a bright and sparkling accord of bergamot, one of perfumery’s most cherished citrus ingredients. The finest bergamot oil traditionally comes from Calabria in southern Italy, where the warm Mediterranean climate and mineral-rich soil produce fruit whose peel contains exceptionally fragrant essential oils. When first inhaled, bergamot smells radiant and uplifting—like the delicate bitterness of citrus zest twisted over a glass of sparkling water. Its aroma contains natural compounds such as limonene and linalyl acetate, which give it both a fresh citrus sparkle and a faint floral softness. This brightness is contrasted by coriander, whose essential oil is distilled from the seeds of Coriandrum sativum, often grown in regions of Eastern Europe or Russia where the cooler climates yield particularly aromatic seeds. Coriander introduces a gentle spice that smells simultaneously peppery, lemony, and faintly herbal—like crushed seeds warmed between the fingers.
Hovering above these notes is the shimmering presence of aldehydes, a family of synthetic aroma molecules that revolutionized twentieth-century perfumery. Aldehydes do not smell like a single natural object; instead, they create the impression of effervescent brightness—often described as metallic, waxy, or reminiscent of freshly laundered linen and sparkling champagne bubbles. In this fragrance, aldehydes lift the citrus and spice, creating a sensation of airiness and luminosity. They function almost like light reflecting off a satin gown, giving the perfume its refined couture elegance.
As the opening sparkle softens, the fragrance blossoms into a sumptuous floral heart, rich yet gracefully balanced. Jasmine emerges first, its aroma creamy, slightly sweet, and faintly indolic—suggestive of warm evening air in a garden where white flowers bloom after sunset. Some of the world’s most prized jasmine absolute comes from Grasse in southern France, where generations of cultivation have produced flowers with extraordinary aromatic depth. Jasmine contributes both romance and sensual warmth to the composition. Alongside it blooms tuberose, a flower native to Mexico whose fragrance is intensely opulent and narcotic. True tuberose absolute smells lush and buttery, with hints of coconut, gardenia, and honey. Because tuberose is so powerful, perfumers often soften its richness with floral molecules that help extend its creamy radiance without overwhelming the composition.
The bouquet continues with gardenia, whose scent is famously difficult to extract because the blossoms yield little to no essential oil. As a result, gardenia in perfumery is almost always created through an accord built from jasmine, tuberose, lactones, and creamy floral molecules. The resulting scent is velvety and luminous—like thick white petals warmed by tropical air. Narcissus, often harvested in the mountainous regions of France or Switzerland, adds a fascinating green-floral nuance. Narcissus absolute smells intensely rich, blending honeyed sweetness with a faintly animalic, hay-like warmth that lends complexity to the bouquet.
Providing a breath of cool freshness within this lush floral heart is lily of the valley, one of perfumery’s most beloved illusions. The delicate bell-shaped flowers produce no extractable essential oil, so their scent must be recreated using synthetic molecules such as hydroxycitronellal and related muguet compounds. These materials smell watery, green, and crystalline, like dew resting on white petals. They introduce a transparent brightness that prevents the floral heart from becoming overly heavy, maintaining the fragrance’s couture-like elegance.
As the perfume settles, it reveals a soft and refined base built around powdery woods. Iris, or more precisely orris, is one of the most precious materials in perfumery. It is derived from the rhizomes of iris plants—particularly those grown in Florence, Italy—which must be harvested and then aged for several years before distillation. During this aging process, aromatic molecules called irones develop, giving orris its extraordinary scent: powdery, violet-like, and slightly woody, reminiscent of fine face powder dusted across silk. Orris provides the fragrance with an elegant cosmetic softness that echoes the sophistication of haute couture.
Supporting this powdery elegance is sandalwood, traditionally sourced from Mysore in India, long considered the finest quality sandalwood in the world. Mysore sandalwood oil is rich in santalol, the molecule responsible for its creamy, velvety wood aroma. The scent feels warm and smooth—almost milky—like polished wood warmed by sunlight. Because natural Mysore sandalwood has become increasingly rare and protected, perfumers often enhance it with modern sandalwood molecules that extend its creamy softness while maintaining sustainability.
Together these elements create a fragrance that feels luminous and refined from beginning to end. The aldehydic sparkle of the opening, the sumptuous white floral heart, and the powdery iris-sandalwood base form a seamless composition that reflects the spirit of Hanae Mori’s haute couture designs—elegant, feminine, and meticulously balanced. The fragrance moves like a beautifully tailored garment: first catching the light with brilliance, then revealing layers of delicate craftsmanship, before settling into a soft, graceful finish that lingers like the memory of silk against the skin.





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