The Story
Why it exists.
Jean-Paul Guerlain created Spiritueuse Double Vanille in 2007 for the L'Art & La Matière collection, positioning it among the house's most ambitious olfactory explorations. The name itself is the brief: spiritueuse speaks to something elevated, almost delicate; double vanille means doubled, intensified, taken beyond convention. The official description frames it as a journey, a woody-ambery passage to somewhere distant. The scent unfolds with remarkable complexity, layering vanilla in ways that reveal its capacity for transformation. Warmth and richness sit alongside darker, smokier facets, creating a fragrance that resists easy categorization. Vanilla's character shifts throughout wear, moving from sweet and inviting to something more mysterious and demanding.
If this were a song
Community picks
Round Midnight
Chet Baker
The Beginning
Jean-Paul Guerlain created Spiritueuse Double Vanille in 2007 for the L'Art & La Matière collection, positioning it among the house's most ambitious olfactory explorations. The name itself is the brief: spiritueuse speaks to something elevated, almost delicate; double vanille means doubled, intensified, taken beyond convention. The official description frames it as a journey, a woody-ambery passage to somewhere distant. The scent unfolds with remarkable complexity, layering vanilla in ways that reveal its capacity for transformation. Warmth and richness sit alongside darker, smokier facets, creating a fragrance that resists easy categorization. Vanilla's character shifts throughout wear, moving from sweet and inviting to something more mysterious and demanding.
The doubling isn't decorative. Two expressions of vanilla occupy this composition simultaneously, one warm and generous, the other dark and smoky, and the tension between them is what gives Spiritueuse its unusual range. Benzoin functions as the bridge: its balsamic warmth connects the two expressions without allowing either to dominate. What could have been a straightforward gourmand fragrance becomes something more demanding. More interesting. The smoke doesn't soften the vanilla, it complicates it, which is exactly what a great vanilla should do.
The Evolution
Incense and pink pepper arrive first, the smoke cool, the pepper bright, bergamot threading through with a flash of citrus that fades before you can pin it down. Twenty minutes in, the incense deepens. Cedar follows, dry and structured, while ylang-ylang brings a honeyed floral note that resists sweetness through sheer restraint. Bulgarian rose and jasmine appear quietly, tempering each other, neither dominant, both present. This middle passage is where the fragrance earns its name: the smoky-woody-vanilla triad creates something almost spiritual, a quality the perfumer clearly intended. The vanilla doesn't arrive all at once. It builds from the heart onward, finally claiming the drydown in full. Benzoin extends the warmth, but the sillage shifts from moderate to intimate, this is a fragrance that settles into the skin rather than announcing itself. What lingers is close, warm, and unexpectedly austere. Still vanilla. Still smoke. Still Guerlain.
Cultural Impact
Spiritueuse Double Vanille occupies a distinct corner of the Guerlain catalog: warm, unhurried, and built for those who appreciate complexity over simplicity. The fragrance represents a deliberate expansion of the house's creative range, demonstrating that Guerlain can work with rich, enveloping materials while maintaining its signature elegance. The 2007 launch brought something different to the collection, a vanilla-forward composition that refuses to rely on confectionery sweetness.
The House
France · Est. 1828
Guerlain stands as one of the oldest and most revered perfume houses in the world, founded in Paris in 1828 by Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain. What began as a boutique on rue de Rivoli quickly became the preferred destination for Parisian society, attracting dandies and elegant women who sought custom-crafted fragrances. The house's influence grew to such heights that Guerlain earned the title of Official Perfumer to Napoleon III after presenting Eau de Cologne Impériale to Empress Eugénie as a wedding gift in 1853. This royal patronage marked the beginning of Guerlain's enduring association with European aristocracy, as the house went on to create fragrances for Queen Victoria and Queen Isabella II of Spain. Today, under the creative direction of Thierry Wasser, the fifth-generation perfumer, Guerlain continues to shape the landscape of fine fragrance with a portfolio spanning over 1,100 olfactory creations. The house remains headquartered at its legendary Champs-Élysées mansion, a historic monument that anchors Guerlain's position at the intersection of heritage and contemporary luxury.
If this were a song
Community picks
Cool smoke and warm vanilla, like a conversation between strangers in a warm room. The opening feels like a cold night walked in from, bergamot and incense, then cedar, then the slow arrival of something sweet. This fragrance sounds like late evening, when the lights have dimmed and the conversation has gotten honest. Quietly confident. Intimate without trying to be.
Round Midnight
Chet Baker






















