Ever Since a Perfumer Taught Me This Secret, People Say I Smell Next-Level Expensive

Throughout my years as a beauty journalist, I've picked up a lot of tips when it comes to perfume. From learning the blueprint of smelling great from Cartier's perfumer (she told me to avoid these perfume mistakes, FYI) to finding out how to make your perfume last longer, I've been let it on a lot of insider hacks and secrets all the way.

Shelf with perfume bottles and makeup products

(Image credit: @pink_oblivion)

However, in more recent years I have been on a quest to find my ultimate signature fragrance and smell totally unique. And through since speaking to perfumers and fragrance experts, I've finally unlocked the cheat code to smelling expensive—and that's by using fragrance enhancers.

What Are Perfume Enhancers?

Escentric molecule 01 perfume bottle on bed linen

(Image credit: @eleanorvousden for Who What Wear UK)

"An enhancer is a perfume specifically made to blend and augment other perfumes. If done well, they can be worn alone as a sheer skin fragrance," says David Moltz, co-founder of D.S. & Durga, which has created one of the most well-known fragrance enhancers, I Don't Know What (£155).

They're designed to be layered with your perfume to enhance the scent even further while making it feel more personalised. "Perfume enhancers are typically used in conjunction with fragrances. It is used as part of 'layering' and provides depth and more projection to a fragrance," says Aamna Lone, fragrance expert with a background in chemistry.

How Do Fragrance Enhancers Work?

"They are designed to help support a fragrance (act as a foundation), envelope the user in a bubble or cocoon of a specific scent and make fragrance personal to each wearer," says Lone.

"In classical perfumery, fragrances have been structured around three main components: top, middle and base notes," says Lone. "However, enhancers tend to be stripped back or completely minimal, and the scent profile is linear throughout wear. It is ingredient-focused and relies on a maximum of four notes or a maximum of two accords."

Some of the most common enhancer ingredients are ambroxan, cetalox or Iso E Super (the key component of Escentric Molecules Molecule 01) and sandalwood. "Iso E Super is probably the most popular enhancer, it has a musky, ambery smell, that works harmoniously with a lot of people," says Lone. "It can also act as a fixative, and it remains on the skin for a substantial time whilst not overstimulating the wearer with its smell." For that reason, it's an ideal fragrance note for migraine sufferers.

How To Use Fragrance Enhancers

Whether you choose to wear them alone or layer with other fragrances, the oppoirtunities are endless.

"Enhancers can be used on their own or, more commonly, as a layering tool to amplify a fragrance’s depth and longevity," says Lone. "If you want to add extra ‘oomph’ to your scent, enhancing its projection and presence for a special occasion, fragrance enhancers are an effective option," she says.

More recently, some enhancers have been developed in roll-on form, such as Cyklar oils, allowing for precise application to various pulse points. These are typically used by themselves and have a weaker projection in comparison to using a fragrance by itself. . They can be used for intimate wear by applying them to lower body pulse points, such as the inner thigh, ensuring that only those in proximity can detect the scent. Finally, enhancers can be used by themselves, if wanting a minimal, clean skin scent sort of profile. In this use, they could be used in professional settings as the sillage isn’t huge and projection remains intimate to the user.

The Best Fragrance Enhancers

Perfume bottles on fabric

(Image credit: @eleanorvousden for Who What Wear UK)

1. Escentric Molecules Molecule 01

2. D.S. & Durga I Don't Know What

3. Glossier You

4. DedCool Dedcool Milk Layering + Enhancer

5. Juliette Has A Gun Not A Perfume

6. Frédéric Malle Acne Studios Par Frédéric Malle

7. Phlur Missing Person

8. Le Labo Another 13

9. Byredo Blanche

10. Zara Energetically New York

11. Jones Road Shower

Eleanor Vousden
Beauty Editor, Who What Wear UK

Eleanor Vousden is the beauty editor for Who What Wear UK. She was previously deputy editor at Hairdressers Journal, health writer at Woman & Home and junior beauty editor at Powder. She has also contributed to Wallpaper and Elle Collections.With a degree in fashion journalism from the London College of Fashion, she has 10 years of industry experience and has been highly commended at the BSME Talent Awards for her work on Powder and also contributed to the title winning Website of the Year at the PPA Awards.Eleanor’s journalistic focus is providing readers with honest and helpful beauty content. She has interviewed celebrity makeup artists, hairstylists and dermatologists throughout her career, as well as celebrities such as Hailey Bieber, Sarah Jessica Parker and Scarlett Johansson.