The Story
Why it exists.
Vanina Muracciole built Insulo around a single conviction: vanilla deserves to be the whole story, not a supporting player. Where many fragrances fold vanilla into amber or wood as a base whisper, Insulo puts it front and center from the first spray. The 2015 launch brought this approach to Jeroboam's extrait de parfum format, concentrated enough to let vanilla lead without dilution. Muracciole chose jasmine as the counterweight, its heady floral quality cutting through the gourmand sweetness just enough to keep things interesting. White musk came in as the closer, the soft landing after the vanilla's initial declaration. Insulo exists because someone wanted to see what happens when vanilla stops apologizing for being vanilla.
If this were a song
Community picks
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker
The Beginning
Vanina Muracciole built Insulo around a single conviction: vanilla deserves to be the whole story, not a supporting player. Where many fragrances fold vanilla into amber or wood as a base whisper, Insulo puts it front and center from the first spray. The 2015 launch brought this approach to Jeroboam's extrait de parfum format, concentrated enough to let vanilla lead without dilution. Muracciole chose jasmine as the counterweight, its heady floral quality cutting through the gourmand sweetness just enough to keep things interesting. White musk came in as the closer, the soft landing after the vanilla's initial declaration. Insulo exists because someone wanted to see what happens when vanilla stops apologizing for being vanilla.
Three notes. Not a complex pyramid designed to impress at a perfumery convention, but something lean and purposeful. Vanilla at the top means the opening hits immediately, thick, sweet, almost edible. Jasmine in the heart prevents the composition from flattening into pure sugar. White musk at the base does what white musk does best: it smooths, it softens, it makes everything feel intimate rather than overwhelming. The result is a fragrance that reads as singular despite its simplicity, the kind of composition that proves restraint can be its own form of ambition.
The Evolution
The opening doesn't ease in. Crème brulée vanilla arrives fully formed, thick, gooey, covered in caramel. No hesitation. For the first thirty minutes, it's pure sweetness with the jasmine just barely threading through, adding a hint of white floral green to keep it from becoming cloying. Then the jasmine finds its footing. Not aggressive, not indolic, just present enough to remind you this isn't food, it's perfume. The white musk begins its slow takeover around the two-hour mark, softening the edges, turning the sweetness into something more personal, more intimate. By hour four, the vanilla hasn't disappeared but it has quietened. The musk holds the composition now, warm and powdery against the skin. Eight to ten hours in, on most skin types, there's still something there, a soft, sweet residue that clings to wrists and collar. On fabric, it lingers longer still. The drydown isn't dramatic. That's not the point. The point is that Insulo stays with you, refusing to become a memory before you're ready to let it go.
Cultural Impact
Insulo sits in a crowded vanilla fragrance space, but its extrait de parfum concentration sets it apart from the many EDP vanillas on the market. Jeroboam's decision to use pure parfum form means the sweetness hits harder and lasts longer than in lighter concentrations. Wearers tend to describe it as the scent of someone comfortable enough with themselves to wear something unapologetically sweet, no apology, no hedging. The jasmine note prevents it from feeling juvenile, and the white musk base keeps it intimate rather than overwhelming. It's the kind of fragrance that works equally well in cold weather as a comfort scent and in cooler evening settings where its warmth can unfold slowly.
The House
France · Est. 2015
Jeroboam is a French niche fragrance house founded in Paris in 2015 by François Hénin, the owner of the celebrated Parisian perfume boutique Jovoy. The brand emerged from Hénin's observation of a growing audience seeking persistent fragrances with distinctive character. Jeroboam specializes in extrait de parfums, positioning itself as "Perfume Extracts for Urban Nomads" (Fragrantica). All Jeroboam creations carry the concentrated parfum form rather than lighter EDP or EDT structures. The house currently offers approximately 15 fragrances spanning collections that explore accords ranging from oud and amber to more abstract compositions. The brand's creative foundation rests on ORIGINO, a signature base composed of a cocktail of musks invented by independent perfumer Vanina Muracciole, which serves as a recurring element across the Jeroboam range.
If this were a song
Community picks
Insulo smells like the moment after dessert, the lingering sweetness on warm skin, the contentment of something indulgent that doesn't need to explain itself. The vanilla is thick, almost edible, softened by jasmine and white musk into something quiet and personal. It moves slowly, refuses to rush, and stays close. The sonic equivalent is late-night jazz: unhurried, warm, intimate enough that it feels like it's just for you. Think muted trumpet, soft piano, the kind of music that doesn't demand attention but earns it anyway.
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker




















