Bastille Rayon Vert Review (Caroline Dumur) 2022 + the ray of green giveway

Bastille Rayon Vert review

Shining green! Bastille Rayon Vert is a luminous green fragrance with an irresistible aniseed note – Background and anise ©Pixybay, bottle ©Bastille, montage and collage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

In Paris, spring is finally here to stay, and we even experienced some heatwaves. Inevitably, the choice of my daily fragrances follows the weather and  my favorite fragrances have floral or spicy notes (pepper and saffron are delicious on the skin when the temperatures soar!). But even a long-time perfumista can change her habits; spring-summer 2022 marks an olfactory revolution for me with scents tuned with aniseed facets. I recently shared with you a review of L’Artisan Parfumeur Cédrat Céruse, built around citron and fennel. The now trendy “vegetables in perfumery excited me about Bastille Rayon Vert (Green Ray), a new creation by Caroline Dumur.

Bastille Rayon Vert is the sixth fragrance from the brand created in 2019 by Marie-Hortense Varin. The young entrepreneur, who decided to experience new adventures in her personal life, has just handed over the reins of her “baby” to new CEO Sophie Maisant (who worked for Bourjois, Chanel and Shiseido). Symbolically, the two women officialized the move when launching Bastille Rayon Vert a few weeks ago in Paris. On that special day, Caroline Dumur was also present to unveil her second creation for the brand.  I was happy to meet the IFF perfumer again, as I particularly appreciate her work (including Corps Volatils Magnified Narcissus and Comme des Garçons Chlorophyll Gardenia). Caroline Dumur’s creative universe is poetic and polished, especially when she combines flowers with green notes.  Her mentor is Anne Flipo, so her beautiful style is no surprise.

 

Bastille new CEO Sophie Maisant and IFF perfumer Caroline Dumur for Bastille

Bastille’s new CEO Sophie Maisant (©Bastille) and IFF perfumer Caroline Dumur (©Grégoire Mahler). Collage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

When Bastille unveiled the new perfume name, at first I was not transported to the world of fragrances; as the commonly used term (green flash or green beam in English) relates to an optical phenomenon observable by the seaside just before sunset disappears, when the last sun ray turns green. Le Rayon Vert is also a French movie directed by Eric Rohmer that won the 1986 Venice film festival Golden Lion… and a sentimental novel set in Scotland written by Jules Verne in 1882.  But now Rayon Vert makes sense as a name as fragrance, “A disco ball in the clearing” as Caroline Dumur defines it.

Le Rayon Vert is (also) both an Eric Rohmer 1986 movie and an 1882 Jules Verne novel – ©DR, collage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

The idea of Bastille Rayon Vert was first conceived during COVID-19, so it’s  no coincidence that is it a tribute to nature. In the history of perfumery, many “green” fragrances were created after serious global crises to instill optimism (with Balmain Vent Vert as the first).  Rayon Vert isa veritable cocktail of green notes (basil, immortelle, anise and fennel) like an Eau fraiche, but in an eau de parfum concentration and with 95% natural ingredients. The eau de cologne, comforting and refreshing, was the starting point for Caroline Dumur to develop this perfume with an incredibly beautiful brief; I can recognize her elegant style, perfectly harmonizing the raw materials she selected.

Bastille Rayon Vert

Basil, anise, immortelle and fennel symbolize Bastille Rayon Vert’s olfactive spine – Bottle ©Bastille and raw materials ©Pixabay, collage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

Bastille Rayon Vert’s opening is fresh and juicy with lemon and bergamot twirling in a frenzied dance with blackcurrant bud adding sparkle, reminiscent of a beautiful cologne that over the minutes, heat up with my skin. The anise seed and the fennel then bring their aniseed and spicy facet, which I love so much. Basil underlines the greenness and fusing aromatic aspects. At this stage of the development, I am transported to a summer Provençal market, where the stalls are filled with vegetables, fruits and aromatic herbs fresh from the garden. The cicadas “tss-tss” punctuate the footsteps of onlookers who stop to inhale the basil, caress a tomato or taste a piece of watermelon. The sun beats down hard, and the smells of the market are accentuated by its few rays that pass through the parasols.

