The Story
Why it exists.
In 2021 perfumer Barnabé Fillion collaborated with Aesop to capture an urban phenomenon: the moment when concrete streets exhale greenery after rainfall. The fragrance grows from Aesop's Melbourne roots, where the studio maintains a dialogue with the city's hidden botanicals. Fillion worked with the brand's commitment to olfactory intelligence, selecting materials that speak to both restraint and depth. The name Erémia derives from the Greek word for mist, honoring that transient veil that settles over foliage in the moments after a storm clears. This Greek reference also evokes contemplation and solitude, qualities embedded in the fragrance's measured evolution.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sunrise
Tycho
The Beginning
In 2021 perfumer Barnabé Fillion collaborated with Aesop to capture an urban phenomenon: the moment when concrete streets exhale greenery after rainfall. The fragrance grows from Aesop's Melbourne roots, where the studio maintains a dialogue with the city's hidden botanicals. Fillion worked with the brand's commitment to olfactory intelligence, selecting materials that speak to both restraint and depth. The name Erémia derives from the Greek word for mist, honoring that transient veil that settles over foliage in the moments after a storm clears. This Greek reference also evokes contemplation and solitude, qualities embedded in the fragrance's measured evolution.
The note philosophy behind Erémia reflects Aesop's broader commitment to materials with history and character. Yuzu, while not native to Australia, brings an international quality appropriate to a globally-minded brand. Guaiac wood and green tea introduce a trans-Pacific dialogue, connecting East and West through olfactory means. Mimosa, with its confections-like sweetness, tempers the otherwise austere quality of the composition. The decision to include galbanum demonstrates an appetite for challenge; this material can easily overpower a composition if not balanced with care. Iris brings medicinal, powdery sophistication that counters galbanum's green intensity.
The Evolution
Erémia begins its evolution as a bright, astringent citrus statement, with yuzu commanding attention through its distinctively sharp, almost medicinal tartness. Bergamot and grapefruit follow, creating a triangulated citrus effect that feels neither sweet nor aquatic but instead crisp and somewhat bitter. Within minutes, the citrus recedes to reveal the heart, where guaiac wood introduces its characteristic smoky dimension, reminiscent of embers or damp charred timber. Green tea arrives as a bridge between top and heart, its grassy, slightly bitter freshness preventing the composition from becoming too heavy. Mimosa adds a velvety, slightly sweet floral finish to the heart phase. The transition into the drydown marks a significant shift toward earthiness. Galbanum contributes intensely green, slightly animalic qualities while iris emerges with powdery, medicinal elegance. Patchouli, present in trace amounts, provides the final grounding with its unmistakable damp-soil character, ensuring the fragrance settles into the skin rather than floating above it.
Cultural Impact
Since its 2021 debut, Erémia has been praised for translating urban petrichor into a wearable scent. Reviewers note its ability to evoke a concrete wasteland sprouting greenery, positioning it as a modern green‑spicy staple among niche enthusiasts who appreciate Aesop’s restrained yet evocative approach.
The House
Australia · Est. 1987
Aesop is an Australian luxury skincare and fragrance house founded in Melbourne in 1987 by hairdresser Dennis Paphitis, who began blending essential oils into hair products at his salon before building one of the most distinctive beauty brands in the world. Known for botanical formulations, architectural retail spaces, and a conspicuous refusal to advertise, Aesop occupies a rare position at the intersection of skincare, perfume, and cultural sensibility. The brand launched its first fragrance, Marrakech, in 2005 and has since developed a tight collection of distinctive scents. Aesop became a certified B Corp in 2020 and, after more than a decade under Brazilian owner Natura & Co, joined the L'Oréal portfolio in 2023 in a deal valued at approximately $3.7 billion.
If this were a song
Community picks
Erémia feels like a sunrise over a city garden, bright, crisp, then settling into a calm, moss‑laden groove. The primary track captures that transition from sharp light to quiet green.
Sunrise
Tycho






























