Jasmin de Corse, released in 1906, draws its name from the island of Corsica, birthplace of François Coty. In French, Jasmin de Corse means “Jasmine of Corsica,” pronounced "zhaz-MAN duh KORS". The name is both personal and poetic—a tribute to Coty’s origins and to the intoxicating flower that had already earned a central place in perfumery. It evokes a sun-soaked Mediterranean landscape where warm breezes carry the scent of white blossoms drifting across rocky hillsides toward the sea. The phrase suggests romance, nostalgia, and a distinctly southern light—images Coty purposely tied to his own identity and to the emotional world he wished to create through scent.
Jasmine, long known as one of perfumery’s most precious flowers, is native to regions of Asia but became deeply rooted in the craft traditions of Grasse, where jasmine plantations flourished from the eighteenth century onward. The blossoms, picked before sunrise to preserve their aroma, were traditionally processed through enfleurage, a labor-intensive method in which fresh flowers were pressed into fat to absorb their scent. Later, solvent extraction produced jasmine absolute, prized for its creamy sweetness, honeyed warmth, and unmistakable indolic depth. Depending on the origin—Grasse, Egypt, India—the character shifts subtly: Grasse jasmine is often described as luminous and refined; Egyptian jasmine carries more warmth and fruitiness; Indian jasmine can be bold, heady, and intensely narcotic. In perfumery, jasmine adds sensuality, radiance, and an emotional intensity that bridges the line between innocence and seduction.

The name Jasmin de Corse would have conjured a particular dream for early twentieth-century women. The imagery Coty used—“haunting as old memories at twilight,” “summer and the south,” “sweet distant voices over still waters,” “the elusive woman, brown-haired, grey eyes of dreams”—framed the scent as an embodiment of wistful romance and feminine mystery. Such language transformed the perfume from a mere floral into a symbol of emotional depth: nostalgic, intimate, and suggestive of a woman who carries an air of intrigue. For Coty, jasmine was the perfect medium for this storytelling. Indolic florals naturally possess an underlying warmth, a soft animalic sweetness that feels both tender and sensuous, making them ideal for evoking the “elusive woman” celebrated in his advertising.
In 1906, Coty released this perfume into a world awash in change. It was the Belle Époque, a period marked by optimism, artistic innovation, and flourishing luxury industries. Parisian fashion, led by designers like Paul Poiret, was beginning to shift away from rigid Victorian silhouettes toward freer, more fluid lines. Women were embracing new social freedoms—bicycling, traveling, attending salons—and perfume became a personal extension of this emerging modern identity. Perfumery itself was undergoing a revolution: synthetics such as aldehydes, indolic molecules, and new floral aromatics were transforming the palette available to perfumers, allowing them to craft scents that were richer, more diffusive, and more complex than ever before. Coty was at the forefront of this movement, modernizing familiar floral themes with subtler structure and greater emotional resonance.
Women of the Belle Époque would likely have responded to Jasmin de Corse as both traditional and daring. Jasmine had long been a beloved floral, yet Coty’s interpretation—sweet, heavy, lingering, with smoky, animalic undertones—pushed it toward something more hypnotic. It communicated confidence and emotional maturity. The fact that figures such as Tatiana Romanov and Colette embraced it speaks to its sophistication: the perfume suited women who valued beauty tinged with intensity, intellect, and a sense of enveloping sensuality.
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In scent, Jasmin de Corse translated its name directly into atmosphere. It opened as a narcotic white floral, rich with indoles that lent a warm, human depth. Beneath the petals lay a soft animalic hum—civet and other natural materials that gave the fragrance its smoky, balsamic oriental undertones. Resinous notes of tolu and benzoin, creamy vanilla, and velvety musks wrapped around the jasmine, allowing it to glow long into the night. The result was an intoxicating White Floral Oriental that felt both timeless and unmistakably of its era.
In the landscape of early twentieth-century perfumery, Coty’s fragrance did not stand alone—many houses offered jasmine perfumes—but Jasmin de Corse distinguished itself through its emotional storytelling, its modern structure, and its deeply atmospheric character. It honored tradition while subtly pushing the boundaries of how jasmine could smell, paving the way for the grand, seductive white florals that would follow.
