The Prague Post - Scent of luxury: India's jasmine infuses global perfume

EUR -
AED 4.270549
AFN 76.747674
ALL 96.80715
AMD 443.323058
ANG 2.081555
AOA 1066.328417
ARS 1693.675871
AUD 1.769002
AWG 2.096027
AZN 1.971678
BAM 1.959211
BBD 2.342749
BDT 142.135017
BGN 1.956713
BHD 0.438411
BIF 3447.834077
BMD 1.162845
BND 1.509715
BOB 8.037925
BRL 6.195397
BSD 1.16321
BTN 104.649848
BWP 15.54493
BYN 3.376721
BYR 22791.753091
BZD 2.339333
CAD 1.624616
CDF 2575.701046
CHF 0.933555
CLF 0.027388
CLP 1074.421821
CNY 8.221888
CNH 8.214845
COP 4439.740475
CRC 572.787388
CUC 1.162845
CUP 30.81538
CVE 110.964423
CZK 24.151145
DJF 206.661022
DKK 7.468649
DOP 73.549588
DZD 151.429072
EGP 55.243366
ERN 17.442668
ETB 179.601462
FJD 2.636924
FKP 0.879137
GBP 0.87961
GEL 3.137674
GGP 0.879137
GHS 13.227353
GIP 0.879137
GMD 84.300947
GNF 10105.118707
GTQ 8.910513
GYD 243.351589
HKD 9.052227
HNL 30.580582
HRK 7.534649
HTG 152.215011
HUF 380.942073
IDR 19322.348247
ILS 3.783018
IMP 0.879137
INR 104.560132
IQD 1523.326355
IRR 48970.289839
ISK 148.587952
JEP 0.879137
JMD 186.354448
JOD 0.824423
JPY 181.06013
KES 150.297794
KGS 101.690331
KHR 4654.277229
KMF 494.209112
KPW 1046.536743
KRW 1706.300219
KWD 0.356865
KYD 0.969379
KZT 589.726588
LAK 25230.817657
LBP 104056.34454
LKR 359.209215
LRD 206.400875
LSL 19.931008
LTL 3.433577
LVL 0.703393
LYD 6.337366
MAD 10.754858
MDL 19.756226
MGA 5226.985728
MKD 61.653533
MMK 2442.275516
MNT 4135.398457
MOP 9.328421
MRU 46.257851
MUR 53.653584
MVR 17.90933
MWK 2019.86087
MXN 21.254355
MYR 4.799078
MZN 74.317998
NAD 19.930824
NGN 1682.915286
NIO 42.746016
NOK 11.776012
NPR 167.438636
NZD 2.025103
OMR 0.447121
PAB 1.163215
PEN 3.915883
PGK 4.948478
PHP 68.043803
PKR 326.090704
PLN 4.233393
PYG 8067.044955
QAR 4.234036
RON 5.089724
RSD 117.372849
RUB 90.057644
RWF 1686.124591
SAR 4.364967
SBD 9.570899
SCR 17.485444
SDG 699.450957
SEK 10.966374
SGD 1.506926
SHP 0.872435
SLE 26.745127
SLL 24384.266532
SOS 664.563756
SRD 44.817775
STD 24068.534317
STN 24.943016
SVC 10.177807
SYP 12857.557612
SZL 19.930696
THB 37.222402
TJS 10.74191
TMT 4.081584
TND 3.437946
TOP 2.799851
TRY 49.397522
TTD 7.885593
TWD 36.536848
TZS 2865.848983
UAH 49.191367
UGX 4158.203792
USD 1.162845
UYU 45.68994
UZS 13855.292534
VES 287.33633
VND 30670.024887
VUV 142.273077
WST 3.256349
XAF 657.095371
XAG 0.019844
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.142645
XCG 2.096314
XDR 0.817177
XOF 656.428106
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.221101
ZAR 19.907526
ZMK 10466.998126
ZMW 26.724298
ZWL 374.435469
  • RBGPF

    1.2200

    79

    +1.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.28

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    0.0600

    75.19

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.2500

    12.38

    +2.02%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    13.71

    -0.51%

  • RIO

    0.3700

    72.34

    +0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    13.74

    -0.44%

  • SCS

    -0.0100

    16.37

    -0.06%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    39.73

    +0.03%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    75.64

    -0.01%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.43

    +0.47%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    23.37

    -0.51%

  • AZN

    -0.3500

    90.17

    -0.39%

  • GSK

    1.0800

    48.27

    +2.24%

  • BTI

    -0.2000

    57.93

    -0.35%

  • BP

    -0.1500

    36.36

    -0.41%

Scent of luxury: India's jasmine infuses global perfume
Scent of luxury: India's jasmine infuses global perfume / Photo: R. Satish BABU - AFP

Scent of luxury: India's jasmine infuses global perfume

Heady scents fill the air as skilled pickers in India pluck white jasmine before the still fresh buds are rushed for processing into a valuable ingredient for global perfumes.

