Candles & Home Scents

Joséphine - Floral Garden

The muffled light of dawn slips through the flower beds. A fine shadow sneaks among the roses, jasmine, camellias and irises. With her delicate green thumb, she awakens the dazzling fragrances of a garden with an imperial destiny.« These are my subje..

L' Oeuf 300ml Diffuser (*3 Classic Scents)

L’OEuf is a decorative object designed to diffusing a selection of Trudon fragrances. Once the refill content has been poured into L’OEuf using the funnel, and the sticks have been inserted, the liquid rises up the sticks by means of capillary action..

Le Diffuseur 300ml Refill (*6 Scents)

Refill for Le Diffuseur & L’ Oeuf Diffusers.The set is composed by a 300ml bottle containning the fragrance and 8 natural, black rattan sticks.6 scents can choose:- Abd el Kader- Ernesto - Cyrnos- Spiritus Sancti- Josephine- Odalis..

Le Diffuseur 350ml (*5 scents)

The collection of Home Objects welcomes a new icon: the Trudon Diffuser joins L’OEuf, the Room Spray and La Promeneuse to further perfume interiors.Shaped out of the same emblematic Trudon-green glass, the 350ml fluted container is adorned with a ..

Maduraï - Splendour of Indian jasmine (Belles Matières)

The Duke of Tuscany first brought jasmine in India in 1690, a flower originally from Arabia. Whether fresh or dried, they still play a quintessential role in India’s myths, legends and daily rituals. At times, jasminum sambac perfumes loose-leaf tea;..

Mary - Cedar and Gaiac (Limited Edition)

The fantastical world by Mary Shelley's work : a combination of spices as the recipe for a strange potion, tender and exotic wood notes expressing desire for movement, a soft amber and tobacco accord reminiscent of certain scents of her time.The Mary..

Napoléon Bust (Empire Color)

As soon as the Consulate period started, Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) became aware of the importance of having his portrait shown to the French people. Thus, he initiated the edification of his own legend. All the supports were used, from sculpture..

Orange Blossom Diffuser

The orange flower grows on the citrus tree, or “Citrus Aurantium”, of the Rutaceae genus. In bloom, the tree aunts its white flowers to the world, emitting a suave fragrance that has symbolized purity and beauty since Antiquity. Intoxicating but myst..

Ourika- Powdery Iris (Belles Matières)

Ourika is a sensual escape, an exploration of iris’ spicy character. Grown in fertile valleys and gardens since Antiquity, iris also played a role in the Egyptian mythology: highly symbolic, iris is associated to Horus, the falcon God that..

Reggio - Hint of citrus from Calabria (Belles Matières)

Brought back from Indochina in 1828, the mandarin-tree has since prospered on the occidental banks of the Mediterranean Sea. Facing the Messina Strait, it sculpts the Calabrian landscape without a touch of bitterness. The mandarin’s softness hints ba..

Sandalwood Diffuser

It is present in Hindu and Buddhist rituals, the former often making the bindi dot out of its paste, the later turning it into incense. In Chinese medicine, sandalwood increases longevity, and builds confidence and determination.Sandalwoods are wi..

Solis Rex - Versailles Wooden Floors

Inspired by the elaborate parquetry of Château de Versailles’s famous Hall of Mirrors, this regal perfume radiates vapours of wax, candelabra and palace. A sumptuous trail of incense weaves through a tapestry of coniferous trees, cut with solar rays ..

Tadine - Sensuality of sandalwood (Belles Matières)

When Englishman Edward Foxhall discovered sandalwood on the Isle of Pines, New-Caledonia, in 1840, it was, then, unknown in Europe. By the end of the 19th Century, the noble spiced wood had quite a pedigree: named ‘candana’ in Sanskrit, or ‘sandal’ i..

Tiare

The Polynesian tiare, of the Rubiaceae family, is the national flower of Tahiti. Amongst the most famous gardenias, the tiare is deliciously aromatic and a symbol of beauty. Women coat their skin and hair with its essential oil monoï, with glowing ef..

Tomato Diffuser

The tomato, a berry of the Solanaceae family, is one of the most popular fruits in the world. Few people know that it was first grown in South America, and that its name comes from the Inca “tomalt”.Sweet and fleshy, whether in the fruit basket o..

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