Fragrance Composition:
So what does it smell like? Jasmin de Corse is classified as a classic white floral with narcotic, animalic, and balsamic oriental undertones — in other words, a White Floral Oriental (sometimes called a Floral–Amber in modern terminology). It was described as being very sweet, heavy and lingering with indolic jasmine with smoky undertones.
- Top notes: Calabrian bergamot, lemon, neroli, orange blossom absolute, methyl anthranilate, cassie, benzyl acetate, linalyl acetate, aldehyde C10, linalool, octyl acetate
- Middle notes: hydroxycitronellal, Bourbon ylang ylang oil, jasmine absolute, indol, tuberose absolute, cinnamic alcohol, orris
- Base notes: civet, ambergris tincture, ambrette, Tibetan musk, vanilla tincture, Siam benzoin, storax, phenylethyl alcohol, rhodinol, heliotropin, benzyl alcohol, benzyl formate, Peru balsam, tolu balsam
Scent Profile:
The opening of Jasmin de Corse rises like a luminous curtain of Mediterranean sunlight. A burst of Calabrian bergamot introduces a gleaming, almost champagne-like sparkle—Calabria’s citrus groves are famed for fruit with unusually bright, floral sweetness, owing to the region’s mineral-rich coastal soil and long, radiant summers. Lemon follows with its crisp, crystalline zest, sharpening the first impression like a clean blade of light. Neroli adds a breath of honeyed freshness—its Tunisian and Moroccan origins prized for producing blossoms that yield an especially green, petitgrain-tinged nuance. Orange blossom absolute deepens this into something richer and more velvety, carrying the sensation of warm air drifting over night-blooming flowers.
Into this sunlight steps the early architecture of the fragrance’s floral heart, supported by a suite of foundational aromatics. Methyl anthranilate lends a grape-like, dusky sweetness that amplifies the fruit facets of jasmine later on; benzyl acetate contributes a dewy, pear-like juiciness; and linalyl acetate softens the composition with a powdery lavender-like cushioning effect. The presence of linalool reinforces this softness, while aldehyde C-10 (decalic aldehyde) introduces a “snowy,” crystalline shimmer—a delicate, soapy coolness that makes the white flowers feel radiant rather than heavy. Octyl acetate adds a subtle, ripe fruitiness. Cassie (acacia farnesiana), with its powdery mimosa-like character, brings a golden, pollen-dusted warmth that hints at the deeper florals still to come.
As the top notes settle, the perfume opens fully into its narcotic heart, where its character becomes unmistakable. Hydroxycitronellal provides a fresh, rosy-green lift, ensuring that the white florals remain airy rather than opaque. Bourbon ylang ylang, sourced from islands where volcanic soil deepens the oil’s creamy, banana-like richness, adds a languid, velvety texture. Then the jasmine absolute emerges—dark, lush, and unmistakably indolic. This is jasmine as it exists in the warm night air of Mediterranean summers: honeyed, animalic, and faintly smoky in its depths. Indole—the natural molecule that gives jasmine its sensual, almost feral breath—threads through the heart, transforming the flowers from charming to hypnotic.
Tuberose absolute, thick and buttery, amplifies this narcotic quality, lending a humid, voluptuous richness. Cinnamic alcohol introduces a spicy-balmy warmth, gently echoing sun-warmed skin, while orris adds a soft, suede-like elegance. Together, these materials create a white floral heart that feels both antique and startlingly alive—lush, intimate, and enveloping.
The base unfolds slowly, revealing the fragrance’s true nature as a White Floral Oriental. Civet, used in infinitesimal trace amounts, imparts a human warmth that melds seamlessly into the skin. Ambergris tincture contributes a radiant, marine-inflected softness—never fishy, but subtly sweet and impossibly smooth, the kind only true ambergris can provide. Ambrette seed adds a pear-like muskiness with a vegetal warmth, while Tibetan musk gives the composition its shadowy, soft-animalic hum, grounding the white flowers in a deeper register.
Vanilla tincture contributes a natural, balsamic sweetness—creamy and gently boozy. Siam benzoin with its warm, resinous, almond-like richness blends with the darker qualities of storax, Peru balsam, and tolu balsam, each contributing layers of smoky, syrupy warmth that give the perfume its oriental undertones. Phenylethyl alcohol—a classic rosy floral molecule—keeps the composition linked to its floral identity even in the drydown, while rhodinol adds a rosy-citronellol brightness. Heliotropin casts a powdered, almond-like veil over the base, softening the resins into a gentle, vanillic haze. Benzyl alcohol and benzyl formate echo the structure of jasmine itself, reinforcing its sweet-fruity and slightly green facets long into the drydown.
