Aroma

Lavender

The most trusted scent in the European cupboard — herbal, clean, quietening. Traditionally the smell of laundered linen and easier sleep.

Scent familyFloral-herbal
Best seasonSummer
Time of dayEvening

Lavender may be the only scent in Europe with a two-thousand-year unbroken record of meaning the same thing: clean, calm, ready for sleep. The Romans washed with it — the name comes from lavare, to wash — and every century since has kept it near beds and linen.

The scent itself is more interesting than its reputation for gentleness suggests. True lavender opens herbal and slightly sharp, almost peppery; the softness arrives a minute later, with hay and faint florals underneath. It is a quietening scent rather than a sweet one — closer to a tidied room than a bouquet.

Tradition files lavender firmly under evening. It is the classic companion for the end of the day: a few drops in a diffuser an hour before bed, a sachet in the pillowcase, a candle lit while the kitchen is put right. In our mood vocabulary it keeps company with Calm and Sleep; summer is its season, evening its hour.

Lavender rewards ritual more than occasion. The tradition's suggestion: the same few drops at the same hour, an unhurried breath, and let the repetition do the deepening. If your body has ever once relaxed near lavender, the scent remembers — and every evening you keep the appointment, it remembers a little better.

In the catalogue you'll find it as essential oil, candles, incense, bath blends and soaps — the whole quiet end of the shelf.

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