Aroma

Bergamot

The citrus that makes Earl Grey smell like Earl Grey — bergamot from Calabria opens sharp and bright, then softens into something quietly complex.

Scent familyCitrus
Best seasonSpring
Time of dayMorning

Bergamot is the fruit of Citrus bergamia, a small citrus hybrid that grows almost exclusively along the Ionian coast of Calabria in southern Italy. The name likely comes from the Turkish beg armudu — prince's pear — though the fruit itself is closer to a lime in shape. The oil is cold-pressed from the peel, which makes it immediate and bright in a way that steam-distilled citruses rarely are.

The scent opens sharp and clean: lemon, a little floral, a faint bitter edge that stops it from being sweet. Within minutes it softens, and what remains is more complex — something between sweet orange blossom and a faintly herbal green note. It is the smell behind Earl Grey tea, which was named after Charles Grey, the 1830s Prime Minister, though the story of how the blend came to him is probably invented.

Bergamot belongs to spring mornings and the early part of the day. The tradition pairs it with Energy and Vitality, which makes sense — the opening is clarifying, almost bracing — but also with Calm, which the tradition holds because the base note is never aggressive. In the mood vocabulary it keeps company with Joy and Balance.

The practice the tradition suggests is simple: bergamot is one of the better candles for the morning desk, and the habit it builds is an honest one. A few breaths before the first email, the same hour each day. The scent does not create calm; it marks the territory where you have chosen to practise it.

Below: bergamot in essential oil, candles, and room sprays — the catalogue's morning shelf, and its most Italian corner.

Resonates with

Moods

JoyBalance

Intentions

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