Worn on the skin, Jasmin de Corse moves from sunlight to twilight—beginning with sparkling citrus light, descending into a narcotic white-floral dusk, and settling finally into a warm, resinous, softly animalic night. It is unmistakably of its time—a fragrance that embraced modern synthetics to intensify natural florals, but still grounded itself in the luxurious raw materials that defined early 20th-century perfumery.
In the end, Jasmin de Corse feels like jasmine magnified: jasmine with its sweetness sharpened, its shadows deepened, its sensuality laid bare. A perfume that lingers long after it seems to fade, leaving a faint, smoky floral imprint that is both intimate and haunting—just as its early admirers once described.
A 1926 ad reads: "Jasmin de Corse - breathing of romance and dreams, poetic, illusive, - stirring the soul to exquisite longings."
Chemist & Druggist - Volume 126, 1937: "All the natural, haunting fragrance of jasmine blossoms, without the heavy, overpowering effect sometimes encountered, has been captured in Le Jasmin de Corse, which is sweet, fresh and elusive."
Personal Perfumes:
During the 1920s and 1930s, perfumery was not merely about scent—it was entwined with personality, appearance, astrology, and the imagined psychology of womanhood. Advertising frequently suggested that a woman’s perfume should harmonize with her complexion, her hair color, her birth month, or even her emotional temperament. These ideas, though rooted in marketing rather than true olfactory theory, shaped how women chose and understood fragrance for decades. In this era, perfume companies actively encouraged women to see scent as an extension of identity—an intimate accessory as revealing as a dress or a hairstyle.
One of the most persistent beliefs was that women of different hair colors should wear perfumes of matching intensity. The era’s perfumers insisted that blondes were best suited to soft, airy florals—fragrances like Paris, L’Aimant, L’Effleurt, La Rose Jacqueminot, and L’Or, light enough to echo the brightness of fair hair and the perceived delicacy associated with it. Brunettes, by contrast, were thought to possess deeper, stronger beauty, paired naturally with richer Orientals and chypres. Their recommended perfumes—L’Origan, Emeraude, Chypre, Ambréine, Fougeraie au Crépuscule, and Styx—were darker, more resinous, more dramatic. Red-haired women occupied a middle realm: vibrant, fiery, and unique. They were encouraged to wear perfumes of contrasting styles—Emeraude, Paris, L’Origan, L’Ambre Antique, Iris, and Cyclamen—fragrances that softened their fire with powdery florals or accentuated it with opulent warmth.
Astrological and seasonal personality guides added another layer of romance. Women born in June, described as restless, brilliant, impulsive dreamers, were assigned perfumes that echoed their mercurial nature. Jasmin de Corse, Muguet, La Rose Jacqueminot, and L’Origan were offered as appropriate—scents that captured lightness, wistfulness, and fleeting beauty, mirroring the imaginative temperament associated with early summer. Women born in September were seen as introspective, strong-willed, and calmly powerful. Their scents—L’Origan, Styx, Jasmin de Corse, and Chypre—were chosen for their depth and poise, fragrances that balanced discipline with mystery.
Other perfumers argued that fragrance should echo a woman’s inner world rather than her appearance. These guides categorized women into emotional archetypes. The “Sunlit, Joyous Type”—optimistic, lively, unreserved—was matched with gentle, happy florals such as L’Effleurt, Muguet, and Violette. The “Dreamy, Elusive Type”, romantic and introspective, was given perfumes like Jasmin de Corse, La Jacinthe, and Lilas Blanc, scents that suggested softness, nostalgia, and unspoken longing. For exotic personalities, perfumes such as Chypre, Violette Pourpre, and Ambre Antique promised a sense of dramatic allure. The mysterious woman—self-contained, quietly intense—was aligned with the enigmatic richness of Ambre Antique, Styx, and Cyclamen. And those with brilliant, sophisticated temperaments—women of quick wit, fashion, and social sparkle—were advised to wear the bold radiance of Emeraude, Paris, and L’Origan.
