The Story
Why it exists.
Ganymede Extrait takes its name from Jupiter's largest moon, a celestial body marked by impact craters yet concealing a vast underground ocean beneath its frozen crust. That duality, the visible and the hidden, the mineral and the liquid, defines the fragrance's signature. The overdose of immortelle signals clear intent: this is not a flank or a limited edition. It is a statement built on the same foundations but amplified until something distinct emerges. The earthy spice unfolds with presence, the warm resinous richness settles into skin, and the mineral base cuts through everything before it.
If this were a song
Community picks
Adagio for Strings
Samuel Barber
The Beginning
Ganymede Extrait takes its name from Jupiter's largest moon, a celestial body marked by impact craters yet concealing a vast underground ocean beneath its frozen crust. That duality, the visible and the hidden, the mineral and the liquid, defines the fragrance's signature. The overdose of immortelle signals clear intent: this is not a flank or a limited edition. It is a statement built on the same foundations but amplified until something distinct emerges. The earthy spice unfolds with presence, the warm resinous richness settles into skin, and the mineral base cuts through everything before it.
What makes Ganymede Extrait compelling is the tension between its warmest materials and its coldest. Immortelle brings a caramelized, syrupy quality that is inherently sweet and dense, but the composition tempers this with cooler elements that keep it from becoming cloying. The mandarin opens bright and acidic, giving the fragrance a brief moment of clarity before the spice and resin establish themselves.
The Evolution
The first hour presents mandarin's brightness alongside incense and myrrh's resinous weight. The fragrance reads as immediate and assertive, a composition that announces itself without apology. Then the immortelle takes prominence. That overdose the brand highlights becomes apparent: the scent thickens, the syrupy sweetness intensifies, and the overall impression becomes richer and more pronounced. This is a phase that demands attention, a stage where the fragrance asserts its character fully. As time passes, the spice begins to recede. The immortelle softens into something warmer and more restrained. The Akigalawood emerges, delivering a mineral, clean quality that cuts through the sweetness and provides contrast. This is the signature.
Cultural Impact
The immortelle-Akigalawood pairing defines Ganymede Extrait's character, a combination that has drawn strong reactions from those who encounter it. Its reception speaks to the broader appetite in niche perfumery for compositions that challenge conventions rather than simply pleasing the senses.
The House
France · Est. 2009
Marc-Antoine Barrois translates the timeless elegance of his Parisian haute couture into an equally refined line of fragrances. These are not mere accessories but standalone works of art, born from a deep creative partnership with perfumer Quentin Bisch. The house is celebrated for its unique, genderless scents that feel both classic and completely of the moment.
If this were a song
Community picks
The fragrance opens like the first chord of something orchestral, resin and citrus before the strings swell. Then the immortelle arrives, honeyed and warm, like a melody that builds without resolving. The mineral base is the silence after: clean, ozonic, the sound of something vast and empty and still. A track that begins cinematic and ends quiet.
Adagio for Strings
Samuel Barber



























