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    Master Perfumer

    Karine Vinchon-Spehner

    Karine Vinchon-Spehner grew up in Normandy, surrounded by the warm, buttery scent of madeleines from her grandfather's biscuit factory and the crisp air of apple orchards. These childhood memories planted the seed for a lifelong obsession with scent. She enrolled at ISIPCA in 2002, then joined Robertet in Grasse where she apprenticed under Michel Almairac. By 2006, she had risen to junior perfumer at the firm. Her partnership with Amouage proved transformative: working under Christopher Chong's creative direction, she authored several house pillars including Interlude Woman and Memoir Man. She has since created for L'Artisan Parfumeur, Memo Paris, Brioni, and won the Beverley Bayne award at the British Society of Perfumers' Fragrance Excellence Awards in 2023 for Amouage Lineage. Parfumo lists 73 perfumes to her name. Karine has described perfume composition as painting, an emotion-driven process that feeds her creative soul alongside painting, sewing, and music.

    Active since 200211 houses20 creations
    See notable work
    KV
    Output
    20
    Fragrances composed
    Acclaim
    4.1
    Average rating
    across the catalogue
    Career
    2002
    First composition

    The signature

    How Karine composes

    Karine's signature centers on natural raw materials used with liberal hand. She gravitates toward warm, enveloping notes: amber, rich woods, and earthier elements. Patchouli and vetiver appear frequently in her palette, lending depth and a slightly smoky complexity. Her compositions tend toward the opulent and heady, with a characteristic fullness that mirrors her belief in ingredient generosity. Whether crafting a complex Amouage dramatic or an effervescent L'Artisan dancer like Batucada, her work shares a thread of richness and tactile warmth.

    Philosophy

    What drives Karine

    "Along with painting, sewing and music, creating perfumes gives me daily fulfilment," Karine has said. She approaches fragrance as an expressive, sensory art form rather than a technical exercise. Her work reflects a deep connection to nature and exotic locales, translating personal memories and sensory experiences into liquid form. She favors generous, abundant ingredients that feel unstinted rather than calculated, creating fragrances with real presence and emotional weight. Each creation serves as what she calls her most instinctive channel for creativity.