Aroma

Petitgrain

Oil from the bitter orange's leaves — green, floral, quietly grounding. Named for small fruit, cherished for its leaves. Evening's citrus, spring's companion.

Scent familyCitrus-green
Best seasonSpring
Time of dayEvening

Petitgrain comes from the leaves and twigs of the bitter orange tree, Citrus aurantium. The name is French for "small grain" — a reference to the tiny unripe fruit that was originally distilled before anyone realised the leaves made something far more interesting.

The oil opens sharp and green, like a crushed citrus leaf. Within a minute the sharpness softens into something honeyed and floral, with a dry-down that is slightly woody, slightly bitter. It is less sunny than orange peel, deeper than neroli from the same tree. The complexity is the point — petitgrain smells like a thing with history rather than a thing trying to announce itself.

In the aromatherapy tradition petitgrain belongs to evening. The green-citrus note is steadier than you might expect from a citrus — it grounds rather than energises. It appears in the registers for calm and sleep, and its natural season is spring: that particular quality of light in the hour before dusk when the day is still changing gear.

The tradition's quiet suggestion is to place it somewhere with intention. A few drops in a diffuser at the same hour each evening, a breath, a named intention for the day that follows — rest, patience, let the evening do its work. The scent keeps the appointment. The repetition deepens the association.

Below: petitgrain as essential oil, candles, and aromatherapy blends. The whole evening register, spring's own.

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