The Story
Why it exists.
In 2005, Guerlain invited Daniela Andrier to create a fragrance for the newly renovated Maison Guerlain on the Champs-Élysées. The brief: work with the highest-quality materials in the house's most artisanal collection, L'Art et La Matière. Andrier turned to Swan Lake, the ballet of black and white swans, where opposites don't just coexist, they complete each other. Angelica's bitter green bite against vanilla's soft warmth. Jasmine and caraway in between. The result is a fragrance that performs the same choreography as its inspiration: forces that attract, blend, and sublimate one another.
If this were a song
Community picks
The Swan
Saint-Saëns, Camille
The Beginning
In 2005, Guerlain invited Daniela Andrier to create a fragrance for the newly renovated Maison Guerlain on the Champs-Élysées. The brief: work with the highest-quality materials in the house's most artisanal collection, L'Art et La Matière. Andrier turned to Swan Lake, the ballet of black and white swans, where opposites don't just coexist, they complete each other. Angelica's bitter green bite against vanilla's soft warmth. Jasmine and caraway in between. The result is a fragrance that performs the same choreography as its inspiration: forces that attract, blend, and sublimate one another.
The structural choice here is what makes Angélique Noire unusual. Angelica appears twice, in the opening and the base. It brackets the composition, creating a kind of mirror effect. Most fragrances move in one direction, from bright to deep. This one arrives and departs with the same signature. The vanilla in the drydown doesn't erase the angelica, it holds it, the way a dark stage holds a spotlight. Cedar provides warmth underneath, but the star of the base is that returning green note, softened now, almost honeyed. It's the same material you smelled at the opening, only transformed by everything that happened in between.
The Evolution
It opens sharp and green, angelica's camphorated bite cutting through like a stage light switched on. Pear sweetens it slightly. Pink pepper adds lift. For the first hour, it's fresh and assertive, almost bracing. Then the jasmine arrives. Not aggressively floral, more like warmth creeping into a cool room. Caraway adds an herbal, slightly spiced undertone that keeps the sweetness from becoming obvious. The vanilla doesn't rush. It builds quietly, finding its way through the cedar, wrapping around the base like a slow exhale. By hour three, angelica resurfaces from below, the same green note from the opening, but rounder now, almost honeyed. Vanilla and cedar hold the composition together as the brightness softens into something intimate and close.
Cultural Impact
Part of Guerlain's L'Art et La Matière collection, Angélique Noire carved out a niche among collectors who appreciate the house's classical structure without wanting something safe. Its herbaceous character and unexpected restraint give it a quality that sets it apart from more conventional choices, offering a different expression of Guerlain's heritage.
The House
France · Est. 1828
Guerlain stands as one of the oldest and most revered perfume houses in the world, founded in Paris in 1828 by Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain. What began as a boutique on rue de Rivoli quickly became the preferred destination for Parisian society, attracting dandies and elegant women who sought custom-crafted fragrances. The house's influence grew to such heights that Guerlain earned the title of Official Perfumer to Napoleon III after presenting Eau de Cologne Impériale to Empress Eugénie as a wedding gift in 1853. This royal patronage marked the beginning of Guerlain's enduring association with European aristocracy, as the house went on to create fragrances for Queen Victoria and Queen Isabella II of Spain. Today, under the creative direction of Thierry Wasser, the fifth-generation perfumer, Guerlain continues to shape the landscape of fine fragrance with a portfolio spanning over 1,100 olfactory creations. The house remains headquartered at its legendary Champs-Élysées mansion, a historic monument that anchors Guerlain's position at the intersection of heritage and contemporary luxury.
If this were a song
Community picks
This fragrance has the quiet drama of a ballet, controlled, precise, with moments of unexpected tension. The mood playlist reflects that: classical restraint meeting romantic warmth, with enough edge to keep things interesting.
The Swan
Saint-Saëns, Camille























