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    Ingredient Profile

    __SOFT_DELETED__beach fragrance note

    Beach in perfumery captures sea air, sun-warmed sand, and salt-tinged breezes through carefully constructed accords using marine synthetics,…More

    France

    1

    Fragrances

    Fragrances featuring __SOFT_DELETED__beach

    Character

    The Story of __SOFT_DELETED__beach

    Beach in perfumery captures sea air, sun-warmed sand, and salt-tinged breezes through carefully constructed accords using marine synthetics, ambergris, and ozonic compounds.

    Heritage

    The beach note emerged as perfumery embraced abstraction in the late 20th century. Before the 1980s, fragrances referenced the sea through individual materials like ambergris but rarely attempted to capture the full atmospheric essence of a shoreline. Jacques Polge revolutionized this when he introduced marine notes to mainstream perfumery, and the approach exploded in popularity through the 1990s with aquatic fragrances dominating the market. The concept draws from humanity's ancient relationship with coasts, where ambergris washed ashore was considered treasure for centuries. Modern beach accords represent a shift from ingredient-driven fragrance to experience-driven composition, using synthetic chemistry to reconstruct memories rather than botanical origins.

    At a Glance

    Fragrances

    1

    Feature this note

    Origin

    France

    Primary source region

    Ingredient Details

    Extraction

    Synthetic

    Used Parts

    Various synthetic compounds and whale-derived ambergris

    Did You Know

    "Ambergris, the legendary 'floating gold' from sperm whales, gives beach accords their distinctive warm, salty marine depth."

    Production

    How __SOFT_DELETED__beach Is Made

    Beach as a fragrance note relies on synthetic aroma compounds rather than a single natural source. The modern marine accord centers on materials like Calone (methyl 2,2-dimethyl-3-dimethylmethylenebicyclo[2.2.1]heptan-6-yl ketone), patented in 1966, which delivers that distinctive ozonic, sea-breeze character. Perfumery also incorporates ambergris, the waxy substance produced by sperm whales and found floating in ocean waters, to add warmth and salt-tinged complexity. Sand effects come from warm, dry materials like coumarin derivatives and synthetic musks that evoke sun-heated surfaces. These compounds are combined in precise proportions to recreate the multi-layered sensory experience of a beach.

    Provenance

    France

    France43.7°N, 7.3°E

    About __SOFT_DELETED__beach