Musk gets all the credit, but civet is the perfumer’s real secret ingredient.
If I had a nickel for every musc perfume that’s actually no-musk and all-civet…
Musk is the frontman, the poster boy, while civet often does all the work.
Like musk, civet is an exalting fixative. Used wisely, it can be even more potent than musk. Strangely, we’ve yet to see a civet-craze hit the perfume industry as we did with ‘musc’.
Any perfume lover should know the scent of civet and how it works because of how widespread it is. It’s so effective that it’s become a cutting agent of sorts—a way to get out of using as few ingredients as possible (which saves companies money). You’ve probably smelled countless one-chord perfumes made ‘complete’ only by the addition of civet.
You smell the story repeats itself over and over. Vetiver + civet, and little else. Rose + civet and little else. Add civet, and you can scrap ten other ingredients. It’s that effective, that potent, and that transformative.
Once you’re familiar with civet, you’d pick it out as easy as rose in a perfume. Having this reference exposes many perfumes—and many perfumers—who try to get away with barebones compositions where they let civet run the show thinking nobody will notice—and most don’t notice.
Civet blends uniquely well with citrus scents. It has an inherent orange sweetness that acts as a magnifying glass when blended with citrus top notes. Not just that, the raw paste has a rich creamy-sweet fragrance even more robust than the richest tuberose.
That’s why civet can take dull floral top notes and ignite them, light up an explosion of orange peel, fuse those notes and make them last straight through the drydown.
Civet binds top and heart notes so well you’re often forced to reformulate the base to incorporate its use. It’s so diffusive and heady on its own, it could even be the base note—in fact, that’s exactly what you smell in many mainstream perfumes… a drydown that’s pure civet, akin to the widely smelled baby-powder drydown of muscone.
What makes civet so powerful is its ability to buff up certain notes and make them go further and last longer. Not just that, it imbues those notes with its ‘civetness’. Orange gets injected with civet to create a new grandiose version of itself.
Why is this important?
We all love a nice bouquet of top notes. But top notes…… fade… often quicker than you’d like.
Modern perfumes solve this by just using synthetics almost exclusively. People who grow up using commercial sprays are so accustomed to smelling the synthetics, they’ve become notes, often whole perfumes unto themselves. ‘White Musk’ is the perfect example. The binders and boosters have become the ingredients.
But civet…
Civet takes those top notes, energizes them, flips on the lights, and acts like viagra.
By itself, the wafts of clementine would have faded in a matter of minutes. But suddenly, you’re able to let the orange peel top note last straight through to the drydown. Civet embalms the top notes and lets you smell them steep into the heart and base and transform the composition like you’d never be able to otherwise.
Of course, the heart and the base both also get civet-ized in turn. That’s why perfumers can throw together only two ingredients, add a dash of civet, and get away with having created a ‘complex’ fragrance. Of course, if you’re familiar civet, you’ll call their bluff.
So, to an educated nose, these spoof perfumes get exposed quickly, and it surely makes you harder to impress because you know the magician’s trick. But…
When used properly, the same refined nose will delight in the amplifying magic of civet. You’ll get to enjoy top notes longer, mingling with floral heart notes and a cacao base as if they all got baked together like a bar of orange-dark-chocolate where all the tastes melt on your tongue at once.
But what you’ve got here isn’t just civet.
This is a unique compound I use to amp up the amplifying civet even further. It’s a simple addition that boosts every note it touches big time: Indian oud.
Indian oud and civet were made for each other. The twangy orange zest, the strong animalic punch, and what the spiciness of wild agallocha does to the funky-creamy sweetness of raw civet makes the brew an olfactory amphetamine.
Infused into dry-spicy Timor sandalwood, here’s a crash course in perfumery you shouldn’t underestimate. Know your civet and the way you experience, judge, and enjoy perfume will never be the same again. Yes, it’ll ruin the parlor tricks for you, but will work true magic when you know it’s what’s brewing behind the scenes because what you’re smelling wouldn’t exist without this precious elixir.
Featured Testimonials…
An integral part of my fragrance journey, this helped me to understand the nuances in civet. Creamy with an orange blossom sweetness, it is evident how well this maligned material complements florals. This attar showcases it in all its glory alongside generous doses of Indian oud. More than just an attar, this is education in the art of perfumery.
Civet Oud combines the power of civet with a blend of musk, citrus, tuberose, sandalwood, and Indian oud. Civet amplifies and prolongs top notes, enhancing the entire fragrance experience. Paired with citrus and tuberose, it creates an explosive bouquet that lingers through the drydown. Sandalwood and Indian oud add depth and richness to the composition. A masterclass in scent manipulation, Civet Oud promises an unparalleled olfactory journey.
Civet Oud is a wonder; subtle, multi-layered, and complex. It is a perfect scent for me.
The Civet Oud has my attention. It’s beautiful…and I do not understand it at all. Therein lies my interest.
I’m loving the Civet Oud, do you know what type of Oud is being used on this one? This is stunning, very lovely and fruity to my nose.
I am experimenting with it mixed with delicate flower scents. You are right, it’s nearly like cheating.
Civet от Ensar – это очень необычный ингридиент. Я добавил небольшое количество в мой спрей, который я настаивал на порошке Santal Tonga (от Ensar) и получил практически идеальный летний парфюм с очень долго играющей верхней нотой. Кастореум и сускус не смогли так “запереть” запах, точнее они доминировали и подменили цветочную ноту Tonga (чтотоже очень хорошо получилось), а civet отчетливо выделил ее и довел довысыхания. По мере высыхания мой Tonga -спрей звучит как если бы я сжег кусок дерева и запах перешел от пряно-цветочного верха к своей древесной
основе. Это безумно притягательно и это оценила моя жена. Стоит немного подождать, когда ноты все подружатся. По своей мощности запах не уступает Red Rose Sultan, только без розы)) Что еще приятно удивило, это то что civet понадобилось добавить совсем каплю!