The essentials
The most important perfume houses of the 19th and early 20th centuries share structural features with modern niche perfumery: a named founder or founding family, semi-artisanal production, selective distribution through specialist retail, and a catalogue organised around identifiable raw materials and perfumer signatures. Houbigant, founded in Paris (France) in 1775 by Jean-François Houbigant, and Guerlain, founded in Paris in 1828 by Pierre-François Pascal Guerlain, are the canonical reference points (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-29).
Caron, founded in Paris in 1904 by Ernest Daltroff and Félicie Wanpouille, built a catalogue including Narcisse Noir (1911), Tabac Blond (1919) and Pour un Homme (1934). These houses distributed through their own boutiques and a tight network of partner addresses, a model that maps directly onto modern niche retail practice. The divergence began in the mid-20th century when mass-market pressures, licensing deals and luxury-group acquisitions reshaped most heritage houses into volume operations.
Modern niche, beginning with L'Artisan Parfumeur in 1976, positioned itself as a deliberate return to features the heritage houses had let go. Frédéric Malle, founder of Editions de Parfums in 2000, explicitly cited the named-perfumer tradition of pre-war French houses as his template. Patricia de Nicolaï, granddaughter of Jean-Paul Guerlain, founded Parfums de Nicolaï in Paris in 1989 as a direct dynastic continuation of that tradition (Basenotes, accessed 2026-05-29).
Houbigant and the founding synthetic gesture
Houbigant, founded in Paris in 1775 by Jean-François Houbigant as a perfumer and glover, is documented as one of the oldest surviving perfume house names. Its lasting significance for the niche conversation rests on Fougère Royale (1882), composed by Paul Parquet, the first commercial fragrance to use synthetic coumarin (extracted from tonka bean and synthesised in 1868 by William Henry Perkin) at structural scale.
Fougère Royale established the fougère accord (lavender, bergamot, coumarin, oakmoss, geranium) that became the template for masculine perfumery for more than a century. The gesture matters for the niche conversation because it shows that the historical house model could absorb a major technical innovation without abandoning its artisanal structure, a balance modern niche houses still navigate with the use of captive molecules and new synthetics (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-29).
Caron's 20th-century arc
Caron, founded in Paris in 1904 by Ernest Daltroff with the financial and aesthetic support of Félicie Wanpouille, built one of the most respected catalogues of the inter-war period. Daltroff signed Narcisse Noir (1911), Tabac Blond (1919), Nuit de Noël (1922) and Pour un Homme (1934) as in-house perfumer. The house operated on a strictly selective distribution model through its own boutiques and a tight network of partner houses.
The post-war decades brought ownership changes and a partial loss of catalogue identity. From the 1990s onward, several historic formulas were reformulated or discontinued. The house returned to a selective, craft-oriented model in the 2000s, with a focus on its extrait de parfum urns (the customer fills their bottle from large crystal urns in the boutique) as a differentiating retail ritual. Caron is now often cited as a heritage niche house, combining 1904 origins with current niche practice (Basenotes, accessed 2026-05-29).
Parfums de Nicolaï and the Guerlain lineage
Parfums de Nicolaï was founded in Paris in 1989 by Patricia de Nicolaï, granddaughter of Jean-Paul Guerlain and a perfumer trained at ISIPCA in Versailles. The house produces formulas under Patricia's direct creative direction, continuing a family tradition of named house perfumers that extends back to Aimé Guerlain (1834-1910), composer of Jicky in 1889.
Parfums de Nicolaï is distributed selectively through a small network of partner boutiques and the brand's own Paris addresses. It functions as a textbook case of a dynastic niche house: the founding tradition of named family perfumers, preserved through three generations of one family, reactivated under the formal structure of a modern niche brand.
Luxury group ownership and the divergence
The mid- to late-20th century saw most heritage houses absorbed into luxury groups. LVMH acquired a majority stake in Guerlain in 1994 and holds Givenchy parfums. Chanel remains privately held by the Wertheimer family. Hermès Parfumerie operates as an internal department with its own captive raw-material policies. Group ownership does not automatically erase the heritage character, but it typically expands distribution beyond the selective model that defined the founding period.
Guerlain, Givenchy and Dior Parfums today distribute through mass-market department-store networks worldwide, which places them outside the niche distribution model even if product quality and creative direction remain elevated. The houses that have stayed closest to the founding heritage model (Caron in its current iteration, Parfums de Nicolaï, Lubin) are precisely those that have either remained independent or operated under owners committed to the selective channel.
Sources
- Fragrantica, brand entries for Houbigant, Guerlain, Caron, Parfums de Nicolaï and Editions de Parfums Frédéric Malle. Accessed 2026-05-29.
- Basenotes, editorial articles on heritage perfumery, the founding of Caron and the lineage from heritage to modern niche. Accessed 2026-05-29.
- Now Smell This, archive articles on Patricia de Nicolaï, Frédéric Malle and the heritage niche model. Accessed 2026-05-29.