Enjoying the Sweet Scent of Natural Perfumery

Providence perfumer Charna Ethier creates elegant, all-natural fragrances through her company

Share
Enjoying the Sweet Scent of Natural Perfumery
Copy

Charna Ethier founded Providence Perfume Co. in 2009. The New Hampshire native, the daughter of “hippie farmers,” has created a line of natural botanical fragrances. As an adult she worked for large fragrance companies and wondered why there were few fragrance options available for consumers who loved the scent of flowers and real plants.

Providence Perfume is the result, an all-natural line that has provided Ethier with the smell of success.

Here is a conversation with Ethier. The full interview can be found here.

Charna Ethier calls natural perfumery a combination of art, science and alchemy because it is a creative endeavor.

“The fact that I’m an independent small, you know, niche perfumer means that I pretty much get to do what I want, and tell stories through my fragrances, which is what I do,” she says.

Charna Ethier
Charna Ethier

Not only does Ethier tell stories. She also is like a fragrance guide.

“And people definitely need it more when smelling natural perfume because they’re not used to natural smells anymore,” she says. “Our entire life is surrounded with synthetic fragrances from our laundry detergent, to our hair products, or whatever.

“They might think they don’t like something, but they’ve never smelled the natural version of it. So it’s really like, kind of an educational process.”

While perfume may seem to be mysterious, it really boils down to three categories when looking at ingredients — top notes, heart notes (also called middle notes) and base notes.

Ethier says when creating a perfume, it is ideal to choose ingredients from all three categories.

“Top notes are what you smell first,” she says. “So in natural perfumery, top notes tend to be citrus, spice, herbs, things like that.

“Heart notes are what they sound like. They form the heart of the fragrance,” Ethier adds. “And so heart notes are almost always flowers.

“And then base notes are things like woods and resins. You know, vanilla, patchouli, frankincense, vetiver, things like that.”

Ingredients from all three categories are needed to make the perfect blend.

“Fragrance is really magical,” Ethier says. “I really love the magic of what fragrance does for me and how it can make me feel.

“I think the magic of fragrance is related to memory and the strong tie that our sense of smell has with our memories.”

Ethier said the farm she grew up on was “more like a commune.”

“I spent a lot of time outdoors as a kid,” she says. “I collected acorns and, you know, so I was kind of that type of kid. So I was always familiar with natural smells and kind of drawn to nature.”

“My goal is to ditch the past hippiness and embrace a more modern style of natural perfumery,” Ethier chuckles.

A $300 million payment dispute and a 2024 blade failure fuel a high-stakes legal fight over the future of the project
Getting up the East Side once meant horses, cable cars and ingenuity. Now, it usually means walking
The power politics of a vacancy on Rhode Island’s highest court
The explosion, which sent 13 people to the hospital, was caused by ethanol vapors accumulating in an oven, according to the Rhode Island State Fire Marshal
Based in East Greenwich, Dewetron specializes in high-tech measurement equipment
Anonymous letters claimed a judge threw cases in favor of a prosecutor he was seeing romantically. A court-appointed investigator found no evidence to support the allegations