After upcycling was embraced by fashion and cosmetics, it's now proving to be a new playground for perfumers who not only aim to do better for the plane but are increasingly using waste to concoct new scents
Upcycling consists in giving an added value to objects or materials destined to be thrown away, in order to reduce waste. Image: TECHNICOFLOR
Previously destined for a life in the trash, strawberry residue, tangerine peels, and carrot seeds are now part of the new olfactory palette of the fragrance world. After upcycling was embraced by fashion and cosmetics, it's now proving to be a new playground for perfumers who not only aim to do better for the plane but are increasingly using waste to concoct new scents.
Upcycling consists in giving an added value to objects or materials destined to be thrown away, in order to reduce waste. This process has already attracted the fashion industry, which uses fabric scraps and unsold items to create new collections, as well as the cosmetics industry, which uses seeds, pits and other waste materials from the food industry to develop formulas for new beauty products. The advantages of upcycling are such that now it's the turn of the fragrance industry to take up this method which looks to further push the limits of the circular economy.
Why throw away clementine peels or strawberry residue when they can be used to create the fragrance that will enchant your evenings out in the future? Many perfumers are now turning to waste materials to create new scents. And if upcycling seems remote from the luxury and glamour image of perfumery, it actually embodies the future of a sector that is reinventing itself to become more responsible, and even more virtuous.
Family group TechnicoFlor, specialized in the creation and manufacture of aromatic compositions for the perfume and cosmetics industries, has just unveiled a debut collection of perfumes essentially based around upcycling. What does that mean in concrete terms? No less than eight responsible fragrances developed by its perfumers, who have taken up the challenge of integrating an upcycled raw material into each composition. And among the selected ingredients are some that are unexpected and surprising, to say the least.