What’s your idea of leather? Ever since my perfumery student days, I’ve associated it with the green-dark paradox of iso butyl quinoline—or perhaps the horse-sweat pungency of cresols. I’ve tried many leather perfumes, but Ganymede redefined what a leather fragrance could be. Created by Quentin Bisch for Marc-Antoine Barrois, it replaces smoke and darkness with light and air. The result feels both ancient and futuristic.
The first impression is mandarin peel tinged with saffron—a brightness so sharp it seems to refract. Then comes the abstraction of leather: smooth, mineral, almost tactile in its absence. The familiar warmth is replaced by a sense of polished stone.
In the heart, violet and osmanthus bridge cool and warm. Violet lends a silken transparency; osmanthus, with its delicate apricot-suede nuance, offers a trace of humanity—the softness of skin. The faint sweetness of immortelle flickers like sunlight on metal, while the woody accord hums in the background—dry, crisp, and luminous. It’s driven by Akigalawood, a Givaudan captive that is impressively diffusive despite its apparent transparency.
As Ganymede develops, it becomes quieter yet more magnetic. Its sillage is not a trail but a series of ongoing explosions, like light particles bursting on skin. The mythic namesake—Zeus’s beloved cupbearer transported to heavens and made immortal—feels apt: this is leather stripped of earthiness, transformed into light.
I often think of Ganymede as the anti-leather. It’s not about seduction or dominance, but about elevation and radiance.
Sadly I can’t wear Ganymede. It lasts too long. A tiny spritz clings for days, surviving showers and scrubs. It’s like listening to a beautiful song on a constant replay. It’s too much—and yet, that persistence is part of its spell.
What about you and Ganymede?
Notes: mandarin, saffron, violet, osmanthus, immortelle, Akigalawood, mineral leather accord.
13 Comments
Nancy Walker: Your most poetic review ever! If the fragrance even approaches your description, it must be thrilling indeed. October 13, 2025 at 9:29am
g bradley: I have been watching Quentin Bisch’s meteoric rise since the get-go, and there’s a loud, bright signature there somewhere. (not necessarily talking about his fetish materials like akigalawood.) The one I have that i both love and illustrates how he wears thin sometimes is 1 Million *le parfum*–which is a deliciously trashy explosion of labdanum, sun block, salt, tuberose, and leather… and which lasts like 4 days. i do love Gucci Guilty Elixir de Parfum Pour Homme though–very very special. October 13, 2025 at 11:04am
Hamamelis: I haven’t smelled Ganymede, but such a long lasting perfume makes me claustrophobic! Your review is beautiful to read though…I am wearing vintage Vol de Nuit in extrait, it fits autumn so perfectly. October 13, 2025 at 1:15pm
Adrienne: I’m wearing Vol de Nuit today too. What a beautiful perfume. October 14, 2025 at 7:00am
Klaas: Oh, vintage Vol de Nuit. My holy grail fragrance. What a glorious choice for our balmy Amsterdam autumn…..geniet ervan!!! October 14, 2025 at 3:37pm
Hamamelis: I haven’t smelled Ganymede, but such a long lasting perfume makes me claustrophobic! Your review is beautiful to read though…I am wearing vintage Vol de Nuit in extrait, it fits autumn so perfectly. October 13, 2025 at 1:16pm
Hamamelis: I haven’t smelled Ganymede, but such a longlasting perfume makes me claustrophobic. Lovely review though! October 13, 2025 at 1:18pm
Hamamelis: Apologies for all these comments…Ganymede-like I suppose 🙂 October 14, 2025 at 2:50am
Cheryl G: I bought this for my son as it was an immediate yes from both of us…because it is different. I’ll catch a whiff of it on him and inquire. Sure enough it’s Ganymede. My response is always,
“Of course!” It’s a shapeshifter and unique. October 13, 2025 at 1:54pm
Neva: I bought Ganymede as soon as it was launched and I was overwhelmed by its originality. I wore it one summer and I smelled all the subtle nuances that you describe so wonderfully. Next summer all I smelled was metal and cold stone and I couldn’t wear it ever since. The subtler and in my opinion the more wearable version is Bois Imperiale from Essential Parfums, also a creation by Quentin Bisch. Have you tried it? October 14, 2025 at 5:01am
Adrienne: I’m so glad that you’re writing more perfume reviews. You’re the best reviewer for me. I learn a lot from your posts and I enjoy reading you. October 14, 2025 at 6:59am
Carolina: Great review! Your description of the leather impression in Ganymed helped me to understand it better and to appreciate it more. Funnily, my first reaction was thinking of it as asphaltic-leather or metallic-asphalt. I need to revisit because I really liked my time wearing the fragrance. October 14, 2025 at 10:27am
Klaas: To me, Marc Antoine Barrois’ perfume line is one of the most exciting of its kind. His association with Quentin Bisch turns out to be a match made in heaven. So original, so well made, so exciting, and in spite of being devisive his brand is hugely successful. Such an achievement!!
I haven’t tried all of the fragrances, but from the ones I did try Ganymede seduced me the least. I much prefered B683 (both EDP and extrait) and especially Enscelade, the intergalactic vetiver/rhubarb BOMB. I own a small bottle but like you I’m almost put off by its staying power. No fragrance should last that long!
I’d love to smell their latest, Aldebaran……would you review it? October 14, 2025 at 3:36pm