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Chanel

Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel — known universally as Coco — opened her first atelier in Paris in 1910, initially selling hats from a shop on Rue Cambon funded by her lover Arthur Capel. Within a decade, she had revolutionised women's fashion by liberating them from corsets, introducing jersey fabric, and establishing a silhouette of effortless simplicity. In 1921, she commissioned perfumer Ernest Beaux to create something unprecedented — a fragrance that smelled of a woman, not flowers. Beaux's fifth formula became Chanel N°5, the first perfume to use aldehydes as a structural element, creating an abstract floral that smelled like nothing that existed in nature. Over a century later, it remains the world's most recognised perfume.

Chanel maintains one of the most extraordinary fragrance creation infrastructures in the luxury world. The house employs only internal perfumers — currently Olivier Polge, who succeeded his legendary father Jacques Polge in 2015. Olivier Polge trained under his father for decades, ensuring an unbroken creative lineage. Chanel owns the Mul family's Domaine de Palatin in Grasse — 33 hectares of jasmine and rose grown using traditional methods — meaning their raw materials are categorically unavailable to competitors. This ingredient ownership is why Chanel refuses to share their formulations and why reformulations happen rarely and with extreme care.

The Chanel fragrance library is extraordinary in its breadth. Coco Mademoiselle (2001) — a clean oriental of bergamot, patchouli, and rose created by Jacques Polge — became one of the fastest-selling fragrances in history and remains a top global seller. Chance (2002) — an innovative circular floral using pink pepper, hyacinth, and patchouli in an unexpected structure — appealed to a younger generation. Bleu de Chanel (2010), created by Jacques Polge, redefined masculine freshness with its cedar-vetiver-sandalwood dry-down and launched Chanel into serious competition in the men's market. The Chanel Les Exclusifs and Coco Noir lines demonstrate the house's artistic range beyond commercial parfumerie.

Chanel occupies a unique position — they are simultaneously the world's most commercial and most exclusive fragrance house. Mainline EDPs range from €120-€200; Les Exclusifs from €190-€350. They are more expensive than Dior, less distributed than Armani, and arguably more prestigious than either. The Chanel customer tends to be aspirational but educated — someone who knows what Polge achieved with Mademoiselle and appreciates the Grasse heritage.

Every Chanel fragrance at The Scent Stories® is 100% authentic, factory-sealed and brand-packaged — sourced from authorised channels and shipped worldwide.

Chanel — Common Questions

When did Chanel create their first fragrance?

Chanel N°5 was created in 1921 by perfumer Ernest Beaux under commission from Gabrielle 'Coco' Chanel. It was the first perfume to use synthetic aldehydes as a structural element, creating an abstract floral that smelled unlike any natural ingredient. Coco famously wore nothing to bed but a few drops of N°5 — a comment attributed to Marilyn Monroe cemented its cultural mythology. It has been the world's most recognised perfume for over 100 years.

Who creates Chanel fragrances?

Chanel employs only in-house perfumers — currently Olivier Polge, who took over as head perfumer in 2015 from his father Jacques Polge, who held the role from 1978 to 2015. This unbroken family lineage is unique in perfumery. Chanel also owns 33 hectares of jasmine and rose fields in Grasse through the Mul family partnership, giving them raw materials unavailable to any other house.

What is Chanel's most iconic fragrance?

Chanel N°5 is the most iconic fragrance in history — an aldehydic floral of ylang-ylang, iris, rose, jasmine, sandalwood, and civet created by Ernest Beaux in 1921. Coco Mademoiselle (2001) is Chanel's modern bestseller — a fresh oriental of bergamot, rose, and patchouli. Bleu de Chanel (2010) is their landmark masculine, a cedar-vetiver composition by Jacques Polge that redefined freshness for men.

Is Chanel more expensive than Dior?

Generally yes — Chanel's mainline EDPs start slightly higher than Dior's, and Les Exclusifs are priced above Collection Privée. The price reflects Chanel's Grasse ingredient ownership and their more limited distribution strategy. Chanel is also harder to find as a genuine parallel import, making authentic samples particularly valuable for testing before purchase.

Can I try Chanel fragrances before buying the full bottle?

Yes — The Scent Stories® stocks authentic Chanel samples, miniatures, and tester bottles including N°5, Coco Mademoiselle, Bleu de Chanel, Chance, and more. All are factory-sealed and brand-packaged, shipped worldwide. Sampling is particularly worthwhile with Chanel because reformulation differences between vintages can be meaningful — testing on your skin before investing is always advisable.

₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 450.00 ₹ 900.00 450.0 INR
₹ 800.00 ₹ 1,120.00 800.0 INR
₹ 1,500.00 ₹ 2,100.00 1500.0 INR
₹ 1,500.00 ₹ 2,100.00 1500.0 INR
₹ 1,500.00 ₹ 2,100.00 1500.0 INR
₹ 1,500.00 ₹ 2,100.00 1500.0 INR
₹ 9,500.00 ₹ 12,350.00 9500.0 INR