These categories may have been loosely rooted in aesthetics and personality psychology, but their true purpose was enchantment. They offered women a way to imagine themselves through fragrance, to link an invisible scent to a desired persona. The strategy was wildly effective. Gift-givers relied on these guides for direction, and women unsure of their own tastes found comfort in choosing a perfume said to “fit” them. Through this poetic and sometimes fanciful marketing, perfumers of the interwar years succeeded in making fragrance not just a luxury, but an intimate expression of self—an identity in scent form.
Bottles:
The little bottle below was used in the Coty chest or rack of perfume testers. The bottles are clear glass and the stoppers have a dauber at the end of the stopper plug. Each bottle stands 2.25" tall and was manufactured in France by the Depinoix glassworks. Both the wooden chest and the brass rack have a locking mechanism akin to a tantalus which prevents the bottles from being taken out. Only the stoppers of the bottles can be accessed. This device helped keep the bottles in place during travel as well.
The Moth Stopper Parfum Flacon's bottle shape was adapted in 1916 originally for L'Origan for travelling by the usage of an inner glass stopper and a gilt brass screw cap, this bottle was made by Baccarat, model number 291. In 1928, these flat, square shaped crystal bottles were available in French leather cases. These bottles held Emeraude, Ambre Antique, L'Aimant, L'Origan,Jasmin de Corse, Chypre, Paris, and possibly others.
Chain Cap Travel Bottle:
The bottle shown below has a gilded brass cap complete with its very own chain, I am dubbing it the Chain Cap Travel Flacon. The metal collar is marked with "Coty Paris." This bottle is the modified version of the Moth Stopper Parfum Flacon, which was the Rene Lalique designed bottle that featured the double moth frosted glass stopper. This bottle was originally designed by Lalique for the Coty fragrance Muguet in 1912, but was later used for almost all of the Coty fragrances. This bottle was also made by Baccarat in 1916, mold number 307. These bottles should be acid marked Baccarat on the base. The Baccarat bottle can be found standing at 3.25' tall. This was later made by Coty's own glassworks and will be marked "Coty" on the base.
A 1922 ad reads: "Coty's Jasmin de Corse, 1 oz cut crystal, gold cap and chain, regularly $7.00, now at $4.98."




Briar Stopper Flacon:Rene Lalique designed this flacon in 1911, and it was later made by Coty's own glassworks after 1920. The clear glass bottle is tall, with a square base, and features a frosted glass stopper molded with the "briar" motif. The bottle was originally made to house the various Eau de Toilettes, but the design was later adapted to include different sizes including a miniature versions to house parfum. The most common miniature size is dubbed "Petite Modele" and debuted in 1936 and held 0.27 oz.
In the 1920s, the boxes had messages inside reminding the owners of the bottles that ""These exquisite crystal flacons are hand-cut in the Paris ateliers of COTY - Care must be taken in placing them on the dressing table to avoid breakage of the corners."
Sizes:
- 2" tall miniature (0.13 oz)
- 2.5" tall miniature (0.27 oz) - Petite Modele
- 3" tall (0.60 oz)
- 4" tall
- 4.25" tall (1.70 oz)
- 5" tall
- 5.25" tall (3 oz)
- 5.5" tall
- 6" tall
- 6.25" tall
- 6.5" tall
- 8.75" tall




Banded Bottles with Frosted Stoppers:
The bottle has an embossed band along the upper part and a frosted glass stopper molded with flowers and ridge details. People have mistakenly attributed this bottle to both Lalique and Baccarat, however, the bottle does not appear in either companies catalogs and was not one of their molds. It was made by Coty's own glassworks in France.
The parfum bottle was available in three sizes: 1/4 oz, 1/2 oz and 1 oz. The bottles were discontinued in 1932. The 1/4 oz bottle itself was discontinued in 1934.
Bottles stand:
- 2.25" tall - 1/4 oz
- 2.75" tall - 1/2 oz
- 3.75" tall - 1 oz
Larger sizes of this bottle were also created for the boudoir, standing at 6" tall, 7.25" tall and 8" tall and hold Eau de Toilette. These bottles were also used for other Coty perfumes: Eau de Coty, L'Origan, Chypre, Paris, La Rose Jacqueminot and L'Aimant.
Etui a Cigarette Presentation:
Also introduced in 1927, was the Etui a Cigarette presentation. Bottle stands 3 1/8" tall and is molded with Coty France on the base as it was made at Coty's own glassworks.

