The Story
Why it exists.
Jacques Guerlain created Vol de Nuit in 1933. The name pays tribute to Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's second novel, Night Flight, a story about pilots navigating darkness, isolation, and the thrill of altitude. The fragrance captures the spirit of that work, its sense of ascent through vast darkness, the solitude of the skies, and the tension between peril and exhilaration. Galbanum was chosen as the signature material, not for sweetness, but for the cold, mineral quality of dark skies and rising through them. The aldehydes that open the blend lend a metallic brightness, a fleeting luminescence against the void, before giving way to powdery iris and warm undertones that emerge as the scent develops, creating an unexpected tenderness within an otherwise austere structure.
If this were a song
Community picks
Blue Moon
The Supremes
The Beginning
Jacques Guerlain created Vol de Nuit in 1933. The name pays tribute to Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's second novel, Night Flight, a story about pilots navigating darkness, isolation, and the thrill of altitude. The fragrance captures the spirit of that work, its sense of ascent through vast darkness, the solitude of the skies, and the tension between peril and exhilaration. Galbanum was chosen as the signature material, not for sweetness, but for the cold, mineral quality of dark skies and rising through them. The aldehydes that open the blend lend a metallic brightness, a fleeting luminescence against the void, before giving way to powdery iris and warm undertones that emerge as the scent develops, creating an unexpected tenderness within an otherwise austere structure.
The galbanum here is the point. Guerlain used it at a level that had never been done before, creating an archetype that would echo through Miss Dior, Vent Vert, and Chanel No.19, all of which followed with their own significant galbanum declarations. But Vol de Nuit isn't simply green. The mineral-cold galbanum meets aldehydic softness, powdery iris, and vanilla warmth. It's a contradiction that shouldn't work, cold and warm, sharp and soft, but does, producing something both demanding and oddly comforting.
The Evolution
The opening is cold. Galbanum arrives sharp, almost surgical, cutting through with the green of high altitude. Bergamot and orange blossom soften the entrance, a brief warmth before the intensity settles. But that galbanum doesn't disappear. It persists, threading through the composition like pressurized air, the mineral quality carrying the next hour. Then the aldehydes take over. Powder builds. Iris rises, creamy and floral, followed by jasmine and rose arriving quietly. The orris settles, powdery. Sandalwood and vanilla hum low. Musk, barely there. This is the drydown that justifies the opening, warm, close, patient. Lasts through a full workday, projects moderately, stays close to the skin.
Cultural Impact
Released in 1933 by Guerlain, Vol de Nuit introduced galbanum at a level that was unprecedented at the time. The fragrance became an archetype, a structural reference point for later green-chypre compositions including Miss Dior, Vent Vert, and Chanel No.19, each building on Guerlain's galbanum-forward approach. The assertion of cold green notes within a warm aldehydic framework was a deliberate choice that contrasted with prevailing preferences. Today it remains one of Guerlain's most distinctive expressions, rewarding those who approach it with patience rather than expecting immediate warmth.
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
A composition that sounds like a cockpit at night, cold instrument light, the hum of altitude, darkness pressing against the glass. Galbanum as the opening note: green, mineral, sharp. Aldehydes soften like static clearing. The heart is powder, iris, vanilla, warmth settling in like a cabin heating up. This is not a loud fragrance. It murmurs. It endures. Think of the quiet after a flight takes off: everything sharp at first, then the softness that follows.
Blue Moon
The Supremes



























