The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Bruno Herve created Café for Franck Boclet in 2019, and the brief was simple: a fragrance named for coffee that works from morning to midnight. Boclet, the Paris-based fashion designer who treats fragrance as an extension of wardrobe, wanted something with the same statement-making conviction as his clothing. A scent you'd commit to, not one you'd swap out by noon. The Colombian coffee inspiration came first, then the question of what to build around it.
The answer was tension. Bright citrus at the opening to keep the coffee from reading as heavy. Orange blossom and rose in the heart to add sweetness that never becomes cloying. The result works because Herve resisted the obvious path. Coffee fragrances often lean sweet, vanilla, tonka, hazelnut. Café leans structural. The florals don't sit on top of the coffee. They're woven into it, anchored by moss, cedar, sandalwood, and patchouli that give the whole composition an earthy chypre backbone. This is coffee as architecture, not decoration.
The evolution
The first minutes are all espresso. Not the ambient smell of a coffee shop, the immediate, physical jolt of it. Bergamot and lemon oils fire first, citrus bright and sharp against the coffee's natural bitterness. Within minutes, the florals arrive. Orange blossom, rose, and a whisper of lily round the edges, turning the coffee from beverage into atmosphere. By late morning, the florals have settled into something softer. The coffee is still there but less a shot and more a memory, one creamier, warmer, with the herbal green of rosemary cutting through what could have been sweet. The drydown is where this fragrance earns its hours. Moss, patchouli, cedar, sandalwood, and vetiver form an earthy, mineral foundation that outlasts the coffee entirely. Vanilla and amber keep it warm and close. The coffee lingers, faint, almost nostalgic, before dissolving into the woods. On fabric, the drydown reverses entirely. Vanilla and cedar take over, sweet and warm, and the scent can live in a coat or sweater for days after you've left the room.
Cultural impact
Café launched in 2019 as part of the niche fragrance expansion, but it occupies its own territory within the Franck Boclet collection. Unlike the smoky, oud-forward compositions that dominate the house's identity, Café threads into the chypre revival, earthy, mossy, woody, that has been gaining momentum in niche perfumery. The name is not subtle: Café announces itself, commits, does not hedge. It is a fragrance for someone who treats scent as part of a personal wardrobe and understands that what you wear on your skin is as deliberate as what you put on your body.





















