Story
Carnal Flower was launched in 2005 by Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle, the Parisian niche perfume house founded in 2000 by Frederic Malle. The composition was entrusted to Dominique Ropion, senior perfumer at IFF, and the brief was explicit from the start: produce the most carnal and most luminous tuberose ever created within a contemporary perfume (fredericmalle.com product page, Now Smell This profile, accessed 2026-05-22).
The personal narrative behind the brief has been documented in several interviews given by Frederic Malle himself. He repeatedly attributes the inspiration to his great-aunt, the French actress Anouk Aimee, and to her love of tuberose. The intention was therefore to produce a tuberose that carried emotional weight rather than a decorative floral, an objective that aligned naturally with Ropion's technical approach to overdose compositions (Bois de Jasmin review by Victoria Frolova, Persolaise notes, accessed 2026-05-22).
The technical answer was a massive overdose of tuberose absolute, reported by multiple sources to represent close to twenty percent of the formula, an unusually high proportion for any contemporary fine fragrance. Ropion surrounded the dominant material with a luminous green opening of bergamot, melon and eucalyptus, a heart of ylang-ylang and jasmine, and a clean white musk base lifted with a touch of coconut and orris. The result reads at once heady and clean, a combination rarely achieved in the white floral family (Fragrantica notes pyramid, Basenotes profile, accessed 2026-05-22).
The international reception was rapid in the niche community. Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez awarded Carnal Flower five stars in Perfumes: The Guide, the English-language reference volume of fragrance criticism, describing it as the technical benchmark for tuberose overdose. Twenty years after its launch, Carnal Flower remains continuously in the Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle catalogue and is widely cited as the reference tuberose composition of twenty-first century niche perfumery (Perfumes: The Guide by Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez, Now Smell This long-form review).
Olfactive pyramid
The architecture of Carnal Flower is dense, green and luminous. Dominique Ropion signs a tuberose composition organized around a single dominant material at very high concentration, with a peripheral structure designed to amplify rather than tame the central floral. Notes documented on the official Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle product page and confirmed on Fragrantica, Basenotes and Parfumo.
Top
Bergamot, melonluminous citrus and aqueous opening
Eucalyptusgreen camphor accent, signature lift
Heart
Tuberose absolutemassive overdose, dominant material
Ylang-ylang, jasminewhite floral amplifiers
Base
White musk, coconutclean creamy drydown
Orrispowdery cool finish
Evolution on skin is direct and instantly readable. The green camphor lift of eucalyptus fronts the first thirty minutes. The tuberose then unfolds at full intensity for several hours, supported by ylang-ylang and jasmine. The musk-coconut drydown closes the composition with surprising cleanliness, never sweet, never indolic, which is the technical signature of the perfume.
Olfactive profile
The olfactive profile of Carnal Flower articulates tuberose absolute, green camphor and clean musk into a signature that redefined the white floral family for niche perfumery. The opening lands immediately through bergamot, melon and the unusual eucalyptus accent, setting a luminous green character that prepares the heart. The heart is monolithic, the tuberose absolute reading at concentrations that no mainstream perfumery typically dares. The drydown moves into a white musk and coconut accord, with a powdery orris finish that lifts the composition rather than weighing it down.
The distinctive signature rests on the technical paradox at the core of the composition. Where most tuberose perfumes either lean indolic and animalic (Fracas, Tubereuse Criminelle) or fully cleaned-up and decorative, Ropion achieves the unusual combination of maximum carnality and maximum luminosity. That deliberate technical position explains the perfume's standing among advanced amateurs and its lasting reputation as the most studied tuberose composition of contemporary niche perfumery.
Carnal Flower is what you get when a technical perfumer is given a single material and instructed to make it sing without smoothing its edges.
Key characteristics
Family
White floral tuberose, niche perfumery overdose tradition
Typical longevity
8 to 12 hours on skin, beyond 24 hours on textile
Sillage
Bold during the first hours, present through the drydown
Audience
Men and women, deliberately unisex per Frederic Malle positioning
Frequently asked questions
Who composed Carnal Flower?01
Dominique Ropion, senior perfumer at IFF, composed Carnal Flower in 2005 for Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle, the Parisian niche perfume house founded by Frederic Malle in 2000.
Why is it called Carnal Flower?02
Frederic Malle has described the brief as the request for a tuberose that would feel emotionally carnal rather than decorative. The name reflects the intention to capture the dense sensual character of the flower without softening its edges.
What is the olfactive family of Carnal Flower?03
White floral tuberose, structured around an overdose of tuberose absolute and supported by a green eucalyptus opening and a clean musk-coconut base.
How much tuberose does Carnal Flower contain?04
Multiple sources report a tuberose absolute concentration close to twenty percent of the formula, an unusually high proportion for any contemporary fine fragrance.
How long does Carnal Flower last?05
Between 8 and 12 hours on skin, with the tuberose-musk drydown lingering on textiles beyond 24 hours.
Is Carnal Flower for men or women?06
It is marketed as a unisex perfume by Editions de Parfums Frederic Malle, in line with the house's deliberately gender-neutral positioning. The clean musky structure makes it entirely wearable for men.
When should you wear Carnal Flower?07
Best between 12 °C and 28 °C. Outstanding in spring and summer, slightly less aligned in cold dry winter air.
What perfumes are similar to Carnal Flower?08
Closest relatives include Fracas by Robert Piguet (1948), Tubereuse Criminelle by Serge Lutens (1999) and Beyond Love by By Kilian (2007).