The Story
Why it exists.
An address. A feeling. The number 24 on Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré is where Hermès operates, a Parisian landmark that became shorthand for everything the house represents. When Maurice Roucel composed this fragrance in 1995, the address wasn't a gimmick. It was a compass. Roucel built 24 Faubourg around white florals, hyacinth, and peach. He wasn't interested in the expected approach. The structure opens cool, almost aqueous. Then it warms. Each phase follows from the last.
If this were a song
Community picks
Misty
Erroll Garner
The Beginning
An address. A feeling. The number 24 on Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré is where Hermès operates, a Parisian landmark that became shorthand for everything the house represents. When Maurice Roucel composed this fragrance in 1995, the address wasn't a gimmick. It was a compass. Roucel built 24 Faubourg around white florals, hyacinth, and peach. He wasn't interested in the expected approach. The structure opens cool, almost aqueous. Then it warms. Each phase follows from the last.
What makes this composition distinctive is the transition. Bergamot and hyacinth create a cool, bright opening, the citrus lifts and refreshes, but it's the hyacinth that defines the first twenty minutes. That green, slightly astringent quality could tip into harshness. Instead, ylang-ylang tempers it, adding a creamy warmth underneath that smooths the edges. The heart, gardenia, jasmine, orange blossom, arrives as the brightness fades, blooming warm and lush. The drydown anchors everything in sandalwood, patchouli, and vanilla. Vanilla last. It always comes last. That patience is the whole point.
The Evolution
The opening arrives fast. Bergamot citrus and green hyacinth, bright, dewy, a little cold. The bergamot cools the florals rather than warming them. Ylang-ylang adds a creamy lift beneath. This phase lasts maybe twenty minutes before the heart takes over. Once the heart arrives, orange blossom and gardenia bloom warm and lush. Jasmine adds depth. A whisper of iris softens the transition. This is the core of 24 Faubourg. The gardenia anchors the heart, lending it a lush, enveloping quality. The drydown settles slowly. Sandalwood and patchouli ground everything. Vanilla arrives last, warm, sweet, intimate. The iris lingers softly. This is where 24 Faubourg lives for hours: intimate, warm, close to the skin. The kind of fragrance someone notices the next day.
Cultural Impact
24 Faubourg references the brand's Parisian headquarters at 24 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. Maurice Roucel structured the scent around a paradox that became a signature: cool white florals opening into warm vanilla. The fragrance offers a counterpoint that felt modern without being aggressive. This balance between restraint and richness characterized the approach, creating something that felt composed without sacrificing depth. The scent moves through phases that build on each other, transitioning from crisp citrus and green florals into a warmer heart before settling into a long, intimate drydown.
The House
France · Est. 1837
Hermès fragrances are the olfactory equivalent of a perfectly crafted leather bag or a fine silk scarf. They're not about loud statements but about quiet confidence, telling stories inspired by nature, poetry, and the house's equestrian heritage. This is perfumery as an art form, defined by intellectual elegance and exceptional materials.
If this were a song
Community picks
Afternoon light through curtains. The quality of warmth that arrives slowly, earned by the cool that came first. Intimate without trying.
Misty
Erroll Garner

























