Genet Fragrances

Genet Fragrances

Genet, or broom, is a flowering shrub (Spartium junceum) native to the Mediterranean basin, known for its profusion of bright golden, sweetly scented blossoms. A precious absolute is obtained from these flowers by solvent extraction, yielding a thick, deeply coloured material that captures their honeyed richness.

Its scent is warm and complex: a heady, honeyed floral threaded with hay, tobacco, and dried leather, underpinned by a green, faintly animalic depth. There is a balsamic, almost tea-like sweetness to it, full-bodied and tenacious, growing softer and more powdery as it settles on the skin.

In perfumery, genet is a prized heart and base note, lending body and a natural, honeyed warmth to floral, chypre, and oriental compositions. It harmonises beautifully with rose, jasmine, and mimosa, and finds depth alongside tobacco, hay, and woody, ambery materials.

About Genet Fragrances

Genipapo — the fruit of Genipa americana — is a tropical tree native to the Amazon basin and the broader Caribbean and Central American region, where it has been used by indigenous peoples for centuries as a body paint, a dye, and a fermented beverage. The ripe fruit has a complex, unusual scent: earthy and slightly musty at first, with a sweet tropical undercurrent and a fermented, almost wine-like depth that makes it unlike any more familiar fruit note.

In perfumery, genipapo is an exotic and relatively rare ingredient that appears primarily in niche and Brazilian-inspired fragrances seeking an authentic tropical earthiness. Its profile is not sweetly pretty in the conventional sense — it has a raw, organic quality that evokes the humid forest floor as much as ripe fruit. Perfumers use it to add an unusual, naturalistic tropical dimension that sets a composition apart from typical fruity-floral or tropical-sweet constructs. It pairs well with dark woods, earthy vetiver, and fermented notes like labdanum or saffron.

Fragrenza's Genipapo collection brings this rare Amazonian ingredient to the forefront in a curated set of fine fragrance dupes. For those who want something genuinely different — a tropical note with depth, history, and raw beauty — these accessible interpretations are a discovery waiting to happen.

Other Collections

Amber Fragrances

Plum Oud

From this collection: Plum Oud — Plum Japonais by Tom Ford alternative

Explore our collection of amber fragrances. Shop amber perfumes and discover captivating scents.

Bergamot Fragrances

Limone e Vaniglia

From this collection: Limone e Vaniglia — Lira by Xerjoff alternative

Explore our collection of bergamot fragrances. Shop bergamot perfumes and discover captivating scents.

Cognac Fragrances

Better Peach

From this collection: Better Peach — Bitter Peach by Tom Ford alternative

Explore our collection of cognac fragrances. Shop cognac perfumes and discover captivating scents.

Jasmine Fragrances

Signorina Miele

From this collection: Signorina Miele — Miss Dior Chérie by Dior alternative

Explore our collection of jasmine fragrances. Shop jasmine perfumes and discover captivating scents.

Lydia Broom Fragrances

Champaca Cognac

From this collection: Champaca Cognac — Champaca Absolute by Tom Ford alternative

Explore our collection of lydia broom fragrances. Shop lydia broom perfumes and discover captivating scents.

Amarena Cherry

Obsessed with cherry? If you want to really amp up the cherry scent, this Tom Ford Lost Cherry dupe will give Lost Cherry a run for its money. Black cherry, cherry syrup, and cherry liqueur all mingle together for an indulgent cherry overdose that’s complemented by notes of almond, tonka bean, Turkish rose, and jasmine sambac.

Musk, Amber, Animalic Smells

  • Labdanum in perfumery

    What Does Labdanum Smell Like?

    Discover labdanum in perfumery — its warm, animalic, balsamic scent, history from ancient Mediterranean ritual to modern ambers, and its role in iconic fragrances.

  • Patchouli leaves and dark earth — Fragrenza guide to patchouli in modern perfumery

    What Does Patchouli Smell Like?

    Patchouli smells like rich, dark earth — wet woods, chocolate, and aged leather. What it really smells like, why it’s linked to weed, and how to wear it.

  • Yuzu in perfumery

    What Does Yuzu Smell Like?

    What does yuzu smell like in perfumery? Explore this Japanese citrus note — its tart, floral-citrus scent, key aroma compounds, and how it elevates contemporary fragrance design.

  • Amber in perfumery

    What Does Amber Smell Like?

    Discover what amber truly smells like in perfumery — from rare ambergris washed ashore to modern synthetics — and why it makes every fragrance warmer.

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