The Story
Why it exists.
Bella Freud founded her London label in 1990, building a body of work that blends fashion, film and interiors into fragrance narratives that function as character studies rather than simple accessories. Psychoanalysis arrived in 2017, named for and inspired by her great-grandfather Sigmund Freud, the man who built a practice out of listening to what people could not say directly. The brief was philosophical before it was olfactory: create a scent that functions like a session, something that opens, deepens, and leaves a residue worth examining. The opening materials, neroli and petitgrain, were chosen to establish an initial clarity, a moment of conscious thought before the unconscious speaks.
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Take Five
Dave Brubeck
The Beginning
Bella Freud founded her London label in 1990, building a body of work that blends fashion, film and interiors into fragrance narratives that function as character studies rather than simple accessories. Psychoanalysis arrived in 2017, named for and inspired by her great-grandfather Sigmund Freud, the man who built a practice out of listening to what people could not say directly. The brief was philosophical before it was olfactory: create a scent that functions like a session, something that opens, deepens, and leaves a residue worth examining. The opening materials, neroli and petitgrain, were chosen to establish an initial clarity, a moment of conscious thought before the unconscious speaks.
The note structure of Psychoanalysis was designed to mirror the act of psychoanalysis itself: an opening that asks a question, a heart that reveals something complex, a drydown that leaves the subject changed. Neroli and petitgrain serve as the conscious surface, bright and purposeful. Resinous notes and tobacco flower represent what lies beneath, warm and layered. Amber, cedarwood and musk constitute the residue, the warmth that remains after the session ends and the room is quiet again. This philosophy shapes not just the composition but the wearing experience, inviting the wearer to notice how the fragrance evolves and what that evolution reveals about their own response to each phase.
The Evolution
Psychoanalysis moves through three clear phases that mirror a therapeutic arc. The opening is neroli and petitgrain: bright, precise, almost interrogative. Neroli delivers orange blossom clarity while petitgrain adds the green, slightly bitter character of bitter orange leaves. Together they create a crisp, aromatic freshness that immediately signals something purposeful is happening. As the fragrance progresses, resinous notes emerge alongside tobacco flower. The resin brings warmth and a faintly medicinal depth; tobacco flower contributes aromatic complexity without sweetness. This is the confession phase, where the conversation deepens and more is revealed. The drydown anchors everything in amber, cedarwood and musk. Amber provides a smooth, honeyed warmth; cedarwood adds dry, woody structure; musk gives the whole composition a skin-close softness. The final phase feels settled and reflective, the silence after something meaningful has been said.
Cultural Impact
Since its 2017 debut, Psychoanalysis has sparked conversation among niche collectors for its daring leather‑tobacco contrast wrapped in citrus. Wearers often describe it as the scent of a quiet analyst who commands the room, positioning it alongside other modern character pieces that prioritize story over trend. Its polarising edge keeps it a frequent topic on fragrance forums.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1990
Bella Freud is a British designer who moves fluidly between fashion, interiors, film and fragrance. Since the early 1990s she has built a label that values narrative as much as material. Her perfume collection, launched in the mid‑2010s, reads like a series of character studies, each bottle framing a story that mirrors her work in clothing. Recent collaborations with heritage houses such as Penhaligon’s show how the brand translates its sartorial sensibility into scent, offering collectors a tactile extension of the Bella Freud aesthetic.
If this were a song
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A sleek, late‑night jazz groove mirrors the fragrance’s crisp citrus opening and its warm, leather‑tobacco heart, creating a sophisticated yet slightly edgy soundtrack.
Take Five
Dave Brubeck






