Metal Case (Etui Metal) Parfum Bottles:
A nice purse size bottle set was created and presented in your choice of a crackle finished or a platinum tone nickel hinged metal case around 1928. The bottle used was the banded bottle with the frosted glass stopper. The case stands 2 3/4" tall. It was invented by Philip A. Reutter and manufactured by Scoville Manufacturing Co. These containers were discontinued in 1933, when a new case was introduced, it was a rectangular shape.
Non-Banded Flacons with Frosted Stoppers:
Other bottle could be found with the frosted stoppers, this thin, rectangular 2.5 oz bottle probably held Eau de Toilette. The label reads "Jasmin de Corse Composition Originale de Coty Contenance Garantie 40 dr égale au flacon de luxe." (Corsican Jasmine Original Composition by Coty Guaranteed Capacity 40 dr equal to the luxury bottle.) Bottles and boxes were shipped to the USA to be filled. These bottles were filled in the United States using Coty's imported perfume extracts and domestic alcohol. The label message was used from at least 1913 to around 1937. It was trademarked in 1924.
Heliotrope Flacon:The "Heliotrope" flacon, also known as "Coty Perfume No. 14" was first made by Rene Lalique in 1911 for the Coty perfume Heliotrope. It is roughly a triangular shape with canted corners along the bottom. The bottle was used for various Coty fragrances: Emeraude, L'Aimant, L'Origan, Styx, Chypre, Muguet, Jacinthe, Jasmin de Corse, La Rose Jacqueminot, and Paris.
Airspun Face Powder:
Bottles from the 1950s and 1960s Period:


Fate of the Fragrance:
Jasmin de Corse, introduced in 1906, was a fragrance that captured the imagination of women at the turn of the twentieth century. Coty’s creation offered a lush, white-floral heart with intoxicating narcotic qualities, set upon a warm, balsamic oriental base. Its name—evoking Corsica, François Coty’s birthplace—lent the perfume an air of personal authenticity and romantic allure. From the moment it appeared on the market, it was celebrated for its richness, its ability to evoke both the sun-drenched Mediterranean and the intimate mystery of the feminine. The perfume’s appeal was immediate: its sparkling top notes gave way to a creamy, heady floral bouquet, which lingered with deep, sensual warmth, capturing the duality of innocence and seduction that defined Coty’s vision.
Though the precise date of its discontinuation is unknown, the fact that Jasmin de Corse was still being sold in 1967 speaks to its enduring popularity. For over six decades, it maintained a devoted following, including figures such as the Russian princess Tatiana Romanov and the French writer Colette, who admired its sophisticated character and wore it consistently. Its longevity illustrates the timeless quality of the composition: the narcotic jasmine, the smoky animalic undertones, and the resinous, balsamic drydown were as compelling to mid-twentieth-century women as they were to those at its launch. In a shifting landscape of fashion and fragrance—from Belle Époque elegance to post-war modernity—Jasmin de Corse remained a benchmark of classical, white-floral oriental perfumery, admired for its richness, sophistication, and lingering sensuality.
2004 Reformulation & Reissue:
In 2004, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Coty company, Henri Coty, son of François Coty, commissioned a re-creation of the legendary Jasmin de Corse. The project aimed not only to honor the original fragrance but also to preserve its luxurious character for collectors and connoisseurs. The perfume was reformulated by Daphné Bugey, ensuring a faithful interpretation of the classic white floral oriental while accommodating contemporary sensibilities and modern perfumery techniques. Each flacon was made of French crystal, a nod to the timeless elegance associated with Coty, and bore the inscription “Bottle Made In France” in raised letters on its base, emphasizing craftsmanship and provenance. The compact flacon, measuring 2 inches tall by 1 1/4 inches square, combined understated refinement with the tactile beauty of finely cut crystal.
This special edition was extremely limited, with only 200 bottles produced, exclusively for the French market, making it a coveted object for collectors. Jasmin de Corse was presented alongside other iconic Coty creations in the limited edition set, including Emeraude, L’Origan, and La Rose Jacqueminot, each celebrating a different facet of François Coty’s pioneering vision. The launch was accompanied by the publication of “Coty: The Brand of Visionary” by Editions Assouline, a luxurious volume that chronicled the history and influence of Coty’s perfumes and design innovations. This centennial reissue transformed Jasmin de Corse into not only a fragrance but also a collector’s piece—a testament to the enduring legacy of Coty’s artistry, blending scent, storytelling, and exquisite material culture.
