by: Dr. Ziad El-Desoki "The Founder of Perfumer Archive" | Published: May 17, 2025
Mastering perfumery takes a lot of effort and patience. There are some basics that many people overlook—small things that have a huge impact on the final result, even if most don’t realize it.
Here are some habits you need to make part of your routine.
Every line, ingredient, molecule, even a single word can teach you something, spark an idea, or form a new hypothesis.
If you imagine that lemon oil with ethyl vanillin might create a sharp, powdery note, don’t just assume. Mix them and smell the result.
Don’t trust your memory, you’ll forget.
Always carry a notebook or use a digital tool like Google Keep.
Write down everything you learn in perfumery every day. "That’s how I built Perfumer Archive"
We won't drink coffee.
Instead,
We will add new formulas, more articles, and new GCMS reports,
so you can grow your perfumery skills.
We won't drink coffee.
Instead,
We will add new formulas, more articles, and new GCMS reports,
so you can grow your perfumery skills.
Perfumery is an art. Each perfumer sees and creates differently. But when it comes to chemistry (especially in functional perfumery), follow the rules carefully.
If someone trains every day with just 5 pieces of gym equipment, they'll get stronger than someone who trains once a week with 50.
In perfumery, don’t focus on collecting more materials. Focus on understanding them, how they behave in different dilutions, on different bases, and in various blends.
Smell your food and guess the ingredients.
Smell perfumes and try to identify the notes and materials.
If possible, read their GCMS analysis, you’ll find some here
Use materials you don’t like, try them in new ways.
If you usually use something at 0.5%, try it at 5% and see how it changes.
Push boundaries: use ingredients where they don’t usually belong.
For example, try using Labdanum in an orange blossom accord.
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