The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Green Bubble draws from the world of reggae: the lush green vegetation of Jamaica, the spiritual weight of Rastafarian tradition, and the sacramental place cannabis holds within that culture. Julien Rasquinet built the fragrance around these elements, crafting something that channels the genre's essence. The name references the bubble chords found in reggae music, those distinctive harmonic structures that create the genre's signature rolling groove. It's a fragrance that evokes sun-drenched Caribbean air, the warmth of sound systems echoing through coastal towns, and the meditative calm of the herb at the heart of it all.
What makes the composition work is how it handles the hemp note. In lesser hands, cannabis can tip into novelty, something you smell once and move on. Here, the hemp opens bright and green, held in check by grapefruit's citrus and the bitter herbal edge of vermouth. It's not trying to smell like the thing it references. It's trying to feel like it. The saffron and honey that emerge in the heart add warmth and depth, but the green intelligence of the opening never fully disappears. That's the discipline of it, and what separates Green Bubble from the novelty cannabis fragrances that came before.
The evolution
The opening hits with immediate clarity. Hemp, grapefruit, a whisper of bitter vermouth, green without being sharp, herbal without being medicinal. It announces itself and then begins to soften and shift. The heart arrives slowly: cedarwood warmth first, then saffron's dry spice, and beneath it all, a honeyed sweetness that feels almost meditative. As the composition evolves, labdanum and patchouli anchor everything in a resinous, slightly smoky depth. Sandalwood and amber add warmth without heaviness. The sillage is moderate, present without overwhelming, the kind of fragrance that someone standing next to you will notice before someone across the room.
Cultural impact
Green Bubble brings cannabis into serious perfumery rather than treating it as a gimmick. The reggae inspiration adds cultural weight and resonance beyond the bottle. It's not for everyone, and that's the point.






