Text size:

Jasmine only issues its powerful scent when it blooms at night, and pickers must select only the ones yet to open.

"We know which one to pick," said Malarkodi, who gave only one name, as she snapped her fingers carefully to pluck the buds, tucking into her hair a few flowers that had already bloomed.

"There is no use of these... but I like the smell," she said.

Jasmine's fragrant flowers have been used for millennia in India to honour the gods, and the scent is a key part of world-famous perfumes.

In the ancient city of Madurai in southern India, jasmine is omnipresent -- attracting buyers from some of the world's most recognisable perfumes, including J'adore by Dior and Mon Guerlain by Guerlain.

"It is one of the most expensive oils in the world," said Raja Palaniswamy, a director of Jasmine Concrete, which squeezes vast quantities of jasmine to create a few precious drops of delicious-smelling essence.

The women picking the buds earn around $1.50 a day per day for about four to five kilograms -- with each kilogram made up of around 4,000 buds.

Once picked, the jasmine is rushed to market, selling for anything between 200 and 2,000 rupees ($2.40-$24) a kilogram on special days.

- 'Expression of love' -

The jasmine of Madurai, an Asian variety with the scientific name Jasminum sambac, was given a "geographical indication" tag from the World Intellectual Property Organization in 2013, which noted its "deep fragrance".

"It is lush, it is rich, it is vibrant," said Thierry Wasser, perfumer and "nose" at French beauty house Guerlain, speaking to AFP while visiting the jasmine operators.

The jasmine in Madurai has a "smoothness... and something floral which is immutable," Wasser added. Wasser sources the jasmine oil he uses from Palaniswamy's company.

As well as Guerlain, Palaniswamy said his company sells jasmine oil to companies including Bulgari, Dior and Lush.

In Madurai, the bright, white flower can be found in the homes of the city's residents, as strings fastened by women to their hair -- and in the sprawling 14th-century complex of the Hindu goddess Meenakshi, considered the guardian of the city.

Meenakshi is depicted holding a parrot, a bird associated with love.

Every night, people surround a shrine of the goddess with fragrant jasmine flowers as she retires with her husband Shiva in a grand, symbolic ceremony.

"When you understand that the purpose of this flower is the celebration of love and brotherhood and family and friendship; when you smell it, it takes another dimension," Wasser said.

"And to me this flower is the expression of love. Period."

-'Real fragrance' -

The process to extract the oil requires long hours of labour.

The women who pluck the jasmine -- be it for their deity, weddings, funerals or expensive perfumes -– have no time to romance its appeal.

In a jasmine field on the outskirts of the ancient city, women tenderly move the branches of the bush, looking for the perfect bud.

The processing factory runs around the clock in harvest season, with workers raking out fresh-picked flowers and waiting for the oblong-shaped buds to bloom.

"The minute it starts blooming, it starts emitting its fragrance," Palaniswamy said.

Late in the night, as the jasmine's sweet scent fills the air, workers collect the blooms and load them into extractors.

The freshly picked jasmine is immersed in a solvent to absorb the fragrance molecules to give a waxy extract called concrete.

The concrete is further processed with alcohol to remove the waxes carefully, which then results in a potent absolute. This absolute becomes the ingredient in perfumes.

Around 700 kilograms of fresh jasmine is reduced to just one kilogram of oil, selling for around $4,200, Palaniswamy said.

But Amsavalli Karuppuswamy, who runs a stall outside the flower market where she threads flowers into garlands, said the fresh jasmine will always outweigh any oil.

"I will continue to do this job till I die... women like jasmine, so that is why we are doing this," she said.

"The scents are not worth as much as the original jasmine flowers -- nothing can match the real fragrance of the jasmine."

Z.Pavlik--TPP