The Story
Why it exists.
Geza Schoen spent years working with synthetic aroma-molecules, learning Iso E Super intimately: a warm, woody, almost pheromonal molecule. The industry had always used it as invisible scaffolding, present in thousands of fragrances, never the point. But alone, on skin, Iso E Super did something different. It made the wearer smell like a better version of themselves. Not a scent. An effect. In 2006, Schoen stripped perfumery back to this single material and launched Molecule 01, nothing added, nothing subtracted. The warmth builds slowly, a soft cedar-like presence without the sharpness, a powdery amber that stays intimate and close. What arrives on your skin isn't an opening in the traditional sense. It's a settling in.
If this were a song
Community picks
Aurora
Boards of Canada
The Beginning
Geza Schoen spent years working with synthetic aroma-molecules, learning Iso E Super intimately: a warm, woody, almost pheromonal molecule. The industry had always used it as invisible scaffolding, present in thousands of fragrances, never the point. But alone, on skin, Iso E Super did something different. It made the wearer smell like a better version of themselves. Not a scent. An effect. In 2006, Schoen stripped perfumery back to this single material and launched Molecule 01, nothing added, nothing subtracted. The warmth builds slowly, a soft cedar-like presence without the sharpness, a powdery amber that stays intimate and close. What arrives on your skin isn't an opening in the traditional sense. It's a settling in.
Iso E Super is a synthetic. It does not exist in nature, not in roses, not in sandalwood, not anywhere except a laboratory at International Flavors & Fragrances. That origin is the point. Natural materials carry hundreds of compounds, each interacting with skin differently. Iso E Super carries one. That purity creates its particular effect: a warm, soft, velvety presence that some skin types amplify into something striking and others barely register. The molecule's radiance has been described as almost pheromonal, not because it mimics biology, but because it behaves like one. It acts on the wearer and the people nearby without announcing itself. That's rare. Most molecules fix, extend, project.
The Evolution
The first hour is the test. If you've never worn Iso E Super, you'll question the dosage, nothing seems to be happening. Trust the molecule. It's working. The warmth builds slowly, a soft cedar-like presence without the sharpness, a powdery amber that stays intimate and close. What arrives on your skin isn't an opening in the traditional sense. It's a settling in. The second hour is where it earns its reputation. Others sense something. You still can't. This is the pheromonal trick, Iso E Super saturates your own olfactory receptors first, leaving you blind to your own presence while everyone around you registers that soft, warm, Woody aura. By hour three, on good skin, it's undeniable, a velvet presence that seems to shift with your body temperature, intimate but unmistakable. The drydown doesn't disappear. It haunts. The molecule retreats to a whisper, then slowly returns over the next two to three hours as your receptors reset. What lingers is that ghost, the sense that someone was here, and that sense was worth following.
Cultural Impact
Before Molecule 01, no one had launched a fragrance consisting of a single synthetic molecule. No cover story of natural ingredients or named inspiration. It made the case that effect matters more than complexity, that intimacy beats projection, and that a molecule most people had never heard of could become a cult fragrance and spawn an entire brand. Escentric Molecules is a fragrance house founded by Geza Schoen and built around synthetic aroma-molecules, chemicals sourced from major fragrance ingredient suppliers rather than naturals. The brand rejects traditional perfumery hierarchies that favor natural complexity.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 2006
Escentric Molecules is a London-based fragrance house that challenged the conventions of perfumery when it launched in 2006. The brand built its identity around synthetic aroma-molecules, allowing individual chemicals like Iso E Super to take center stage rather than functioning as background enhancers. Its signature format presents fragrances in paired releases: the Molecule line features the pure, singular molecule, while the Escentric line pairs that same molecule with complementary ingredients. This minimalist, chemistry-forward approach produced an entirely new category in luxury fragrance. The brand operates from London with perfumer Geza Schoen based in Berlin, and has released five numbered pairs since inception, each centered on a different aroma-molecule with the depth to stand alone.
If this were a song
Community picks
Quiet, warm, slightly hypnotic. The kind of music that doesn't demand attention, it earns it. Molecule 01 works on the edges of perception, and this playlist matches that energy: electronic minimalism that breathes, ambient textures that shift slowly, moments of beauty that arrive without warning. Think late-night clarity, not late-night noise.
Aurora
Boards of Canada

































