L’Oréal Group is building a haute couture fragrance portfolio, taking inspiration from the craftsmanship of haute couture through a higher concentrate dosage, rare ingredients, and design-driven bottles. After building out the category with Valentino Beauty’s Anatomy of Dreams and Armani Beauty’s Armani/Privé Haute Couture Parfum fragrances, it was time for Maison Margiela, which is also licensed by L’Oréal Group, to join the mix.
Enter the Scentsorium Collection, which launched on Wednesday at the brand’s Shanghai show. The line will be exclusively released at Maison Margiela boutiques globally on April 21, with wider distribution through retailers currently in the works.
“We were seeing new consumers appearing on the market and we wanted to stay ahead of the competition. They are craving radical creation, exclusivity, and craftsmanship,” Sandrine Groslier, global president of L’Oréal Group’s luxe fragrances, tells Vogue Business exclusively.
But what makes a perfume haute couture?
The concept came together three years ago by former Maison Margiela creative director John Galliano, who toyed with two ideas for the fragrance line: radicalism and key human emotions. The cracked, rectangular cut-glass bottle represents the former, while the latter is expressed through pure and simple ingredients such as fig, musky suede, incense, saffron, and more.
The six scents take on names that could pass for undiscovered Dostoevsky or Tolstoy novels: Blaze Of Stillness, Silent Fury, Anguish and Awe, Tender Defiance, Delight in Despair, and Fit of Folly. “The new consumers that are appearing on the market are really craving radical creation and exclusivity within fragrances,” says Groslier, adding that the fragrance industry is at a turning point as the market becomes even more saturated.
As Maison Margiela continues to build its next creative era, under the design direction of Glenn Martens, both L’Oréal and the house built by Martin Margiela in 1988, are identifying new audiences and opportunities.
A demand for niche fragrances
The fragrance market is continuing to normalize off a post-pandemic boom period. In L’Oréal Group’s full-year 2025 results, the company’s Luxe arm, made up of luxury skincare, makeup and fragrance brands, posted 2.8% growth on a like-for-like basis. The group noted that fragrance remained a powerful growth engine, with double-digit growth and “exceptional results from Aesop and Maison Margiela”.
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