Vintage Perfume Review: Coty Jasmin de Corse (Francois Coty)

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanov wore Coty Jasmin de Corse

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanov, 1914 was said to wear Coty Jasmin de Corse

Long fascinated by the last Romanovs, I read and re-read what was then the definitive biography of the Russian royal family, Nicholas and Alexandra, by Robert K. Massie. In his discussions of the four grand duchesses, Massie mentioned their penchant for Coty perfumes: Lilas for Marie, La Rose Jacqueminot for Olga, Violette Pourpre for Anastasia, and, for my favourite princess, the elegant Tatiana,  Coty Jasmin de Corse. Many years later, when I happened on an unopened bottle of Jasmin de Corse for sale on Ebay, I jumped, and astonishingly, bought it for around $60. When it arrived, I gingerly opened the package and found the bottle enthroned on its pedestal inside Coty’s trademark flowery box; perfume aristocracy. As I removed the cap, it was like awaiting the release of a genii. In a few moments, I would summon Grand Duchess Tatiana Romanov with a dab of a scent from many decades ago on my wrist, and the world would momentarily fall away.

Francois Coty perfumer

Francois Coty

Launched in 1906, Jasmin de Corse, named for Francois Coty’s birthplace, is old-school jasmine: indolic, full-bodied, thick with nectarous blooms. But it possesses a unique smokiness that sets it apart from the many beautiful jasmine perfumes I’ve come across. How do I describe Jasmin de Corse’s development? I can’t quite. For me, there is no top, middle and dry-down, only a self-contained but sensual fragrance that wears like a wistful ghost and stays quietly by my side for a day.

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanov

Tatiana as a child, 1906

Grand Duchess Tatiana Nicolaevna, with her grave, direct gaze, looks at me across a hundred years but keeps her secrets. Teasingly known as “the Governess” by her sisters, she was the family beauty, and the most poised and organized of the sisters. Unlike the ebullient Marie, mischievous Anastasia and intellectual Olga, Tatiana seems self-contained, a bit unknowable, even when her face is splashed with laughter. Her eyes never give much away. This enigmatic quality survives in Coty Jasmin de Corse, too.

Coty Jasmin de corse review

Photo via diyphotography.net

As I raise my wrist, I smell a bouquet of interwoven, heady white blossoms surrounded by gentle tendrils of grey smoke, an illusion created, I believe, by orris mixing with ambrette. I imagine that it was this befogged quality, the smudgy grey edges of Coty Jasmin de Corse, that helped make it her signature, for this perfume has a quiet seriousness that cuts through its sexier qualities like the center of a storm. When you first get to know it, Jasmin de Corse is a languorous perfume with a tinge of eroticism, its quiet animalism purring like a tamed leopard. But as I revisit it over the years, I find now that it hides a girlish heart. Smelling it again, and waiting a while, I breathe in a virginal sweetness – most likely from cassie — that makes me think of debutante ballgowns and elbow gloves. It is perfect for a sheltered princess who wants to be something more.

vintage Coty Jasmin de Corse review

Jasmin de Corse extrait — my bottle with original packaging 

My bottle of Coty Jasmin de Corse is dwindling. Soon, it will go the way of all perfumes past, becoming its own ghost, with elusive traces that cling to its cap like a half-forgotten thought. But for now, the rare times I re-encounter its unusual smoky beauty, its shimmering shower of jasmine flowers, its catlike seductiveness, I feel for a fleeting moment, that I feel what lies behind those serious almond eyes and ponder the woman she might have been but for the smoke of a gun.

Notes: Cassie, neroli, jasmine, orange blossom, orris, civet, ambergris, ambrette, benzoin.

Coty Jasmin de Corse from my private collection.

–  Lauryn Beer, Senior Editor

Note: Jasmin de Corse was reformulated in a limited edition coffret by perfumer Daphne Bugey at the behest of Henri Coty to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Coty.

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3 comments

  • ScentitarFragrance says:

    I agree and love this article, we need to bring back the high energy and high intensity fragrance energy that was captured in the past. I hope to be a perfumer and will work to create such a fragrance.

  • Wonderful read! And was Tatiana astonishingly beautiful? So glad you found your gem on eBay; always sad when a favorite, discontinued love dwindles. For me, that is Plus Que Jamais – how will I go on after I use those last, precious drops?

  • Collin Van Reenan says:

    Dear Lauryn,
    your evocation of the beautiful Tatiana and her favourite perfume, Jasmin de Corse, really moved me. How wonderful to have been able to find a bottle of the real thing. That fragrance remains for me. one of the strongest memories of my meeting with the Princess in 1968. How is that possible? I have never been able to find out. If it interests you, my book, published in 2018, might give some answers. “The Spaces in Between” by Count Collin Van Reenan. Sincerely, Van Reenan.