UP TO 80% OFF SITEWIDE + 25% OFF WITH CODE: PRIME

UP TO 80% OFF SITEWIDE

+ 25% OFF WITH CODE: PRIME

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20 ml
20 ml
20 ml
20 ml
20 ml
20 ml
20 ml

White Lotus

$15 $20 Save 25%

WITH CODE: PRIME

4.9

Inspired by the iconic Four Seasons® hotel lobby scent, White Lotus Fragrance Diffuser Oil brings the essence of a serene luxury retreat in a lush rainforest into your home. This exotic, multi-layered aroma infuses your space with tranquility, elegance, and timeless sophistication.  Read more

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Low stock
99% Sold
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Features

• Formulated in the USA 🇺🇸

• Safe for pets, kids, artwork and furniture

• Preserve the oil’s benefits when used with Scentiment®️ Diffusers

FAQ

What makes Scentiment®️ fragrance oils unique?

Scentiment®️ fragrance oils are made from the world’s finest ingredients, expertly blending therapeutic-grade essential oils with premium, perfume-quality fragrance oils. Our luxury fragrance collection is thoughtfully designed to recreate the signature scents of five-star hotels, capture the allure of iconic designer perfumes, and bring the warmth of seasonal aromas into your home.

What ingredients are in Scentiment®️ fragrance oils?

Our fragrances are thoughtfully designed to never include harsh chemicals. We avoid ingredients known to cause potential harm to health or the environment, and each scent is ethically sourced.

Are Scentiment®️ fragrance oils safe?

Yes, our fragrance oils are safe to use around people, pets, plants, and furniture. 100% free of all Parabens, Formaldehyde, Color Additives, Synthetic Dyes, and Preservatives.

How long will the fragrance oils last?

When used at the recommended settings of 4 to 8 hours per day, a 50 ml fragrance oil bottle will last approximately 30 days in our Scentiment Diffuser. Length of time may vary on the usage and fragrance concentration, and intensity.

Luxury in Every Note
From the first impression to the final linger, each scent is crafted with high-end, layered notes that bring depth, warmth, and elegance to your space.

Wild Fig

Wild fig in perfumery is not a single extract but a composed accord built around the whole fig tree (Ficus carica) rather than the fruit alone — the leaf, the milky sap, the warm bark, and the ripe pulp all together. Because no part of the tree yields a faithful essential oil at commercial scale, the note is reconstructed from a small group of aromachemicals that perfumers have used since the 1990s. The signature material is stemone, a Givaudan captive that smells green, sappy, and faintly minty, paired with gamma-octalactone or gamma-decalactone for the creamy, milky, almost coconut-like sweetness of unripe fig flesh. A touch of cedarwood or cashmeran adds the dry, sun-warmed bark; small green notes like cis-3-hexenol bring leaf realism. The combination was made famous by L'Artisan Parfumeur's Premier Figuier in 1994 (Olivia Giacobetti) and codified by Diptyque's Philosykos in 1996, which set the modern stemone-lactone template still used today. The result smells green, milky, and slightly bitter on top, with a warm woody-coconut softness underneath — the precise impression of standing under a fig tree in late summer. "Wild" fig pushes the accord toward the leafier, more shaded end of that spectrum: less ripe fruit, more crushed leaf and sap. It pairs naturally with cedar, vetiver, and almond in Mediterranean structures, and with white musk for a soft, sun-on-skin drydown. It is one of the most evocative landscape notes in modern perfumery — a whole tree compressed into a single accord.

Vetiver

Vetiver is one of the most important woody-earthy materials in perfumery — a viscous, dark amber oil steam-distilled from the dried roots of Chrysopogon zizanioides, a tropical grass native to India (where it's known as khus) and now cultivated mainly in Haiti, Java, and the island of Reunion. Roughly 100 kilograms of cleaned, sun-dried roots are required to produce a single kilogram of essence, which is why fine vetiver oil ranks among the costliest natural raw materials. Haitian vetiver is the most prized for perfumery: smoky, woody, faintly grapefruit-rosy, with a clean smoothness that wears beautifully on skin. Java vetiver is darker and more aggressively earthy — sometimes described as smelling like grilled bacon and damp soil — while Bourbon vetiver from Reunion is finer, with a soft rosy facet, though now largely commercially extinct. The key odorants are khusimol, vetiverol, and the vetivones, which together create that signature mossy-rooty character. In a composition, vetiver is a base note that grounds the entire pyramid. It can read masculine and dry (Guerlain Vetiver, 1959) or modern and almost crystalline (Frederic Malle Vetiver Extraordinaire, 2002), depending on whether the perfumer leans into the smoky-earthy or the clean-woody side. It pairs naturally with citrus, leather, tobacco, iris, and cedar, and it's a quiet anchor in countless masculine and unisex compositions where it provides the sense of soil, root, and quiet authority.

Sandalwood

Sandalwood is one of perfumery's most prized wood notes — a creamy, milky, soft-resinous material distilled from the heartwood of Santalum album, an evergreen tree native to southern India and now also cultivated under tight regulation in Western Australia, where Santalum spicatum and plantation-grown S. album have become the primary sustainable sources. The Mysore region of Karnataka produced the legendary East Indian sandalwood that defined the note for most of the twentieth century; overharvesting led to strict export controls, and most modern fine fragrance now relies on Australian plantation oil. The scent is unmistakable: warm, smooth, lactonic, with a soft cedar-like dryness and a hint of sweet rosin. It has none of the sharp, sappy edge of fresh-cut pine — it reads as polished, almost milky, with skin-like warmth. The key odorant is santalol, which carries the characteristic creamy facet; sustainable synthetics such as Javanol and Ebanol now fill in where natural oil is scarce, delivering a brighter, more diffusive sandalwood signature. In a composition, sandalwood is a base note that fixes and softens almost everything it touches. It rounds out rose and jasmine, mellows the sharpness of citrus and spice, and forms the creamy backbone of countless oriental and woody compositions — from chypres to modern skin scents. It pairs naturally with vanilla, oud, iris, vetiver, and cardamom, and gives a fragrance the unmistakable sensation of warm wood worn close to the body.
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