The anise facet is present until the drydown of Bastille Rayon Vert weaving in and out with various degrees of intensity. Combined with sandalwood, it warms up and becomes creamier and then neroli dusts the perfume with  floral and sunny notes, in a more gourmet version, accentuated by chamomile. The anise-fennel-caraway triptych wraps itself in an armful of immortelle both honeyed and salty, which reminds me of the sun and the seaside, the two essential elements of a green ray.

Bastille Rayon Vert is the type of perfume that one likes to wear on sunny days, solar and invigorating. Its omnipresent anise note makes it irresistible and addictive. More symbolically, it is like a reassuring light that guides us towards better, joyful and luminous days.

Bastille Rayon Vert candle

Bastille created a candle version of Rayon Vert with Parisian florist Desirée – ©Emmanuelle Varron

Coupled with Bastille Rayon Vert, the brand developed a candle with Caroline Dumur, and in collaboration with Parisian florist Désirée, that was selected by Le Printemps when the department store unveiled its… green new visual identity!

Natural notes (95%): bergamot, , lemon, basil, anise seed, blackcurrant buds, neroli , angelica, mugwort,  caraway seeds, fennel, chamomile, immortelle absolute, sandalwood, cedarwood and organic wheat alcohol.

Disclaimer: A big “Merci” to Bastille for the 50 ml Rayon Vert bottle provided for this review. The opinions expressed are my own.

Emmanuelle Varron, Senior Editor

Rayon Vert by Bastille PAris

Bastille Le Rayon Vert 50 ml bottle – ©Bastille

Thanks to Bastille, we have a 50 ml bottle of Rayon Vert for one registered reader in USA, UK and EU. To be eligible, please leave a comment on what sparks your interest about Emmanuelle’s review and where you live. Draw closes 06/3/2022.

Bastille Rayon Vert is available at Jovoy Paris and on Bastille’s website.

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45 comments

  • How could you not want to try something that is akin to “A disco ball in the clearing?” Sounds interesting. NV, USA.

  • NituNicolae says:

    “So fresh and so clean, clean” is a verse from an Andre 3000 song. I think it describes this scent perfectly. Neroli, lemon, anise and many more make for a tropical fragrances with a salty twist. Excited for this giveaway. From Romania, EU.

  • Claumarchini says:

    As much as – like Emmanuelle – I like saffron and pepper, when temperatures soar like in these weeks (it’s so hot here in Milan… Feels like July!!), I am drawn towards green scents. I absolutely love green and vegetable notes, and recently I have encountered more and more, it’s a feast for the nose! I have read excellent reviews about Bastille, and am very intrigued by Rayon Vert for its amazing notes: I adore aniseed, caraway, basil, fennel, camomile… All of them basically! Plus, the giveaway ends on the day of my birthday, that would be a great present! Lol! Greetings from Italy

  • BostonScentGuy says:

    I’m a fan of all things anisic, so it’s great to hear this has anise, fennel, and basil in it! Also love the idea of it germinating from a cologne type harmony and grounded by sandalwood. I loved the beautiful market description that evoked the feeling the scent conjured. Thanks for the generous draw! I’m in the US (Colorado).

  • The joyful, optimistic nature of Rayon Vert will complement the laid back, relaxed, hot days of summer. I learned from Emmanuelle’s review how some green perfumes came about after serious global crises. Would love to try Rayon Vert and experience anise and angelica notes in particular. Thanks for the review and draw. I am from USA.

  • Thanks for this uplifting article Emmanuelle!

    I’ve always been a fan of the fresh, green uplifting fragrances. I have bought many dark, sweet thick and cloying fragrances over the last few years, but when I need a boost of energy, nothing beats an airy, light and fresh scent.

