
L'Envol de Cartier
Mathilde Laurent built this one around a single idea, honey lifted off the ground until it turns into air. L'Envol de Cartier, the house's Eau de Parfum from 2016, is the jeweller doing what it does best, taking something rich and polishing it down to something quiet and precise. It reads woody-oriental but wears far lighter than that label suggests. Aromatica carries the Cartier L'Envol de Cartier decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test that restraint and decide on a size that works for you.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Sage, Artemisia
Heart: Violet Leaf, Pepper
Base: Honey, Iris, Guaiac Wood, Musk, Patchouli, Amberwood, Cedar, Vetiver
The Scent
Herbal and a little cool from the first breath, with lavender, sage, and artemisia setting a dry, almost aromatic frame. There is a slight bitterness to the artemisia that keeps things from going sweet too early, and the sage reads more culinary-green than medicinal. The lavender here is restrained, not the big barbershop kind, more of a clean floral haze sitting behind the herbs. The trio holds together with a focused dryness, each note reinforcing the others rather than competing, so the opening phase feels taut and deliberate before the composition begins its slow shift toward warmth. Then the honey arrives, and this is where L'Envol surprises people. It is not the thick, sticky honey of a gourmand. It is aerated, airy, almost floral, more the idea of honey than the spoonful. Violet leaf and a quiet thread of pepper green up the heart and keep the sweetness in check, the pepper adding enough grain and bite to stop the transition from feeling soft. The violet leaf contributes a slightly waxy, green quality rather than a floral one, which works to tether the composition back to earth during a phase that could otherwise float away entirely. As the herbs recede, there is a brief window where the honey and violet leaf exist almost alone, and the balance there is delicate, sweet without tipping, green without going sharp. As it settles into the mid-stage, iris pushes forward and the composition turns powdery and refined, that cool makeup-box iris facet sitting right against the honey. The two notes interact in an unusual way: the iris cools the honey down and the honey rounds out the iris, neither one dominating for long. Underneath, guaiac wood brings a smoky-creamy warmth, a subtle dry-wood quality that is somewhere between pencil shavings and a faint incense quality. Patchouli here is well-behaved, earthy rather than dark or dirty, giving the base body without pulling the whole thing into gourmand territory. Cedar and vetiver hold the structure steady, the cedar adding a clean crispness and the vetiver contributing a faint rooty dryness that grounds the sweetness. Amberwood and musk carry the dry-down into genuinely skin-close territory, soft, warm, and barely there, honey and iris fading into a clean woody hum rather than a loud finish. It can read as beautiful honeyed iris or veer toward something more fermented and fougere-adjacent depending on skin chemistry, and the honey-iris balance is the axis everything turns on.
When to Wear
A cooler-weather scent, best from autumn through early spring when the honey and powdery iris have room to breathe without turning cloying. The restraint and polish make it a strong choice for the office, evening dinners, and quieter formal settings where you want presence without volume.
Who Is It For
Someone who likes powdery, iris-driven fragrances and wants a touch of sweetness handled with discretion rather than dessert-level honey will find this a natural fit. If loud sugary scents put you off but you still want warmth, this is your lane.
If you enjoy Iris Patchouli by French Avenue, it shares that powdery iris-and-patchouli spine and is worth comparing, while Tobacco Honey takes the honey idea in a richer direction. You can also explore more in the Powdery collection and the full Cartier collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $890.00
-65%$890.00
$311.50Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Mathilde Laurent built this one around a single idea, honey lifted off the ground until it turns into air. L'Envol de Cartier, the house's Eau de Parfum from 2016, is the jeweller doing what it does best, taking something rich and polishing it down to something quiet and precise. It reads woody-oriental but wears far lighter than that label suggests. Aromatica carries the Cartier L'Envol de Cartier decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test that restraint and decide on a size that works for you.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Sage, Artemisia
Heart: Violet Leaf, Pepper
Base: Honey, Iris, Guaiac Wood, Musk, Patchouli, Amberwood, Cedar, Vetiver
The Scent
Herbal and a little cool from the first breath, with lavender, sage, and artemisia setting a dry, almost aromatic frame. There is a slight bitterness to the artemisia that keeps things from going sweet too early, and the sage reads more culinary-green than medicinal. The lavender here is restrained, not the big barbershop kind, more of a clean floral haze sitting behind the herbs. The trio holds together with a focused dryness, each note reinforcing the others rather than competing, so the opening phase feels taut and deliberate before the composition begins its slow shift toward warmth. Then the honey arrives, and this is where L'Envol surprises people. It is not the thick, sticky honey of a gourmand. It is aerated, airy, almost floral, more the idea of honey than the spoonful. Violet leaf and a quiet thread of pepper green up the heart and keep the sweetness in check, the pepper adding enough grain and bite to stop the transition from feeling soft. The violet leaf contributes a slightly waxy, green quality rather than a floral one, which works to tether the composition back to earth during a phase that could otherwise float away entirely. As the herbs recede, there is a brief window where the honey and violet leaf exist almost alone, and the balance there is delicate, sweet without tipping, green without going sharp. As it settles into the mid-stage, iris pushes forward and the composition turns powdery and refined, that cool makeup-box iris facet sitting right against the honey. The two notes interact in an unusual way: the iris cools the honey down and the honey rounds out the iris, neither one dominating for long. Underneath, guaiac wood brings a smoky-creamy warmth, a subtle dry-wood quality that is somewhere between pencil shavings and a faint incense quality. Patchouli here is well-behaved, earthy rather than dark or dirty, giving the base body without pulling the whole thing into gourmand territory. Cedar and vetiver hold the structure steady, the cedar adding a clean crispness and the vetiver contributing a faint rooty dryness that grounds the sweetness. Amberwood and musk carry the dry-down into genuinely skin-close territory, soft, warm, and barely there, honey and iris fading into a clean woody hum rather than a loud finish. It can read as beautiful honeyed iris or veer toward something more fermented and fougere-adjacent depending on skin chemistry, and the honey-iris balance is the axis everything turns on.
When to Wear
A cooler-weather scent, best from autumn through early spring when the honey and powdery iris have room to breathe without turning cloying. The restraint and polish make it a strong choice for the office, evening dinners, and quieter formal settings where you want presence without volume.
Who Is It For
Someone who likes powdery, iris-driven fragrances and wants a touch of sweetness handled with discretion rather than dessert-level honey will find this a natural fit. If loud sugary scents put you off but you still want warmth, this is your lane.
If you enjoy Iris Patchouli by French Avenue, it shares that powdery iris-and-patchouli spine and is worth comparing, while Tobacco Honey takes the honey idea in a richer direction. You can also explore more in the Powdery collection and the full Cartier collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











