Every fine fragrance tells you what is inside it. The problem is that the language it uses — vetiver, bergamot, saffron, tonka bean — assumes you already speak it. Most people do not. And that is a shame, because learning to read fragrance notes is one of the more pleasurable forms of literacy available to us. Jade Maya is one of the best places to start.
How Fragrance Notes Work
Fine fragrances are composed in three layers: top, heart, and base notes. The top notes are what you smell in the first few seconds — bright, immediate, and the first to fade. The heart notes emerge as the top notes settle, forming the character of the fragrance. The base notes are the slowest to develop and the longest-lasting — what remains on your skin or in a room hours after the initial encounter. A well-composed fragrance moves through all three layers as a single, continuous experience.
Lemon and Bergamot — The Opening
Lemon is perhaps the most universally legible note in perfumery. Clean, transparent, alive. In Jade Maya it sets the scene: you are outdoors, in moving air, in a place where the vegetation is vivid.
Bergamot is more complex. It is a citrus fruit grown primarily in southern Italy, with an oil unlike any other citrus — bright but also slightly floral, with a green, almost herbal quality underneath. If you have ever drunk Earl Grey tea, you have tasted bergamot. In fragrance, it bridges freshness with the warmer materials that follow. Together, lemon and bergamot open Jade Maya with what feels like a deep breath of clean jungle air.
Vetiver — The Soul of the Fragrance
Vetiver is a grass whose roots grow downward rather than outward — sometimes three metres deep into the soil — which gives the extracted oil a quality no other ingredient replicates. It smells of earth in the most refined sense: dry, woody, slightly smoky, with a coolness underneath that keeps it from feeling heavy. In Jade Maya, vetiver is the note that connects the fragrance to the jungle floor of Chiapas, to the dark soil around the ancient ruins, to something that has been there far longer than we have.
Saffron and Ginger — The Energy of Jade
Saffron in perfumery adds warmth and a subtle, almost leathery richness — a depth that gives the composition gravity. It is a note associated with luxury and rarity: saffron is the most expensive spice in the world, harvested by hand from the stigmas of the crocus flower.
Ginger brings energy. Fresh, slightly spicy, with a brightness that echoes the citrus opening. It is the note that gives Jade Maya its vitality — the quality that the Maya attributed to jade itself.
The Complete Picture
Top notes: lemon, bergamot — fresh, bright, transparent.
Heart notes: vetiver, saffron, ginger — earthy, warm, alive.
Base notes: the depth of vetiver and saffron as they slow and deepen — long-lasting, grounded, unmistakable.
Explore the Jade Maya collection — or start with the Jade Maya Liquid Hand Soap.
IZAPA is a Mexican luxury fragrance brand. Our fine fragrances are created in partnership with a world-renowned French fragrance house, formulated to be 100% vegan, cruelty-free, and free of parabens and phthalates.