    Rayon Vert certainly sounds like a blast of green freshness. Absolutely divine and I can’t wait to try it!
    I can’t believe Bastille is already on the 6th fragrance and I haven’t tried any of them yet! I have bookmarked their site and will have to give their discovery kit a try.

    Thank you for introducing me to Bastille!
    Greetings from the UK!

  • Great review by Emmanuelle on this fragrance. I loved how the fresh notes mixed with anise seed adds its spicy and everything results in this special fragrance that reminds of a Provencal market
    Would love to smell this one.
    USA here.

  • The fabulous details and the unique way it was written spark my interest. I live in Poland, EU.

  • Brad Woolslayer says:

    I love a good basil fragrance, and this one sounds really fun for the summertime. I liked how this fragrance transported Emmanuelle to a Provencal with fresh herbs, fruits, and vegetables. I live in Maryland USA.

  • This notes in Rayon Vert make my heart skip a beat. I adore the smell of garden herbs and was excited to see many of my favorite notes were included in the perfume. I’m particularly excited about anise seed and chamomile. Thank you for bringing this fragrance to my attention. It will be perfect for summer. ~ Indiana, USA

  • Sorohan Adriana says:

    A fresh and elegant fragrance for hot summer days.
    I am from Bucharest Romania Europe

  • “The anise-fennel-caraway triptych wraps itself in an armful of immortelle both honeyed and salty, which reminds me of the sun and the seaside, the two essential elements of a green ray.” – this alone has made me want to start every day in vapors of Rayon Vert

    I live in Portugal

  • I would love to add an addictive anise fragrance to my collection! I had heard about the green flash phenomenon when I was a child, but I never saw it. So I assumed it was a story made up by parents who wanted to keep us sitting still for a while by watching for something that would never arrive. Thank you for the review, writing from the EU.

  • when I first saw the fragrance’s name, my thoughts turned to the omonym fiber, expecting something very different from the latter. I mean, I was familiar with the name, but not with the composition, which, apparently, is from natural sources of cellulose.
    now back to Rayon Vert, it was an interesting piece of information the timing of the creation – in a difficult time frame for the humankind – and it makes me all the more curious, as I tend to gravitate towards green fragrances, just to find out that I’m not very keen on the dry facet of it.
    when Emanuelle stated- very poetically, too, I might add – about the neroli dusting the perfume with floral and sunny notes, here I was, thinking, hmmmm….this just might be the green for me 🙂
    I am living in EU, thinking about greens 🙂

  • RiccardoC says:

    Never tried this brand, but I loved the description on how it was developed during a dark period such as the one with COVID. An ode to nature, with lots of natural ingredients.
    Love to try it
    Riccardo, Italy EU

  • lavienrose13 says:

    I am so happy that Ca fleure bon is reviewing Rayon Vert, which I have not been able to test, so far ! I enjoy very much green notes and the presence of fennel is super appealing. The whole description of the notes is quite inspiring. Thanks for the great opportunity and the rich review. From France.

  • foreverscents says:

    I love fragrances that are sunny and green, that make me feel like I am strolling through a farmer’s market. I really enjoy basil in fragrances, as well as anise and lemon. Rayon Vert sounds like a burst of sunshine.
    I live in the USA.

  • Bastille Rayon Vert is the type of perfume that one likes to wear on sunny days, solar and invigorating. Its omnipresent anise note makes it irresistible and addictive. More symbolically, it is like a reassuring light that guides us towards better, joyful and luminous days. Natural notes (95%): bergamot, , lemon, basil, anise seed, blackcurrant buds, neroli , angelica, mugwort, caraway seeds, fennel, chamomile, immortelle absolute, sandalwood, cedarwood and organic wheat alcohol. Intrigued by the notes especially caraway, fennel and sandalwood. This is a house that I have not tried anything by. Thanks a million from the UK

