Finding Help for a Specific Fragrance

Houses and Fragrances 4 min read Updated July 14, 2026

You have a scent in mind, or one already in hand, and you want the facts on that exact bottle rather than a general primer. Almost everything you need lives in one place. Each fragrance in the collection has its own product page, and that page is where the house gathers the notes, the tier, the launch year, and the wear guidance for that single scent.

Start at the product page

Every fragrance we carry has its own page, reached at /products/ followed by that scent's own slug. The fastest way to get there is the collection itself, which is the homepage at the collection. Scan the grid, or use search to jump straight to a house, a note, or a name. If you would like a walk-through of that first, see Searching and Filtering the Collection.

Once you open a fragrance, its page holds the details that describe how it is built and how it wears:

  • The house. Who composed it, which tells you a great deal about its style before you read a single note.
  • The tier. Every bottle is either Eau de Parfum (EDP) or Extrait de Parfum. Those are the only two concentrations we carry, and Extrait is the highest tier. The page states which one this fragrance is.
  • The launch year. A quick read on its era and the sensibility it comes from.
  • The notes. The opening (top), the heart, and the base, so you can follow the scent from the first spray through to the drydown.
  • Wear guidance. Where it sits in the rotation, and when it tends to shine, whether that is warm evenings or an everyday signature.

For a fuller tour of how a product page is laid out and what each field means, read How to Read a Product Page.

Prices, exclusives, and availability

Anything that can change over time is left out of these guides on purpose. Prices, shipping, and the exclusive surcharge on certain fragrances all vary, so the product page and the order flow are the only reliable source. If a scent is marked exclusive, its added surcharge is shown on that fragrance's own page in the collection, and the full cost is confirmed live at order. We never quote a figure here that could drift out of date.

Availability moves too. The collection rotates, so a specific scent can become unavailable between visits. When that touches a box you have ordered, we ask you to choose a like for like replacement, and we never promise an exact bottle in place of another. For the full picture, see How Substitutions Work.

Reading the house behind the scent

If the product page leaves you curious about the perfumer, the house name is your next thread to pull. Each house tends toward a recognizable signature, and knowing it helps you predict whether a new-to-you fragrance will suit you. Two guides go deeper here: The Houses We Carry for a tour of the perfumers in the collection, and Understanding a House's Style for how a house's character carries across its releases.

When your question is about a physical bottle

Sometimes the question is not about a listing but about a bottle you are holding. Is it genuine, and how old is it. A batch code can give a rough sense of age, but it is not proof of authenticity, and counterfeiters copy real codes onto fakes. Treat any decoder as an estimate, never a verdict. See Batch Codes Explained for what a code can and cannot tell you. If your real concern is whether a bottle is genuine, that is a sourcing and verification question, so look to verify for a lookup and authenticate for our authentication service.

If you have read the product page and still have a question about a particular fragrance, we are glad to help. Write to us at [email protected] with the fragrance name, and we will point you to the right detail.

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