Coeur De Jeannette Houbigant
At a glance
Is Coeur De Jeannette Houbigant worth trying?
Coeur de Jeannette by Houbigant is a fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Evening wear in Spring
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- floral, white floral, powdery with Acácia, Mimosa, Lilac
The first impression
Coeur de Jeannette by Houbigant is a fragrance for women. Coeur de Jeannette was launched in 1899. The nose behind this fragrance is Paul Parquet. Top notes are Acácia, Mimosa and Lilac; middle notes are Carnation, Orange Blossom, Rose, Honeysuckle and Tuberose; base notes are Musk, Sandalwood, Clove and Ambergris.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Paul Parquet
Paul Parquet was a pioneering perfumer for Houbigant, known for his innovative contributions to fragrance history. He created the groundbreaking Fougere Royale, which introduced the fougère accord, and also composed Coeur De Jeannette and Le Parfum Ideal. His work laid the foundation for many modern fragrance families.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Muse Archetype: Portrait of Coeur De Jeannette Houbigant
Essence
Coeur De Jeannette personifies the Muse archetype-an inspirer who exists at the intersection of memory and creation. The fragrance's late-19th century floral bouquet, with its mimosa and lilac nostalgia, suggests someone who draws artists out of creative blocks. The animalic base notes whisper that true inspiration isn't always pretty, but it's always alive.
Style & Aesthetic
They dress in layers of time: a Victorian chemise under a 1920s beaded cardigan, paired with contemporary wide-leg trousers. Their hair might be styled in Gibson girl waves one day and a messy chignon the next. They collect fountain pens but are just as likely to scribble verses on cocktail napkins.
Philosophy & Values
They believe beauty is a verb rather than a noun. The perfume's evolution from powdery florals to spicy musk reflects their conviction that art requires both delicacy and grit. They champion forgotten female perfumers and keep a ledger of interesting dreams shared by friends over absinthe.
Relationships
They orbit creative circles without ever fully belonging to any movement. Lovers are often artists who later realize they were in love with their own potential reflected in the Muse's eyes. Their closest companions are fellow catalysts: piano tuners who hum countermelodies, librarians who slip provocative titles into display cases.
Lifestyle
Their days follow inspiration's mercurial rhythm. One morning might find them leaving anonymous love letters on park benches, another spent transcribing overheard cafe conversations into a libretto. Evenings often involve this perfume dabbed behind ears before attending underground ballet rehearsals or hosting opium-den-style poetry slams.
Shadow
Their gift for sparking creativity in others sometimes comes at the cost of their own unrealized projects-the clove note's sharpness hints at this frustration. There's also a danger of becoming so associated with inspiration that they're no longer seen as a complete person.
Conclusion
Coeur De Jeannette is less a fragrance than a creative manifesto in liquid form. Like the Muse who wears it, the perfume reminds us that art isn't made from raw materials alone, but from the ineffable spark between memory and imagination, between the first lilac bud of spring and the last ember of a dying candle.