✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
HomeStore

Herbes Troublantes

Product image 1

Herbes Troublantes

Thierry Wasser built Herbes Troublantes in 2021 as part of Guerlain's L'Art et la Matiere line, and it reads like a walk through an herb garden right after the rain stops. Aromatica carries the Herbes Troublantes decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it's a fragrance that rewards anyone tired of sweet, syrupy releases. This is a green, savory, slightly unsettling composition, hence the name, which translates loosely to "troubling herbs." It sits closer to a culinary garden than a perfume counter, and that's exactly the point.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Thyme, mint, rosemary, bergamot, bigarade

Heart: Orange blossom, lavender, geranium

Base: White musks, woody notes

The Scent

Thyme registers first, sharp and a little medicinal, immediately backed by rosemary and a cool ribbon of mint. There's nothing soft about this opening. It smells like crushed leaves between your fingers, with bergamot and bigarade cutting through the herbal thicket to keep things from turning too savory. Within the first twenty minutes, the mint softens and rosemary takes the lead, giving the impression of a sunlit patch of scrubland rather than a bottle of cologne. The transition into the heart is where things get interesting. Orange blossom arrives unexpectedly, bringing a waxy, honeyed sweetness that briefly argues with the herbs instead of blending into them. Some wearers find this friction jarring; others find it the most compelling part of the whole composition. Lavender bridges the gap, its soapy, camphorous quality tying the green top notes to the floral heart without smoothing away the tension entirely. Geranium adds a rosy, slightly bitter edge that keeps the orange blossom from turning cloying. Bergamot and bigarade linger faintly under this stage too, adding a bitter citrus note that stops the orange blossom from reading as purely sweet. As the fragrance settles into the dry-down, the herbs retreat and a quiet base of white musk and soft woods takes over. It's here that Herbes Troublantes stops being troubling and becomes almost tender, a clean, skin-like finish that still carries a faint trace of rosemary if you get close. The woody notes deepen slowly under the musk, giving the base a dry, papery texture that echoes the thyme and rosemary from the opening without repeating them outright. Geranium and lavender continue to hover at the edges of this stage, fading unevenly rather than all at once, so the floral heart never fully disappears even as the herbs and woods take charge. Mint makes brief, faint reappearances whenever the skin warms, as if the scrubland from the opening never entirely left the composition. The whole arc feels less like a linear story and more like a garden changing character as the sun moves across it.

When to Wear

This is a fragrance for early autumn mornings or cool spring afternoons spent outdoors, somewhere with actual plants nearby, a garden visit, a hike, a market stroll. It works for casual daytime settings, not a boardroom or a formal dinner. Pair it with the rest of the Guerlain collection if you want to explore how the house handles green and herbal territory elsewhere in its lineup.

Who Is It For

Someone who gets more excited by a spice rack or an herb garden than a bouquet of roses will understand this one immediately. It also suits people who like their florals roughed up a bit rather than presented politely.

If you're drawn to sharp, green compositions from the same house, Vetiver shares that dry, earthy discipline, built around root instead of leaf. Browse the full Guerlain collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Select Options
From $488.60

Original: $1,396.00

-65%
Herbes Troublantes

$1,396.00

$488.60

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Thierry Wasser built Herbes Troublantes in 2021 as part of Guerlain's L'Art et la Matiere line, and it reads like a walk through an herb garden right after the rain stops. Aromatica carries the Herbes Troublantes decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it's a fragrance that rewards anyone tired of sweet, syrupy releases. This is a green, savory, slightly unsettling composition, hence the name, which translates loosely to "troubling herbs." It sits closer to a culinary garden than a perfume counter, and that's exactly the point.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Thyme, mint, rosemary, bergamot, bigarade

Heart: Orange blossom, lavender, geranium

Base: White musks, woody notes

The Scent

Thyme registers first, sharp and a little medicinal, immediately backed by rosemary and a cool ribbon of mint. There's nothing soft about this opening. It smells like crushed leaves between your fingers, with bergamot and bigarade cutting through the herbal thicket to keep things from turning too savory. Within the first twenty minutes, the mint softens and rosemary takes the lead, giving the impression of a sunlit patch of scrubland rather than a bottle of cologne. The transition into the heart is where things get interesting. Orange blossom arrives unexpectedly, bringing a waxy, honeyed sweetness that briefly argues with the herbs instead of blending into them. Some wearers find this friction jarring; others find it the most compelling part of the whole composition. Lavender bridges the gap, its soapy, camphorous quality tying the green top notes to the floral heart without smoothing away the tension entirely. Geranium adds a rosy, slightly bitter edge that keeps the orange blossom from turning cloying. Bergamot and bigarade linger faintly under this stage too, adding a bitter citrus note that stops the orange blossom from reading as purely sweet. As the fragrance settles into the dry-down, the herbs retreat and a quiet base of white musk and soft woods takes over. It's here that Herbes Troublantes stops being troubling and becomes almost tender, a clean, skin-like finish that still carries a faint trace of rosemary if you get close. The woody notes deepen slowly under the musk, giving the base a dry, papery texture that echoes the thyme and rosemary from the opening without repeating them outright. Geranium and lavender continue to hover at the edges of this stage, fading unevenly rather than all at once, so the floral heart never fully disappears even as the herbs and woods take charge. Mint makes brief, faint reappearances whenever the skin warms, as if the scrubland from the opening never entirely left the composition. The whole arc feels less like a linear story and more like a garden changing character as the sun moves across it.

When to Wear

This is a fragrance for early autumn mornings or cool spring afternoons spent outdoors, somewhere with actual plants nearby, a garden visit, a hike, a market stroll. It works for casual daytime settings, not a boardroom or a formal dinner. Pair it with the rest of the Guerlain collection if you want to explore how the house handles green and herbal territory elsewhere in its lineup.

Who Is It For

Someone who gets more excited by a spice rack or an herb garden than a bouquet of roses will understand this one immediately. It also suits people who like their florals roughed up a bit rather than presented politely.

If you're drawn to sharp, green compositions from the same house, Vetiver shares that dry, earthy discipline, built around root instead of leaf. Browse the full Guerlain collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Herbes Troublantes | Aromatica