Ysayo: Antoine Lie And The Puredistance Travelled

Ysayo

I started wearing Puredistance Ysayo Extrait de Parfum in December last year. And I thought I had it all figured out in terms of my thoughts on this 2025 release from the Dutch niche brand. But then I interviewed its creator, Antoine Lie, in January and that changed. For the better.

Ysayo - Antoine Lie
IMAGE: Puredistance.

Antoine Lie scored numerous big commercial hits before he became an independent perfumer in 2018. Whether you’ve worn them or not, there’s a good chance you’ve come across creations such as:

+ Ralph Lauren Romance For Men EDT (1999)

+ Elizabeth Arden Beauty EDP (2002)

+ Versace Crystal Noir EDP (2004)

+ Armani Code EDT (2004)

+ Van Cleef & Arpels First Premier Bouquet EDP (2007)

+ Avon Far Away Exotic EDP (2012)

+ Tom Ford Café Rose EDP (2012)

+ Pharrell Williams Girl EDP (2014)

+ Davidoff Cool Water Wave EDT (2017)

Versace Crystal Noir EDP
IMAGE: Versace.

Even while working for the big fragrance companies, he was showing his creative flair with Etat Libre d’Orange Secretions Magnifiques EDP (2006) and Comme des Garçons Wonderwood EDP (2010).

Comme des Garcons Wonderwood EDP

Nowadays, Antoine Lie is very much his own man, with his own company, Antoine Lie Olfactive Experience. He can count brands such as Eris Parfums, Houbigant, Les Indémodables and Zoologist among his clients.

Les Endemodables
IMAGE: Les Indémodables.

Without a marketing department in one of the big fragrance firms filtering his thoughts, Antoine Lie speaks his mind directly and is particularly scathing about the industry’s current business model. Which helps explains why projects like Puredistance Ysayo appeal so much to him.

Ysayo

In this interview, we spoke about how he became an independent perfumer, the non-negotiables in the way he works now and the creation of Puredistance Ysayo. It’s not the first fragrance he’s created for the house. In fact, since he started working with brand founder Jan Ewoud Vos, he’s produced standouts such as Black (2013), White (2015), Warszawa (2016), Gold (2019) and Aenotus (2019), among others, for them.

Puredistance Warszawa Extrait

When did you become an independent perfumer?

I began as an independent perfumer in 2018. Actually, I did not really decide on it as such, at first. Before that, I worked with big companies like Givaudan, IFF, and then Takasago from 2011. I don’t want to go into detail, but they decided to get rid of me.

I left Givaudan, because it’s a monster with teams of perfumers all working in one category with some clients, but not the others.

It’s not motivating in terms of inspiration and creativity because everything depends on evaluators, salespeople, marketing people, and consumer testing people. It became very boring and frustrating to me. I left Givaudan to have more freedom, then suddenly I was kicked out of Takasago without anticipating that turn of events.

Antoine Lie
IMAGE: Puredistance.
What did that unexpected turn of events force you to do?

I was forced to interrogate myself. What do I want to do? How do I want to finish my career? Do I want to go back to the big companies?

“I just want to talk with the brand owner. I refuse to talk to people from marketing and consumer testing. Those are my conditions.”

I consider myself as an artist. It means I just want to talk with the brand owner. And I don’t want any filters between me and the brand. I refuse to talk to people from marketing and consumer testing. Those are my conditions.

Because then you don’t think about the brand, you don’t think about the quality, you just think about the test, the analytical results. And then it becomes rational and not emotional.

Antoine Lie and Jan Ewoud Vos in Paris
NO FILTERS: Antoine Lie and Puredistance founder Jan Ewoud Vos in Paris. IMAGE: Puredistance.
And how’s that working for you?

It’s working great. I’ve got plenty of work, plenty of projects. And they respect the way I want to work. They know that there is a creation fee and that my conditions are to work with the dialogue and only with one person.

Do you ever miss working on high-profile projects, such as Armani Code (2004)?

Not at all. It’s even worse now than when I worked with them. They are into result, performance, the cheapest way possible to get the biggest amount of money.

