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Etat Libre d'Orange

Etat Libre d'Orange — translating as 'Free State of Orange' — was founded in Paris in 2006 by Etienne de Swardt, a former marketing director who deliberately rejected every convention of luxury fragrance marketing: the aspirational lifestyle imagery, the celebrity face, the minimalist bottle, the euphemistic name. De Swardt's vision was a fragrance house that treated its customers as intellectually serious adults capable of engaging with provocation, complexity, and explicit naming. Tom of Finland — named for the Finnish illustrator whose homoerotic drawings defined a certain masculine aesthetic — Secretions Magnifiques — with its genuinely transgressive notes that mimic biological secretions — and Putain des Palaces ('Hotel Whore') announced the house's refusal to make comfortable decisions.

Etat Libre d'Orange works with some of perfumery's most respected independent practitioners. Tilda Swinton collaborated with perfumer Mathieu Nardin to create Like This (2010) — a warm, autumn composition of pumpkin, ginger, mandarin, and heliotrope over vetiver, frankincense, and vetiver that became one of the decade's most admired celebrity collaboration fragrances for its genuine artistic ambition. Antoine Lie created Secretions Magnifiques (2006) — a marine-floral composition using lactone molecules, blood notes, and metallic accords that achieved genuine transgression by smelling of biological reality rather than abstracted fantasy.

Like This (2010) — Tilda Swinton's collaboration with the house — is arguably the most critically admired celebrity fragrance ever created: a warm autumn composition of pumpkin, ginger, and vetiver that won a Fragrance Foundation Award and is regularly cited by perfume critics as one of the finest feminines of its decade. Secretions Magnifiques (2006) is the house's most controversial composition — genuinely transgressive olfactive territory that has attracted both devoted adherents and horrified rejection. Tom of Finland (2008) — leather, cigarette, and warm musks — is a straightforward, well-constructed masculine that its provocative name does a disservice.

Etat Libre d'Orange occupies premium niche luxury — EDPs from €120-€180 — with a brand identity so clearly defined that their customer is self-selecting: those who find comfort in fragrance houses with something to say.

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

Etat Libre d'Orange — Common Questions

Who founded Etat Libre d'Orange?

Etat Libre d'Orange was founded in Paris in 2006 by Etienne de Swardt, a former luxury marketing director who deliberately rejected every convention of luxury fragrance: aspirational imagery, celebrity faces, euphemistic names. His vision was a house that engaged with intellectual provocation rather than comfortable aspiration. Names like Tom of Finland, Secretions Magnifiques, and Putain des Palaces announced this philosophy from the first.

What is Like This by Tilda Swinton?

Like This (2010) is the most critically admired celebrity fragrance collaboration in modern perfumery — created by Tilda Swinton and perfumer Mathieu Nardin as a personal expression of a specific autumn afternoon feeling. Pumpkin, ginger, mandarin, and heliotrope over vetiver, frankincense, and musk create a warm, unique composition that won a Fragrance Foundation Award. Swinton's genuine creative involvement — rather than a commercial endorsement — gives it artistic credibility that most celebrity fragrances lack entirely.

Is Secretions Magnifiques actually transgressive?

Yes — Secretions Magnifiques (2006) by Antoine Lie uses lactone molecules, blood notes, metallic accords, and marine elements to create a composition that genuinely smells of biological reality: skin, sweat, blood, and sea. The reaction is polarising in the extreme — some find it intimately beautiful; others find it disturbing. De Swardt created it as a philosophical statement about what fragrance is for, and it has succeeded in that provocation beyond most contemporary conceptual art.

How does Etat Libre d'Orange compare to Serge Lutens and Comme des Garçons in provocative niche?

All three represent the intellectual extreme of Parisian niche perfumery. Serge Lutens is the most aesthetically coherent — his entire visual and olfactive world is consistent and beautiful. Comme des Garçons Parfums is the most fashion-concept-driven. Etat Libre d'Orange is the most explicitly transgressive — their naming and marketing deliberately court controversy rather than elegance. For fragrance enthusiasts who want their house to have genuine social and artistic courage, ELdO is the most consistently provocative.

Can I try Etat Libre d'Orange fragrances as samples?

Yes — The Scent Stories® stocks authentic Etat Libre d'Orange samples and miniatures including Like This, Rien, Charogne, and more. All are factory-sealed and brand-packaged, shipped worldwide. In-skin sampling is particularly important with ELdO — their transgressive compositions perform significantly differently on skin versus paper.

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