Mac
Professional colour brought to life in scent.
MAC Cosmetics was born in Toronto in 1984 when makeup artist Frank Toskan and salon owner Frank Angelo began cooking up pigments in their kitchen — colours designed to hold up under studio lighting and high-contrast photography. The brand sold first from Angelo's hair salon before expanding rapidly through North America. In 1994, Estée Lauder acquired a majority stake, and by the late 1990s MAC had become a global beauty powerhouse synonymous with professional-grade colour and inclusive shade ranges. The fragrance line, introduced in the mid-2000s, translates the brand's signature makeup sensibility into wearable scents. The acclaimed Shadescents collection ties each perfume directly to a cult-favourite lipstick shade — Ruby Woo's deep red leather, Candy Yum-Yum's fruity brightness — making the link between colour and scent unusually literal. Bottles sit at accessible price points, in keeping with MAC's long-standing aim to place professional quality within broad reach. All MAC fragrances are produced under the Estée Lauder Companies umbrella, drawing on the group's formulation resources and global distribution. The collection has remained relatively compact but maintains a dedicated following among makeup loyalists who want their scent to echo the rest of their kit.
DNA over time
Each column is an era. Each colored band shows that family’s share of accord weight across every perfume the house released in that window. Bigger band = the house leaned harder on that family.


























