Olfactive family: Dulce
The sweet family brings together fragrances with a sugar, honey or cane sugar sweetness in the foreground. It differs from gourmand through simplicity and directness: the sweetness does not necessarily come from complex edible ingredients, but from an overall sensation of sugar, honey or syrup that can accompany any olfactory family.
Sweet fragrances: sugar, honey and simple pleasure
Sweetness in perfumery is created by diverse ingredients: sugar itself (ethyl maltol, helional), honey (phenylacetic acid, synthetic honey), vanilla (vanillin), tonka (coumarin) or sweet-character aldehydes. This sweetness can be simple and direct (a single dominant ingredient) or complex (multiple contributors overlapping for an overall sweet sensation).
The sweet family frequently overlaps with gourmand, floral-sweet and oriental-sweet, making its classification imprecise. Yet there are fragrances in which the sweet note is so prominent and so direct that it deserves its own category: fragrances that simply smell of sugar or honey, without excessive complexity, where this simplicity is the artistic choice.
At The Scent Nest, fragrances with a sweet dominant are chosen for how well they manage the risk of becoming too simple or too sugary. Well-calibrated sweetness can be extremely pleasant and accessible; excessive sweetness becomes tiring quickly. Testing on skin is essential, as individual chemistry significantly affects the perception of sweetness.
Frequently asked questions about Sweet
What does the sweet olfactory family smell like?
The sweet family smells of sugar, honey, syrup or simple vanilla. It is a direct and accessible sweetness without necessarily the complexity of a gourmand or an oriental.
Is sweet different from gourmand?
Yes. Gourmand evokes patisserie ingredients (caramel, chocolate, coffee); sweet is simpler and more direct, evoking sugar or honey in an almost pure state. There are overlaps, but the distinction is clear in extreme cases.
Are sweet fragrances suitable for daily wear?
Moderate, well-managed sweetness is extremely popular for daily wear. Intensely sweet fragrances can become tiring in enclosed spaces or in large quantities.
What ingredients create the sweet note in perfumery?
Ethyl maltol (cotton candy), synthetic honey, vanillin, coumarin from tonka, sweet aldehydes and benzaldehyde (almond) are the main contributors to the sweet note in perfumery.