Armani Code was an exception because it was supposed to be a flanker of something that is called Mania for Men. It was not completely formatted to hit the market. You still had, at the time, it’s more than 20 years ago now, humanity in the Armani team, people who have the conviction and power to do this sort of fragrance.

Armani Code
IMAGE: Giorgio Armani.
I’m glad you’re getting to work with clients that buy into your approach. Puredistance seems to get what you do.

It’s a long association that we have. Jan Ewoud [brand founder] gives me his idea that he expresses through words, sentences, pictures and textures. And then I translate what he wants. We’ve had a great fit since we began to work together on Puredistance Black in 2013 and White in 2015, which I developed while I was still at Takasago.

We respect each other because he saw I was completely frustrated with the way I was working, and I needed to have projects like this to allow me to reveal some creativity or some daring intention as well.

Puredistance Warszawa Extrait

When you started working on Ysayo, what kind of fragrance did you imagine in your mind?

I remember that Jan Ewoud showed me visuals. It was about a man with experience in life doing introspection, cerebral in a way. And he showed me textures like underground, caves, where you get water dripping and moss. Darkness, a bit leathery as well.

It was how to mix touches of greenness, spiciness, woods (because it’s very patchouli as well), ambery parts, animalic parts, but without taking over the whole purpose.

Ysayo - Antoine Lie
INSPIRATION: Antoine Lie drew on imagery of a cave to create Ysayo. IMAGE: Puredistance.
Tell us about some of the ways in which you went about differentiating it.

I started to re-smell ingredients that I’d not used a lot before. Blue chamomile is a very specific ingredient – there’s an overdose of it in Ysayo that makes the difference, especially on top.

“Blue chamomile has different inflections. Of course, it’s aromatic, but there’s a touch of soft greenness, also a leathery quality to it.”

What I like about blue chamomile is that it has different inflections. Of course, it’s aromatic, but there’s a touch of soft greenness, there’s also a leathery quality to it. If you remove the blue chamomile, and maybe the celery as well, then you would end up with something a bit more déjà vu, more expected in a way.

The way you source your raw materials, that’s also important to you…

I work with L’atelier Français des Matières and Atelier Fragranze Milano. For Ysayo, I worked with L’atelier Français des Matières because Jan Ewoud wanted the best quality possible in terms of ingredients. I’m also part of the L’atelier team in terms of trying to develop new ingredients, so I guide them to let them know if it’s a good trial, or they must change parameters to get something better.

For the sourcing at L’atelier Français des Matières, Rémi Pulverail is in charge. He was a buyer for Givaudan, like, maybe 15 or 20 years ago. So he knows exactly where the good sources for ingredients are because he’s travelled the world.

Antoine Lie and Rémi Pulverail
Antoine Lie and Rémi Pulverail in the laboratory. IMAGE: Puredistance.

For the big companies, they are not just looking for the quality. They are looking for the best quantity at the best price, which is completely different.

For example, Rémy goes to the small producers that have great ingredients with very specific olfactive profiles. Instead of having one lavender oil, like, in a big company, where the buyers buy everything everywhere, and they are mixing all the things, and after that are just adjusting to make sure that it’s going to smell the same as last year… The industrial way.

For consistency?

Yeah, exactly. Rémy decided he wants to give the perfumers who work in his lab the possibility to use different olfactive profiles from, for example, lavender. We have four different lavenders coming from different places in France, all with distinctive profiles.

“If you’re a painter, suddenly instead of having one red, you’ve got nuances on the red.”

You get one that is warm, almost tonka chocolatey. Another one would be sparkling in a way. Some other would be very clean, very aromatic. Depending on the project you have, you may switch from one to another, which [chuckles] if you’re a painter, suddenly instead of having one red, you’ve got nuances on the red.

We are going directly to the source, directly to the producer, respecting them, and we are not trying to negotiate the price like the big company is doing. Basically, they put a lot of pressure on the price on those farmers. That’s the problem. And it’s like this, not just in perfumery, everywhere. That’s why the ingredients we have on our palette are more expensive than the one you can have with some other company.

Puredistance Warszawa Extrait

It makes a difference. It’s a great perfume. The more I wear it, the more I’m enjoying it. I prefer to grow into something more than love it the first time, and then six months later, I’ve gone the other way.