  • Bastille Rayon Vert weaving in and out with various degrees of intensity. Combined with sandalwood, it warms up and becomes creamier and then neroli dusts the perfume with floral and sunny notes, in a more gourmet version, accentuated by chamomile. The anise-fennel-caraway triptych wraps itself in an armful of immortelle both honeyed and salty, which reminds me of the sun and the seaside, the two essential elements of a green ray. A beautiful description by Emmanuel really intrigued by the spicy facets and sandalwood. Thanks a lot from the United Kingdom

  • It sounds like such an uplifting fragrance. I am not at all surprised that many fragrances with these type of notes were born out of the pandemic. Everyone is seeking some kind of way to calm and soothe themselves with so much uncertainty going on in the world. I know I am. And fragrances are my form of “medicine” that help uplift my mood and soothe my soul. I love that this formula is 95% natural. The notes are wonderful. I’d be so thrilled to add this to my collection.
    I live in the USA.

  • Regis Monkton says:

    I can enjoy natural perfumery a lot, and I’d like to become more familiar with this style of perfumery. I’d like to try the collected works of this company. The list of notes for this fragrance is very appealing to me. I appreciate Emmanuelle’s insight of this fragrance and the historical insight also. This fragrance seems like something which I would enjoy very much, and I’d like to try it. I live in the U.S.A.

  • Teresa Cs says:

    The words ‘refreshing and comforting’ caught me completely. The description of a natural-world tribute that can revitalize and also soothe makes this sound like the perfect fragrance for our world right now. I live in the USA.

  • Sounds like a perfect green fragrance. I am intrigued by the idea behind its creation to bring optimism to the world. I live in EU.

  • Green is my favorite color and a scent that captures it along with anise is probably going to be a winner. I would love to try this. In mayrland.

  • I’m a fan of green smells in general and love basil and anise so the thought of them together sounds divine! US

  • GennyLeigh says:

    I love anise in any season but the triptych of anise-fennel-caraway in combination with the immortelle does being to mind the summer in Camargue seaside. The bergamot, lemon, basil and angelica notes drive home the Provençal herbiness of the fragrance. I’ve experienced the green ray phenomenon of the setting sun over the Atlantic. It’s a magical but rare flash. I love the name and would love to win a bottle. MD, USA.

  • Green green green. I am so into green these days. I’m not always into anise, but Emmanuelle’s review has me on board. I am in the US.

  • It is interesting that global crises increase green fragrances. I wonder how the spicy and green aspects of Bastille Rayon Vert would work on me. A reassuring light is definitely something I need right now. Great review! I live in CA, USA.

  • Laurentiu says:

    I have not tried anything from the house of Bastille but I would not mind starting with Le Rayon Vert as it has some interesting notes going on that I am sure I will enjoy.
    Thank you!
    Europe

  • I love, like Emmanuelle, pepper when temperatures soar in this “sprummer”…at least in Madrid spring each year is shorter and shorter , passing from winter to summer in few days. As Emmanuelle, my love for aniseed facets is growing (in kitchen and in my skin) and this Rayon Vert sounds promising as a mix of green notes. Even better, it is and Eau fraiche, with an eau de parfum concentration and natural ingredients (all listed I guess as Bastille perfumes does). Who doesn’t love a sparkling and juicy lemon and bergamot opening? Anise seed, fennel, basil follows as in a summer salad plate in a chamomile and immortelle field close to the mediterranean sea. As you say , sun and sea to contemplate the rayon vert in a summer sunset and feel better, solar and invigorated. I live in Spain, EU.

  • I admittedly tend to shy away from green scents but this one sounds really nice. I’m a big anise fan and I adore the smell of fresh basil. Also bonus points for being so natural! USA

  • Thank you, Emmanuelle for this uplifting article! I’m obsessed the fresh fragrances. I bought many dark, sweet, and cloying fragrances over the last few years, but nothing beats an airy, light, and fresh scent when I need a boost of energy. I googled the website of Rayon Vert, and it seems a treasure of freshness. I liked how naturally they are selecting the fragrance ingredients… Absolutely divine and I can’t wait to try it. Thank you for introducing Bastille! All the best from BiH.

