Skip to Content

Diptyque

Diptyque was founded in Paris in 1961 by three friends: Christiane Montadre-Gautrot, a fabric designer; Desmond Knox-Leet, a British painter; and Yves Coueslant, a stage director. Their shared artistic backgrounds — visual art, textiles, theatre — shaped the company's founding identity: objects of aesthetic beauty rather than functional commodities. The first boutique at 34 Boulevard Saint-Germain sold fabric prints and objects d'art before a signature candle in 1963 became unexpectedly popular, leading to the candle and fragrance business that now defines the brand. The name Diptyque references the three founders — Desmond, Yves, Christiane — and the artistic practice of the diptych. The brand is owned by Manzana Group (Italian private equity) since 2005.

Diptyque works with a small group of perfumers whose creative briefs typically originate from Fabienne Pons (formerly) and Olivia Giacobetti — one of the most celebrated natural-material perfumers in the industry. Giacobetti created Philosykos (1996) — a composition built on the fig tree (the tree as much as the fruit): fig leaf, fig wood, and fig milk creating something simultaneously green, milky, and woody that smells of the tree rather than the fruit. Tam Dao (2003), inspired by a Vietnamese sandalwood forest, uses sandalwood, cedar, rosewood, white musk, and cypress. L'Ombre dans l'Eau (1983), by Jacqueline Cavallier-Lebret, uses blackcurrant bud and Bulgarian rose in a green-aquatic-floral of extraordinary freshness.

Philosykos (1996) is Diptyque's most celebrated composition — the fig tree fragrance that Olivia Giacobetti created by smelling every part of the tree rather than just the fruit. Fig leaf, fig wood, and fig milk together create something that smells of the tree standing in a Provençal garden rather than anything you might find in a perfume catalogue. Tam Dao (2003) — sandalwood, cedar, rosewood, white musk, and cypress — is the house's most meditative masculine-leaning composition, beloved by fragrance connoisseurs for its quietly extraordinary sandalwood quality. Do Son (2005), inspired by a Vietnamese coastal town where jasmine and tuberose meet sea salt, is the house's most wearable and accessible feminine.

Diptyque occupies premium niche luxury — EDPs and EDTs from €120-€180 — with a genuine artistic identity that no other mainstream niche house matches. Their candle business (from €50-€95) makes the brand accessible as a lifestyle object before fragrance; many fragrance wearers come to Diptyque through the candles.

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

Diptyque — Common Questions

When was Diptyque founded and by whom?

Diptyque was founded in Paris in 1961 by three friends: Christiane Montadre-Gautrot (fabric designer), Desmond Knox-Leet (British painter), and Yves Coueslant (stage director). Their first boutique at 34 Boulevard Saint-Germain sold fabric prints and art objects before a candle in 1963 became unexpectedly popular, pivoting the brand toward fragrance. The name references both the three founders and the artistic diptych. The brand is owned by Italian private equity group Manzana since 2005.

What is Philosykos and why is it so admired?

Philosykos (1996) — meaning 'lover of the fig tree' in Greek — was created by Olivia Giacobetti by smelling every part of the fig tree, not just the fruit: leaf, bark, wood, and milk. The result — fig leaf (green, slightly bitter), fig wood (warm, woody), and fig milk (creamy, lactonic) — smells of the tree standing in a Provençal garden rather than anything perfumers had tried to capture before. It is regularly cited by perfumers and connoisseurs as one of the most original compositions of the 1990s.

Who is Olivia Giacobetti?

Olivia Giacobetti is one of the most celebrated natural-material perfumers in the industry, known for compositions of extraordinary botanical accuracy and transparent freshness. Her work for Diptyque — Philosykos, Tam Dao (co-creation), Do Son — demonstrates her ability to smell the world as a painter sees it: specifically, without preconception. She also created Hermès Concentré d'Orange Verte and Premier Figuier for L'Artisan Parfumeur, establishing a fragrance career of remarkable consistency and botanical innovation.

How does Diptyque compare to Jo Malone and Byredo in the lifestyle niche space?

All three are premium lifestyle niche houses with strong aesthetic identities beyond fragrance. Diptyque is the most artistically grounded — founded by painters, fabric designers, and theatre directors, their fragrances have a visual art quality. Jo Malone is the most British and botanical, with the layering system as its unique contribution. Byredo is the most Scandinavian-fashion-forward, with minimal aesthetic and cultural references. Diptyque's candles create a lifestyle entry point that neither Jo Malone nor Byredo replicates as effectively.

Can I try Diptyque fragrances before buying?

Yes — The Scent Stories® stocks authentic Diptyque samples, miniatures, and tester bottles including Philosykos, Tam Dao, Do Son, L'Ombre dans l'Eau, and more. All are factory-sealed and brand-packaged, shipped worldwide. Diptyque fragrances are particularly rewarding to sample in skin — Philosykos's green fig-wood character and Tam Dao's sandalwood meditation both evolve significantly over 4-6 hours, revealing compositional layers that short testing cannot capture.

No product defined

No product defined in this category.