Technical detail
Production of iris butter requires three to five years of rhizome aging after harvest, during which irones (the key aromatic compounds: alpha-irone, beta-irone, gamma-irone) develop from precursor molecules. After aging, the dried rhizomes are steam-distilled to yield orris concrete, which solidifies at room temperature as a pale yellow waxy butter (Société Française des Parfumeurs EN, accessed 2026-05-27).
The principal growing regions are Florence (Tuscany, Italy) and Morocco. Florentine orris from Iris pallida is considered the benchmark for quality; Moroccan orris from Iris germanica is more commercially available and slightly earthier. Yield is extremely low: approximately one kilogram of orris butter from 1,000 kilograms of rhizomes, explaining prices of €40,000, €100,000 per kilogram for premium grades (Perfumer & Flavorist, accessed 2026-05-27).
The dominant aroma compounds are the irones (violet-woody-powdery) and their oxidation products. Orris oil (the steamdistilled essential oil with solids removed) is more fluid and slightly less complex than the full butter.
Examples
- Iris Silver Mist (Lutens, 1994, Christopher Sheldrake): orris as the dominant olfactive statement; the most analytical treatment of iris in niche perfumery.
- Infusion d'Iris (Prada, 2007, Daniela Andrier): iris butter in a pale, contemporary, powdery-floral interpretation.
- 28 La Pausa (Chanel Les Exclusifs): orris as the quiet luxury material in a powdery floral.
Sources
- Société Française des Parfumeurs EN, iris/orris entry (accessed 27 May 2026)
- Perfumer & Flavorist: orris butter production and pricing (accessed 27 May 2026)
- Fragrantica: iris materials in perfumery (accessed 27 May 2026)