Houses
Find your favorite fragrance houses here.
S-Perfume is a small, art-driven fragrance house that treats scent like a design object—minimal, concept-forward, and built around mood and texture rather than crowd-pleasing trends. The line is known for concise collections, thoughtful materials, and an aesthetic that feels closer to contemporary art and architecture than traditional “perfumery storytelling,” with releases that often explore airy musks, clean woods, and modern ambers in a distinctly understated way.
Stella McCartney is a modern luxury fashion label whose fragrance releases extend the brand’s clean, contemporary sensibility and long-running emphasis on responsible design. Perfumes under the name typically lean polished and wearable, positioned as extensions of the house’s lifestyle world—fashion, beauty, and a forward-looking attitude—rather than a standalone niche perfumery concept.
Stéphane Humbert Lucas 777 is an artistic perfume house built around high-impact materials, vivid contrasts, and a “synesthetic” approach where color, texture, and imagery guide the scent’s structure. The collection is often associated with extrait-style intensity and a luxurious, opulent signature—spices, resins, woods, and radiant florals—crafted to feel dramatic and expressive rather than quietly minimalist.
Syed Junaid Alam (Junaid Perfumes) is a long-established Middle Eastern perfume house with deep roots in regional fragrance culture, spanning traditional perfumery styles alongside contemporary releases. The brand is widely associated with rich materials—oud, amber, musks, and florals—offered across a broad portfolio that blends heritage-inspired profiles with modern, retail-friendly compositions.
Ted Lapidus is a classic French fashion name whose fragrances reflect the traditional “designer scent” era—bold, confident, and often built around aromatic woods, spices, and clean musks. Releases under the brand tend to favor strong signatures and accessible luxury positioning, tying perfume to the house’s broader style identity rather than niche experimentation.
Téo Cabanel is a revived Paris-rooted perfume house with a heritage narrative and a present-day focus on modern, easy-to-wear compositions. The lineup often balances tradition with a contemporary “clean” sensibility—smooth gourmands, soft woods, and luminous florals—designed to feel refined and approachable while still maintaining a distinct house style.
Terry de Gunzburg’s world is best known through the By Terry beauty brand, where fragrance sits alongside makeup and skincare as part of a polished, luxury aesthetic. The perfumes typically emphasize elegance and finish—smooth florals, soft ambers, and well-groomed woods—aimed at a beauty customer who wants a scent that feels tailored, refined, and effortlessly wearable.
Thameen is a London-based niche house inspired by the idea of “preciousness,” often linking compositions to jewels, rare materials, and a high-concentration, long-lasting style. The range tends to marry modern refinement with a touch of opulence—resins, spices, woods, and plush florals—built for strong presence while keeping a contemporary, well-edited finish.
The Beautiful Mind Series is an artistic fragrance project created by perfumer Geza Schoen, conceived as a celebration of intelligence and creativity rather than traditional celebrity glamour. Each “volume” is framed around a real-world muse and a specific idea, with compositions that tend to feel modern, polished, and concept-driven—often emphasizing clean musks, luminous florals, and contemporary woods. The result is a compact, curated line that sits comfortably in the niche space: distinctive in theme, thoughtfully constructed, and designed for fragrance enthusiasts who enjoy a strong point of view.
The Body Shop began in 1976 and grew into a globally recognized beauty retailer known for accessible personal-care products and a strong emphasis on ethical sourcing and advocacy. While the brand spans skincare, bath and body, and cosmetics, fragrance has long been part of its offering—typically straightforward, everyday scents designed to be easy to wear and easy to gift. Its identity is closely tied to the “values-led” side of modern beauty, with an approach that prioritizes broad appeal and a practical, shop-friendly fragrance style.
Founded in 2000, The Different Company is a French niche house built on the idea that modern luxury perfumery can be both bold and precise. The brand is known for working with respected perfumers and for presenting its fragrances as well-made “objects,” including refillable formats that emphasize longevity and craftsmanship. Stylistically, the line often blends clean structure with distinctive materials—fragrances that feel polished and wearable, yet clearly positioned for enthusiasts who want something more intentional than mainstream releases.
The Vagabond Prince is a small niche perfume label launched in 2012 with a storybook sensibility—mythic themes, poetic naming, and a preference for evocative atmospheres. The house is best known for a tightly edited catalog that leans lush and expressive, often pairing striking accords with a refined, perfumerly finish rather than mass-market sweetness. It’s the kind of line that appeals to collectors: limited in size, strong in narrative identity, and built to feel like a set of wearable tales.
Mugler is a French fashion house founded by Manfred Thierry Mugler, recognized for theatrical silhouettes and a bold, futuristic aesthetic that later translated into equally distinctive fragrance releases. In perfumery, the brand became known for statement-making scents designed for strong presence—often built around modern gourmands, bold florals, and dramatic amber/wood structures. Today, Mugler fragrances remain closely tied to the house’s larger identity: unapologetic, stylized, and made to feel larger than life rather than quietly minimalist.
Thomas Kosmala is a contemporary niche perfume house centered on a clean, modern “alchemy” approach—taking familiar raw materials and reworking them into sleek, high-impact signatures. The collection often emphasizes clarity and texture (musks, woods, ambers, and fresh aromatics), with a style that feels urban, polished, and deliberately minimalist in storytelling. It’s positioned for wearers who want modern projection and performance without heavy ornamentation—fragrances that read confident and current.
Tiffany & Co. is an American luxury design house founded in 1837, best known for fine jewelry and a long-standing association with classic, giftable luxury. Its fragrance releases are extensions of that lifestyle branding—polished, elegant compositions designed to feel refined and approachable, often echoing the “bright, clean, and luminous” aura associated with the Tiffany name. In other words, the perfumes are positioned less as experimental niche projects and more as wearable, prestige accessories that complement the house’s broader luxury identity.
Tiziana Terenzi is an Italian family brand whose roots trace back to a candle-making tradition, later expanding into high-concentration artistic perfumery with an unmistakably rich, expressive style. The house is known for plush materials and dramatic signatures—resins, woods, ambers, and radiant florals—often presented with a sense of travel, memory, and shared moments as creative inspiration. The overall effect is opulent and collector-friendly: fragrances designed for presence and longevity, aimed squarely at niche enthusiasts.
Tom Daxon is a British niche house built around a clean, modern luxury sensibility—polished woods, airy aromatics, and understated structure that aims for refinement rather than loudness. The line tends to emphasize clarity and texture, often pairing contemporary materials with classic perfumery ideas, and it has expanded into home and body formats while keeping a cohesive, minimalist identity anchored in fine fragrance.
Tom Ford fragrances translate the brand’s fashion-forward glamour into scent, spanning everything from sleek, office-ready signatures to bold statement compositions in the private-blend tradition. The house style is frequently associated with high-impact materials—spices, resins, ambery woods, and decadent florals—packaged with a sharp, architectural aesthetic that mirrors the label’s modern luxury positioning.
Tommy Bahama is a lifestyle brand whose fragrances extend its relaxed, resort-inspired identity—sun-warmed skin, beach air, fresh citruses, and easy woods that feel casual and vacation-ready. Scent releases under the name are generally designed for broad appeal and everyday wear, matching the brand’s laid-back, escapist tone rather than a niche, experimental approach.