The Story
Why it exists.
Dandelion Butter began as an honest question: what does a dandelion actually smell like? Not the抽象 concept of a sunny day, the real thing. The snap of a green stem, the bitter latex in your fingers, the powder that clings. Laura Oberwetter built the fragrance around these contradictions, finding that dandelions contain both a delicate pollen sweetness and a distinctly bitter green edge that most people have never separated. Butter, salted and warm, became the bridge between them, the note that makes the bitter feel familiar instead of jarring. This is a fragrance about precision, about capturing a flower most people treat as a weed and finding something genuinely worth keeping.
If this were a song
Community picks
Orange Skies
Everything But The Girl
The Beginning
Dandelion Butter began as an honest question: what does a dandelion actually smell like? Not the抽象 concept of a sunny day, the real thing. The snap of a green stem, the bitter latex in your fingers, the powder that clings. Laura Oberwetter built the fragrance around these contradictions, finding that dandelions contain both a delicate pollen sweetness and a distinctly bitter green edge that most people have never separated. Butter, salted and warm, became the bridge between them, the note that makes the bitter feel familiar instead of jarring. This is a fragrance about precision, about capturing a flower most people treat as a weed and finding something genuinely worth keeping.
The structure is unusual. Dandelion leaf appears in every phase, top, heart, and base, acting less like a note and more like a through-line, a thread that keeps the composition coherent as it moves. Pollen repeats too. This repetition isn't lazy; it mirrors how the flower actually works, with the same botanical identity expressing itself differently at different stages of growth. The salted butter is the genuine outlier. It's a dessert note, an edible material that rarely appears in floral compositions, yet here it does something unexpected: it doesn't sweeten the dandelion. It deepens it, rounds off the bitter edges, and leaves the green feeling warm rather than sharp.
The Evolution
It opens bright. Pollen arrives with its particular sweetness, not honey, not powder, but the actual fine dust that catches light. Then the green kicks in. Not grass, not stem exactly, the bitter bite of dandelion leaf as it breaks the skin of your thumbnail. This is the honest part, the moment most florals skip. The transition takes fifteen minutes as the plant sap emerges, adding a slightly viscous quality that softens the sharpness without erasing it. The milk note isn't obvious; it's more a suggestion of creaminess that runs underneath, smoothing everything that comes after. The base arrives gently. Salted butter doesn't storm in, it seeps, warming against the skin like butter melting into toast. The dandelion lingers as pollen now, powdery and still slightly sweet, held in place by the butter's fat. Four to six hours on most skin, closer to skin than room. The next morning, there's a faint yellow residue on fabric, the kind the flower's sap actually leaves. That detail isn't coincidental.
Cultural Impact
Clue Perfumery operates in the conceptual niche space, producing fragrances for enthusiasts who seek alternatives to mainstream houses. Dandelion Butter occupies unusual territory within that world, a floral built on botanical realism rather than abstraction, with a salted butter base that places it closer to indie-gourmand than traditional floral. Community response has been notably polarized in the productive way: those who connect with it tend to connect deeply, describing it as one of the most realistic botanical interpretations they've encountered. The butter note has drawn specific praise from reviewers who typically avoid edible fragrances, finding it grounding rather than cloying. Against peers like D.S.
The House
United States · Est. 2023
Clue Perfumery is a Chicago-based independent fragrance house founded in 2023 by perfumer Laura Oberwetter and designer Caleb Vanden Boom. The brand crafts conceptual fragrances that draw from surprising references, balancing surreal vignettes with the familiar appeal of perfume. Each scent invites wearers into unexpected sensory narratives, finding delight in the unexpected and challenging conventional fragrance categories. Clue operates as a small, handcrafted operation with a dedicated following in the indie perfume community.
If this were a song
Community picks
Imagine a Sunday afternoon in late April, sun coming through a window at a low angle, the light warm and slightly golden. There is no urgency. Something slightly wistful in the melody. This fragrance sounds like that light feels.
Orange Skies
Everything But The Girl































