The Story
Why it exists.
Yuki by Illuminum emerged in 2016 as the third scent of Illuminum’s experimental 95 percent series, a collaboration that paired the house with Japanese chef‑author Yuki Gomi. Perfumer Barnabé Fillion translated Gomi’s culinary perspective into aroma, choosing osmanthus to echo the delicate fragrance of fresh blossoms, while the green‑tea and tangerine notes reflect the chef’s love for bright, palate‑clearing ingredients. The British niche house, founded in 2011, used this project to push the boundary between taste and smell, delivering a high‑concentration eau de parfum that feels both edible and wearable.
If this were a song
Community picks
Tea for Two
Jimmy Van Heusen
The Beginning
Yuki by Illuminum emerged in 2016 as the third scent of Illuminum’s experimental 95 percent series, a collaboration that paired the house with Japanese chef‑author Yuki Gomi. Perfumer Barnabé Fillion translated Gomi’s culinary perspective into aroma, choosing osmanthus to echo the delicate fragrance of fresh blossoms, while the green‑tea and tangerine notes reflect the chef’s love for bright, palate‑clearing ingredients. The British niche house, founded in 2011, used this project to push the boundary between taste and smell, delivering a high ‑concentration eau de parfum that feels both edible and wearable.
The choice of osmanthus gives Yuki a sweet‑apricot nuance that sits beside a crisp tangerine spark, a pairing that feels like a citrus‑kiss on a blooming branch. Green tea adds a clean, herbaceous coolness, balancing the fruit’s brightness and preparing the skin for the earthy vetiver base. Vetiver’s dry, woody earthiness grounds the composition, creating a subtle contrast that mirrors the culinary tension between light palate cleansers and deep, lingering flavors. This blend makes the fragrance feel both fresh and rooted.
The Evolution
At the first spray, osmanthus bursts forward, its honeyed apricot scent filling the air like sunrise over a quiet garden. Within ten minutes, a flash of tangerine cuts through, adding a citrus zing that brightens the opening. As the top fades, green tea settles, cooling the composition with a tea‑leaf serenity that feels like a sunlit ceremony. This heart lingers for the next half hour, keeping the scent lively yet refined. Around the thirty‑minute mark, vetiver emerges, its dry, woody earthiness taking the lead. The base stays present for the remaining six to eight hours, offering a subtle, smoky undertone that clings to skin without overwhelming. The overall arc moves from bright floral‑fruit to calm, grounded wood, delivering a moderate sillage that stays close, perfect for day‑long wear.
Cultural Impact
Osmanthus has long been cherished in East Asian cultures, especially in Chinese and Japanese traditions, where its sweet, apricot‑like fragrance is associated with autumnal festivals and poetic gatherings. Historically, the flower has been used in tea ceremonies, incense, and even culinary dishes, symbolizing love, romance, and the fleeting nature of beauty. Its inclusion in modern perfumery bridges ancient reverence with contemporary taste, allowing wearers to experience a subtle nod to cultural heritage while enjoying a fresh, sophisticated aroma that feels both timeless and current. This connection to tradition adds depth to Yuki, making it more than a scent, it becomes a quiet homage to centuries of artistic expression.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 2011
Illuminum London is a British niche fragrance house that emerged in 2011 with a focus on high‑concentration eau de parfum. The brand builds its core around three aromatic pillars – oud, Taif rose and Indonesian patchouli – and releases limited‑edition scents that often explore the border between taste and smell. In 2016 the house invited chefs Jackson Boxer, Yuki Gomi and Tom Wolfe to translate culinary ideas into fragrance, resulting in a three‑part series that highlighted the brand’s experimental edge. Today Illuminum offers a compact catalogue of twelve distinct perfumes, each presented in a restrained bottle that lets the scent speak for itself.
If this were a song
Community picks
A gentle acoustic piano piece with subtle tea‑house ambience mirrors the fragrance’s fresh tea heart, while a soft ambient swell captures the lingering vetiver drydown.
Tea for Two
Jimmy Van Heusen






















