Why Fragrance Notes Matter: Top, Heart & Base Explained

The Secret Behind a Perfume’s Dry-Down

Fragrance notes are the stages of scent you experience over time after spraying a perfume, often described as a “fragrance pyramid”: top (opening), heart (core), and base (dry-down). Notes are grouped this way because different aromatic materials evaporate at different speeds, which is why a perfume can feel bright at first, then turn warmer, deeper, and more long-lasting as the hours pass.

Top notes (the first impression)

Top notes appear immediately and shape your first “yes or no” moment. They’re usually sparkling and airy, then fade relatively quickly as the fragrance settles.
HERMES (Night De Paris Prive), which opens with a vibrant citrus trio: mandarin orange, Sicilian orange, and Calabrian bergamot. That crisp lift makes it feel clean, polished, and easy to wear.
Another bright opening is OURANOS (Night De Paris Prive) with grapefruit and bergamot, layered with airy florals like jasmine and magnolia for a fresher, more luminous start.

And for a more refined, minimal top-note statement, AMARIS (Night De Paris Prive) opens with bergamot alone, a sharp citrus sparkle that sets a confident tone.

Heart notes (the signature personality)

Once the top fades, the heart notes reveal the perfume’s real character, the part people recognize as “what you smell like.”
In HERMES, the heart turns fresh-spicy and aromatic with pink pepper, nutmeg, pepper, Tunisian neroli, and Guatemalan cardamom, giving the citrus opening a refined, energetic backbone.
With OURANOS, the heart becomes more textured: ginger with herbal and powdery notes, creating a balanced transition from bright to softly sophisticated.
For a richer, more dramatic heart, AMARIS moves into incense, labdanum, and violet, the kind of resinous elegance that feels made for evening.

Base notes (depth, warmth, and longevity)

Base notes are the foundation, the slow-burning layer that lingers longest and shapes the trail (sillage). They’re often warmer, woodier, and more resinous, and they’re a big reason some scents feel more long-lasting than others.
AMARIS finishes with a sensual base of leather, honey, and vanilla, giving it a warm, sophisticated dry-down that feels plush and memorable.
When it comes to HERMES, the entire dry-down rests on the vetiver. That single base note keeps the scent feeling polished, confident, and quietly sophisticated long after the citrus and spices fade. 

And OURANOS anchors its freshness with musk, cedar, amber, and patchouli, which is why it wears brighter at the start but dries down warmer and more grounded.
If you love the opening, check the top notes. If you want a true “signature,” focus on the heart. And if you care most about longevity, look for base notes like amber, woods, labdanum, musks, or patchouli. Fragrance notes matter because they explain how a perfume evolves on skin, from the first impression to the lasting dry-down. Once you understand top, heart, and base, choosing a scent becomes simpler: look to the opening for freshness, the heart for character, and the base for warmth and longevity.

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