The Story
Why it exists.
In 2012, Jo Malone London asked perfumer Fabrice Pellegrin to capture a specific memory: blackberry picking in an autumnal wood. Not an abstract idea of berries, an actual sensory moment. Stained lips. Sticky palms. The composition captures that feeling of being deep in the brambles, the tartness of the fruit, the green of the undergrowth. Pellegrin worked with those specific textures, building something that feels rooted in that experience rather than a conventional fruity-floral approach. The result is tart, herbaceous, deliberately raw, closer to the actual bramble than to any interpretation of it. The blackberry note sits at the forefront, bright and acidic, while the bay adds an aromatic complexity that elevates the entire composition.
If this were a song
Community picks
Pink Moon
Nick Drake
The Beginning
In 2012, Jo Malone London asked perfumer Fabrice Pellegrin to capture a specific memory: blackberry picking in an autumnal wood. Not an abstract idea of berries, an actual sensory moment. Stained lips. Sticky palms. The composition captures that feeling of being deep in the brambles, the tartness of the fruit, the green of the undergrowth. Pellegrin worked with those specific textures, building something that feels rooted in that experience rather than a conventional fruity-floral approach. The result is tart, herbaceous, deliberately raw, closer to the actual bramble than to any interpretation of it. The blackberry note sits at the forefront, bright and acidic, while the bay adds an aromatic complexity that elevates the entire composition.
What makes this work is the tension between notes that rarely coexist in perfumery. The blackberry is tart and deep, not sweet, not syrupy. The bay is bitter and camphorated, almost medicinal in its greenness. Together they create a bitterness that doesn't resolve into softness. The average fruity fragrance gives you the opening, then pardons it with warmth. This one stays true to the material: blackberries have seeds, stems, a faintly medicinal edge. Pellegrin didn't smooth that away. The cedar-vetiver base anchors the composition without warmth, keeping the unpolished woodland feel intact throughout. It's the anti-fruit-cocktail, the actual smell of a British hedgerow in autumn, not a concept of one.
The Evolution
The opening hits immediately. Deep tart blackberry, almost medicinal in its sharpness, the kind that stains fingers and makes your mouth pucker. Grapefruit adds citrus zest, but it's not bright and clean. There's something green underneath, already hinting that this isn't going to settle into something sweet. Within the first hour, the bay arrives. Not a decorative herb in the background, a full aromatic presence that shifts the composition entirely. Fruity becomes verdant. The florals are doing quiet work here, keeping the transition from sharp to green from feeling jarring. Then the hand-off: florals deepen, cedar-vetiver takes over. But there's no clean switch. The whole thing stays in that bitter-sweet register, not quite fruity, not quite herbal, holding that tension until the very end. Cedar and vetiver provide the dry, woodsy finish, no warmth, no softness. What lingers, hours later, is the ghost of that tart berry. Faint. Sticky. Like a stain that won't quite wash off.
Cultural Impact
The fragrance has cultivated a following among people who appreciate its distinctive character. The blackberry reads as actual fruit to some and medicinal-to-herbal to others, creating genuine divisiveness that keeps it from being another forgettable berry fragrance. The bay note, with its camphorated green quality, is what people return to: it keeps the composition from becoming sweet and gives the fragrance its specific, divisive character.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1990
Jo Malone London is a British fragrance house founded by Jo Malone in 1990 and now owned by Estée Lauder Companies. The brand built its reputation on a signature layering concept that lets wearers combine colognes into personal signature scents. Each fragrance begins with a story, whether drawn from childhood memories, British traditions, or sensory moments. The collection spans delicate florals like Peony & Blush Suede alongside richer compositions such as Velvet Rose & Oud. Known for understated bottles finished with black script lettering and a colored ink matching each scent, the brand maintains a refined British aesthetic across over 30 countries. The house continues releasing new fragrances under Estée Lauder while preserving the creative philosophy Jo Malone established.
If this were a song
Community picks
The music should feel like an autumn morning in overgrown British countryside, something quiet, natural, with a slight melancholy edge. Not cheerful. Not dramatic. The kind of soundtrack for wandering through a bramble patch with no particular destination. Think acoustic textures, restrained arrangements, a sense of time passing slowly.
Pink Moon
Nick Drake




