Jan Ewoud was also saying something like that when I last met him.

The interesting thing is that now there is no filter between me and the people who are wearing the fragrance. They are sending me direct messages through Instagram, because I’m open to this and I’m visible on media, because I’ve got people that are taking care of my image as well… It’s not like I want to be present all the time, but when I’ve got something to say, I want to be able to present it in the best way possible.

A lot of people are loving Ysayo, that’s for sure. But it has a strong signature, so some people are going to love it, and others are going to say, “No, it’s not for me at all.” But that’s what I love. You don’t have something in between, like, “Yeah, okay. Well, so what?”

“I prefer it to be categoric in a way. That’s art, that’s the way it should be.”

I prefer it to be categoric in a way [chuckles]. That’s art, that’s the way it should be. In industrial perfumery, it’s the opposite. They just want everybody to love it, even though it smells like something that has already been done before.

Ysayo

MY THOUGHTS ON PUREDISTANCE YSAYO EXTRAIT DE PARFUM

I don’t usually list the raw materials in a fragrance, but for Ysayo (from the Puredistance website), it shows its quality and complexity:

Top notes: Saffron, Galbanum oil Iran, Blue Chamomile oil Egypt, White Artemisia oil Morocco.

Middle notes: Celery oil India, Geranium oil Egypt, Jasmine absolute India, Thyme oil France, Geranium oil Madagascar.

Base notes: Ciste absolute Spain, Patchouli oil Indonesia, leather, Vetiver oil Java and Haiti.

Ysayo

When I first started writing about Ysayo, I was going to focus on the two aspects that really stood out for me: the patchouli and vetivers. My conversation with Antoine Lie gave me a deeper appreciation of what went into the creation of this perfume.

Call it the power of suggestion (or education), but I now pick up more of the blue chamomile and how together with the galbanum (often a heavy-hitter), it gives Ysayo a softly green feel. Blue chamomile is also known for its hay-ish characteristics and that certainly comes through here.

Blue Chamomile
IMAGE: Hermitage Oils.

The interplay between the herbal and aromatic aspects is never obvious, with one shouting out its presence more than the other. The same could be said for the jasmine, with its slightly sweet floralcy in the background.

I love how the spiciness of celery (slightly green too) leads to the more instantly recognisable earthiness of patchouli (a tad chocolate-y to me) and vetivers in the drydown.

Throughout the progression of Ysayo, there’s a leatheriness. This would come from the saffron, blue chamomile and labdanum. No doubt, a synthetic emphasises this side. It’s a smooth, lived-in leather, with just a hint of the animalic.

Ysayo

I wouldn’t hesitate to praise Ysayo for its elegance. But elegance can sometimes imply safe and boring too. With Ysayo’s abundance of character – or as Antoine Lie would call it, “signature” – there’s none of that here.

Ysayo is available from selected retailers worldwide. It can also be ordered from the Puredistance website

Puredistance Divanché: The Luxury Of Time + Nathalie Feisthauer Interview

Puredistance Divanche

The last Puredistance fragrance, Papilio Extrait de Parfum, was released in 2023 and when I thank founder Jan Ewoud Vos for sending me the latest 2025 release, Puredistance Divanché, he tells me to “take my time to enjoy it”.

Puredistance Papilio

Why am I telling you this? Because in a world of fast fragrance – yes, increasingly even in niche, governed by strict, predictable launch schedules and expectations of instant coverage – Puredistance does their own thing. The Netherlands-based company is also unusual in that they appreciate writing about their fragrances.

Puredistance Papilio

I was first exposed to the world of Puredistance and their distinctly non-corporate approach through Papilio, created by one of my favourite perfumers, Nathalie Feisthauer. The Paris-based perfumer is also behind Puredistance Divanché and Puredistance No. 12 (launched in 2021).

Nathalie Feisthauer
IMAGE: Supplied by Nathalie Feisthauer.
FRUITY-FLORAL, BUT SO MUCH MORE

Genre-wise, Puredistance Divanché is a fruity-floral, but that term doesn’t do it justice. The fruity opening may be relatively low key at first, with notes of pear, apple and pineapple, but is increasingly enticing as it develops. The fruitiness continues into the floral bouquet at the heart of the fragrance.

