
Worth
Haute-couture heritage; home of Je Reviens.
Charles Frederick Worth, born in Lincolnshire in 1825, established his Paris couture house in 1858 and is broadly credited as the founder of haute couture, dressing European royalty and aristocracy for decades. Fragrances entered the Worth universe in 1924 when grandson Jacques Worth commissioned perfumer Maurice Blanchet to create Dans la Nuit, with glassmaker René Lalique designing the bottle. Subsequent Blanchet compositions — Vers le Jour, Sans Adieu, and the 1929 Je Reviens — established Les Parfums Worth as a serious fragrance entity. Je Reviens, a blue-floral chypre of extraordinary elegance and melancholy, became one of the most enduring fragrance icons of the twentieth century, inseparable from mid-century ideals of refinement and longing. The fashion house closed after the House of Paquin acquired it in the early 1950s, but Les Parfums Worth continued as an independent entity under the Société Maurice Blanchet. Today Worth operates as a heritage fragrance brand focused on maintaining and reissuing its classic archive, particularly Je Reviens, through its dedicated website. The house stands as a living document of pre-war Parisian haute parfumerie, sustained by collectors and vintage enthusiasts.
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.









