Tiffany & Co.
Tiffany & Co. entered the world of fragrance in 1987, extending the jeweller's identity — precision, restraint, and an almost lapidary sense of luxury — into scent. The original fragrance, composed by François Demachy, established an aesthetic of refined femininity with an accord of black currant, Taif rose, and sandalwood, and it circulated in European and American selective retail for years before being retired. The house returned to fragrance in 2017 with a new eau de parfum developed by Daniela Andrier of Givaudan, deliberately reframing the Tiffany olfactory signature for a contemporary sensibility. As a fragrance house, Tiffany & Co. operates within the prestige tier — its perfumes benefit from the brand's extraordinary equity and association with the blue box, crafted American luxury, and aspirational gift culture. Andrier's 2017 creation brought additional depth to the portfolio, followed by contributions from Honorine Blanc and Marie Salamagne in later flankers and limited editions. Since 2021, Tiffany & Co. has been part of LVMH following a landmark acquisition. The fragrance arm continues to operate under the house's traditional standards of quality, with distribution through the brand's own boutiques and prestige department stores globally.
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.