“While characteristically heady, with elements of freshness, it’s not overpowering or overdone.”

Inspired by the beauty of Japanese gardenia, this is primarily a gardenia scent that’s accompanied by champaca India absolute, sambac jasmine India absolute and Tuberose India absolute. While characteristically heady, with contrasting elements of freshness and lushness, it’s not overpowering or overdone.

Puredistance Divanche

Is that magnolia? Actually, it’s the synthetic Hedione HC known for its boosting and magnolia qualities. Another synthetic, Heliotrope, brings powdery creaminess to the mix.

There’s complexity in the drydown via the balsamic warmth of Siam Benzoin Resinoid. Feisthauer heightens the sensuality here using a few ingredients known for their muskiness, including Ambroxan, ambrette and Muscone. The combined effect is warm, slightly floral and sweet, but not animalic.

Puredistance Divanche

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

While a fruity-floral, Puredistance Divanché avoids the oft-pretty sugariness of that genre adroitly. This pure parfum (28%) is a fine example of naturals and synthetics working together. (FYI: all the house’s releases since their 2007 debut created by Annie Buzantian, Puredistance 1, are in pure parfum concentration.)

Puredistance Divanché feels out of sync with many of the current trends in modern niche. This is a particularly good thing – it doesn’t equate quality and parfum concentration with blaring and brash performance.

Puredistance Divanche

INTERVIEW WITH NATHALIE FEISTHAUER

When I contacted the award-winning perfumer, she was on her way to NYC for a project. On her return, she had these things to say about the creation of Puredistance Divanché:

Nathalie Feisthauer

WHEN DID YOU FIRST GET TO KNOW PUREDISTANCE FOUNDER, JAN EWOUD VOS?

It all started with my visit to Parfumerija Lana perfumery store in Zagreb, Serbia. It was directed by an incredible woman, who launched luxury brands in the Balkan countries. She was the one who oriented me towards Puredistance, because she was sure we would do an interesting collaboration together.

I contacted Jan Ewoud and he invited me to Groningen. I met Jan and his wonderful team at their office, which is inside a church. This special encounter really left a mark on my memory.

Puredistance HQ
IMAGE: Puredistance.
WHY WAS THERE WAS A GAP OF ALMOST A YEAR AND A HALF BETWEEN PAPILIO AND DIVANCHÉ?

That’s how long it takes to launch – Puredistance doesn’t launch a fragrance a year.

“Gardenia is often very caricatured.  I love its wet, petal-like quality, with a slightly tropical ambience.”

IT’S NOT THE FIRST TIME YOU’VE CREATED A GARDENIA SCENT. you’ve also created VAN CLEEF & ARPELS gARDENIA pETALE EDP (2009) AND CZAR Gardenia X Nathalie Feisthauer edp (2023). WHY IS THIS FLORAL SO SPECIAL TO YOU?

Gardenia is often very caricatured. It’s an aggressive, fruity, green, lactonic note. But for me, the facet I love about gardenia is the wet, petal-like quality, with gardenia in the air and a slightly tropical ambience.

DID YOU USE REAL GARDENIA IN ITS CREATION?

Gardenia essential oil does not exist. However, we have added other wonderful oils in the gardenia spirit, such as a rare champaca absolute, tuberose absolute and jasmine absolute.

Gardenia
IMAGE: Random Harvest.
WERE THERE ANY DIFFICULTIES IN THE CREATION OF DIVANCHÉ?

Not because there was a story, love at first sight, an obviousness. The brand’s distributor, Sachi, who lives in Japan, had given me a Japanese gardenia concrete as a starting point. It was very interesting because it was the first time someone had given me their own concrete that they’d made, and that’s where it all began.

WILL YOU BE WORKING ON ANOTHER CREATION FOR THE HOUSE?

Puredistance is a quiet luxury brand based on sincerity and long-term relationships. Yes, I’d love to work with them again, but there’s no rush.

Nathalie Feisthauer and Jan Ewoud Vos
MEET ME IN PARIS: Nathalie Feisthauer and Jan Ewoud Vos celebrate the launch of Puredistance No. 12 in 2021. IMAGE: Puredistance.

