The Story
Why it exists.
Aesop built its following through restraint and intention, letting quality speak for itself. Hwyl emerged from that same commitment, composed by Barnabé Fillion with a deceptively simple brief: translate the sensation of walking into a Japanese Hinoki forest, resin, shadow, and still air, into a wearable composition. Fillion reached for coniferous materials as the structural backbone, layering cypress and cedarwood against quieter aromatic accents. The result is a fragrance that captures atmosphere rather than spectacle.
If this were a song
Community picks
Suf
Nils Frahm
The Beginning
Aesop built its following through restraint and intention, letting quality speak for itself. Hwyl emerged from that same commitment, composed by Barnabé Fillion with a deceptively simple brief: translate the sensation of walking into a Japanese Hinoki forest, resin, shadow, and still air, into a wearable composition. Fillion reached for coniferous materials as the structural backbone, layering cypress and cedarwood against quieter aromatic accents. The result is a fragrance that captures atmosphere rather than spectacle.
The notes selected for Hwyl reflect Aesop's preference for materials that read as familiar yet carefully layered. Pink pepper and thyme serve as aromatic punctuation, elemi resin adds a quiet resinous lift. Cypress and geranium bridge the transition from opening to heart, while suede keeps the composition intimate. Frankincense, vetiver, and cedarwood form the anchor, a trio chosen for their ability to evoke the forest floor rather than dominate it. The result pairs with intention: quiet environments, deliberate choices, and the kind of smell that rewards close attention.
The Evolution
The scent journey begins with pink pepper, thyme, and elemi resin providing an aromatic, citrus-adjacent opening that feels immediate and clean. Within minutes, cypress and geranium arrive, transforming the character from bright to green and coniferous, while suede threads softness through the heart. As time passes, frankincense and vetiver take hold, introducing a faint smoke and earth. Cedarwood extends the drydown into something long and woody, completing a progression that moves from airy brightness to grounded stillness.
Cultural Impact
Hwyl has earned a devoted following among fragrance people who want something that resists categorization, too smoky for fresh, too austere for warm, too quiet for projection-chasing. It sits comfortably alongside the Comme des Garçons incense series and other minimal, meditative compositions. The comparison that stuck: the smell of a forest you didn't expect to love. Its quiet persistence rewards those who lean in rather than lean back, and for many it has become exactly that, an olfactory memory they didn't know they needed until they found it.
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
The moment after smoke clears from a forest path. Air that tastes like pine and cold stone. Hwyl has that same quality, meditative, slightly austere, carrying you from shadow into clean air.
Suf
Nils Frahm
































