Skip to main content
    Home/Notes/Meadow flowers

    Meadow flowers

    Meadow flowers capture the essence of wild, sun-kissed fields in full bloom. This fragrant harmony blends floral, green, and slightly herbaceous notes that evoke open countryside landscapes, offering an unpretentious yet romantic quality.

    France
    See fragrances
    Meadow flowers
    Reach
    1
    Fragrances feature it
    Source
    Natural
    Blended (Steam distillation and solvent extraction)

    Character

    How it smells

    The fresh, green scent of wildflower-covered hillsides

    Did you know

    Modern meadow accords blend extracts from over 20 wildflower species to recreate that just-cut grass and bloom sensation.

    France43.5°N, 6.9°E

    Origin

    France

    Perfumers have recreated meadow scents for over a century, though wildflower gathering dates back millennia. Ancient peoples collected fragrant petals from meadows for ceremonial and cosmetic purposes.

    The formalized "meadow" note emerged in the late 1800s when perfumers began blending multiple wild botanical extracts into composite accords. Grasse, France became the center for this work, where artisans had centuries of experience processing diverse floral species.

    Before synthetic aromatics existed, recreating fresh-cut field aromas required assembling dozens of natural extracts. This labor-intensive practice continues today, though modern perfumers balance natural meadow accords with carefully selected synthetic molecules that extend lasting power and add crisp green facets.

    Wears it best

    Fragrances featuring Meadow flowers

    Good to know

    Questions, answered

    The essentials on Meadow flowers in perfumery: how it smells, where it comes from, and how it behaves on skin.

    What exactly are meadow flowers in perfumery?

    Meadow flowers is a blended fragrance accord combining extracts from multiple wild-growing botanical species. It recreates the fresh, green, and slightly herbaceous scent of open meadows in bloom.

    How do perfumers create the meadow flower scent?

    Perfumers blend separate extracts from various wild botanicals like lavender, chamomile, and wild rose. Each component is extracted individually, then combined in specific ratios to achieve a natural meadow character.

    What does meadow flowers smell like?

    The scent combines fresh green notes reminiscent of cut grass with delicate floral accents and subtle herbaceous undertones. The overall impression evokes open countryside and sun-warmed wild blooms.

    Which flowers appear in meadow flower accords?

    Common components include lavender, chamomile, wild rose, yarrow, clover, and sometimes cornflower. Actual blends vary by perfumer, often incorporating 15 to 25 different botanical extracts.

    Does "meadow flowers" refer to a single ingredient?

    No, it is a composite accord, not a single botanical. No single flower produces a true meadow scent, so perfumers construct the impression by blending multiple wildflower extracts.

    How long has the meadow note existed in perfumery?

    The formalized meadow accord emerged in the late 1800s when perfumers began systematically blending wild botanical extracts. Ancient cultures gathered meadow flowers but did not create the specific blended note.

    What extraction methods work for meadow botanicals?

    Steam distillation extracts essential oils from stems and leaves, capturing green and herbaceous notes. Solvent extraction preserves delicate aromatic compounds from small wildflower petals.

    What parts of the plants are used in meadow flower ingredients?

    Perfumery uses mixed botanical parts rather than petals alone. Stems and leaves provide green, herbaceous aromatics while petals deliver delicate floral notes. This combination creates the authentic meadow impression.