  • sephrenia300 says:

    Fantastic review Emmanuelle! What sparks my interest about Emmanuelle’s review is learning that Rayon Vert is made with 95% natural ingredients. Although I am not a purist, my favorite fragrances tend to be those very high in natural ingredients, around 70-80% or above. Particularly green focused fragrances as I tend to find synthetic green notes very jarring, and furthermore that green notes are among the cheaper ones to use natural ingredients – as opposed to florals or oud centric fragrances. I live in the US.

  • Rayon Vert is a tribute to nature. A cocktail of green notes with eau de parfum concentrations. Opening is fresh and juicy. It has an anise facet that is present until the dry down. This perfume is for sunny days. I don’t believe I have any anise focused fragrances but this sounds like a fragrance worth experiencing.
    Maryland, US.

  • I am sparked with wearing on sunny days- Emmanuelle’s statement. It is difficult for me to understand the smell without sniffing it. Thanks for the opportunity. I live in the US.

  • megabass99 says:

    Love the fact that this scent is as natural as possible and seems to capture essence of the color green . Checking in from Chandler ,Az

  • Rayon Vert sounds absolutely delightful for the warmer days to come. Sparkling and fresh enough from the citrus, basil and fennel, yet rounded and sweetened by the neroli and chamomile with a sandalwood base. Cozy, wearable yet unique and transporting the reader to a lovely sunny open air market immediately.
    I live in the EU.
    Thanks.

  • Southirina says:

    Green beam is such an interesting Nature’s little magic tricks. Bastille Rayon Vert seems like a green light combined with anise. I can’t really create this combination with my imagination. I would like to try it. Thanks for the review and for the draw.
    Hugs from Romania

  • joetelegram says:

    Thanks for another great review, Emmanuelle.

    I really appreciate the basil as an addition in “Rayon Vert”. I have a family member that just came back from a vacation to South Korea. They brought back a cologne that you can’t find here in the states called “Heal Wood” and it has an incredible basil wood combo that is blowing my mind. I also really appreciate the historical perspective.

    Best,

    Joseph O’Brien–Roseburg, Oregon (USA)
    Instagram: @joetelegram

  • A “luminous green fragrance” sounds like my kind of perfume. I’m also drawn to the aniseed note; I find Cognoscenti Wild Child to be more dynamic and compelling each time I wear it, and that fragrance is also built around anise and a range of green. I’d expect the use of basil and fennel alongside anise to give Rayon Vert a distinct herbal character, which is perfect for the onset of hot days in the sun. I’ll need to try this one—thanks for the wonderful review Emmanuelle!

    I’m in the midwest, USA.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Thanks for the review Emmanuelle.

    I enjoyed the writeup of this intensely solar green fragrance that exudes dark herbaciousness, much like the green lantern phenomenon.

    The use of blackcurrant bud in this fragrance to add that intense green tang is quite interesting.

    This fragrance makes me thing of a lush forest, with the final rays of sunlight filtering through, the air warm with the smell of greenery, before the sun finally sets and it becomes dark and cooler.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • Courtnee Felton says:

    I’m encouraged by Emmanuelle’s trip to a “summer Provencal market” via Rayon Vert because that suggests a prominent basil note. I love basil. I love green notes and I would be thrilled to win this perfume.

    I’m in Virginia.

  • Michael Prince says:

    What interests me about Emmanuelle’s review of Bastille Rayon Vert is a beautiful and unique creation made from Marie-Hortense Varin. The young entrepreneur, who decided to experience new adventures in her personal life, has just handed over the reins to the CEO Sophie Maisant. This is my first time hearing about this brand. I love the creative combination of unique notes and would love to try this. I am from the USA.