Puredistance Divanché is available from the following stores worldwide

Puredistance Papilio: A Tale Of Synchronicity

Puredistance Papilio

[Will be doing this Puredistance Papilio post differently. Hope it’s indulgent, rather than self-indulgent.

Visual treatment note: In line with the brand’s policy of minimising waste, I’ve deliberately used the bubble wrap the goods arrived in.]

Niche ain’t what it used to be. That will come as no surprise to you. No need to mention any names but so many brands are increasingly corporate in their approach.

Puredistance Papilio

I’ve wanted to try Puredistance for a long time and got the opportunity when fellow blogger Undina recommended me to the Dutch company (based in the city of Groningen, away from all the hoopla) as part of their PR activities around their latest launch, Puredistance Papilio.

The way I was contacted by brand founder / creative director Jan Ewoud Vos – personal and direct – made an impression from the start. Then the box of goods arrived.

Puredistance Card

It took me a couple of weeks to open and explore it all. I read the book The Story of Puredistance 2002-2022 (written by former blogger Birgit Oeckher of Olfactoria’s Travels fame) until I was ready to try Puredistance Papilio. This passage from the book sums up the Puredistance way rather nicely:

Puredistance Book Extract

I held back on wearing Puredistance Papilio. It arrived at a time when I’ve been struggling with my feelings about another year whizzing by, auditing my achievements  and questioning whether I should continue this blogging thing. (FYI: I do this annually around this time in my own reverse version of seasonal affective disorder.)

The Story of Puredistance Book

One inner voice telling me: “Get on with it, Richard. You need to get this post done. Don’t keep them waiting when they’ve been so kind to send you all these beautiful things.”

Puredistance Bedtime Reading
IN THE SHADOWS: Me reading The Story of Puredistance 2002-2022.

None of which helps matters, of course. So I told myself to take all the time I need to experience Puredistance Papilio. After all, part of the house’s ethos since its debut launch in 2007 has been about slowing down to enjoy the beauty in our world. I also decided not to obsess about notes and ingredients.

A zing of invigorating citric freshness at first.

From high intensity to the lower warm hum of something altogether more intriguing.

Not what I was expecting. But then what I was expecting?

Is that sensual leather?

Florals coming through. Not overpowering or heady variety. No need for performance fascism here.

Warmer and warmer. I can feel my skin almost glowing.

Muskiness in various forms in the drydown, yet those florals (lots of powderiness) keep coming back, as if adding colours.

Beautifully blended without any domineering aspects but each time I wear it (mostly at bedtime), I’m captivated by another aspect.  

Puredistance Papilio Box

Now’s a good time to mention the inspiration for the scent (and I paraphrase from the press release here). Embrace your true nature, as a butterfly would through its various stages of metamorphosis (egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, butterfly).

Puredistance Notebook

How powerful is that. This verse from the poem written by Jan Ewoud that accompanies the perfume especially struck a chord with me. No wonder Nathalie Feisthauer (the independent Paris-based perfumer also created the 2021 release Puredistance No. 12) had tears in her eyes when Jan Ewoud discussed the idea of Puredistance Papilio with her.

Puredistance Papilio Inspiration

The best kind of fragrances should make you feel something. And Puredistance Papilio certainly does that for me in ways that many others haven’t. While self-proclaimed Buddhist Jan Ewoud might see some of my emotions and my identification with the processes of change as attachment and projection, I can’t help feeling that the gifting of this perfume isn’t a mere coincidence. Whether I’m stuck in the chrysalis or liberated in the butterfly stage, that’s another story completely.

Puredistance Papilio

If niche is about absolute quality (ingredients, parfum concentration, collaborations with top perfumers), creativity, limited distribution (less than 100 retailers globally), personal connection, exclusivity and not being part of mindless more, more consumerism, Puredistance gets it so right.

Puredistance Papilio (25% pure parfum) is available in three sizes: 17.5ml spray, 60ml flacon and 100ml flacon (with a leather holder) from selected retailers worldwide.

Puredistance The Magnificent XII Collection
Puredistance Papilio joins The Magnificent XII Collection. There are always 12 fragrances in the range, but the one that sells the least is removed from distribution (but still available from the company directly as part of its “Private Collection”) to make way for the new arrival.