Jean Kerleo spent thirty-one years as the in-house perfumer at Jean Patou. He created 1000 in 1972, Sublime in 1992, and co-founded the Osmothèque in Versailles — a physical archive of perfumes that no longer exist. A man who preserved scents for posterity accepted a commission, in 1996, from a designer who once told AnOther Magazine he didn't really like any perfume.
The result was Yohji.
I own the 15ml parfum. Splash format, not spray. This matters more than it should. Spraying distributes a fragrance evenly across skin. Splashing concentrates it. You dab on pulse points and the opening arrives unevenly, galbanum landing sharp and metallic in one spot while the fruit notes bloom somewhere else. This is not a fragrance that announces itself uniformly.
Galbanum was already unfashionable by 1996. The market belonged to aquatics and transparencies: L'Eau d'Issey in 1992, CK One in 1994, all that clinical freshness designed to smell like clean rather than like anything in particular. Kerleo's choice of galbanum works the way Yamamoto chose black as a default palette. Not because it was easy, but because it communicated refusal. One retrospective called it "an act of deliberate counter-programming," and that phrase is exactly right.
Then the heart opens.
Dark fruit, compressed and ink-like, stripped of sugar. Heliotrope and jasmine underneath, structural rather than sweet. The base: vanilla, sandalwood, benzoin, and coumarin at concentrations that pre-IFRA regulations permitted and modern reformulations cannot touch. The dry-down is creamy and melancholic and lasts twelve hours minimum on skin. Longer on fabric. Some collectors insist the parfum reaches its truest expression on a wool scarf, where slower evaporation reveals depths that body heat obscures.
The contradiction is structural. The opening is austere, almost architectural in its precision. The base is intimate and enveloping. The fragrance moves from distance to closeness as it develops, from something that pushes you back to something that draws you in. Yamamoto's collaborator Caroline Fabre-Bazin described his garments as offering "shelter." The parfum operates on the same principle. It does not seduce. It rewards patience. Something comforting lives inside something haunting, and neither quality cancels the other.
The glass column beside its clear acrylic case is the eau de toilette, not the parfum. The 30ml spray, Yamamoto's signature running vertically along the body, the packaging giving nothing away. No gold, no ornamentation, no attempt to signal luxury through conventional codes. The glass itself is the statement. Thin-walled and elegant, the lettering prone to wear on bottles that have actually been handled, which is how collectors distinguish preservation quality. The parfum came wrapped in tissue paper inside the same architectural box. I remember unwrapping mine with the kind of care you reserve for things you suspect you will not find again.
That suspicion proved correct. Patou held the fragrance license, and when P&G acquired the house, the entire Yohji line disappeared by 2005. A reissue surfaced in 2013, reformulated by Givaudan's Olivier Pescheux. The IFRA restrictions on coumarin alone make faithful reproduction structurally impossible. What Kerleo built required ingredients at concentrations modern regulations prohibit.
He died in July 2025, aged ninety-three. The Osmothèque he co-founded now holds more than 4,000 perfumes, including 800 that exist nowhere else. I don't know whether the original Yohji formula is among them.
The parfum concentration has zero reviews on Parfumo. Not one. Not because it is inferior to the EDT, which has hundreds, but because almost nobody owns it. The 15ml splash was always the rarest format. Rarity compounds after discontinuation. What I have is something fewer people will smell with each passing year, as bottles empty or degrade or disappear into collections that never get opened. There is a particular quality to wearing a fragrance that is leaving the world. It shares something with what sealed bottles preserve about time held in suspension, except this bottle is not sealed. I wear it. It diminishes.
Sources
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Perpetual Revolution: The Paradox of Yohji Yamamoto - AnOther Magazine
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Yohji by Yohji Yamamoto (1996) - Raiders of the Lost Scent
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Jean Kerléo - Wikipedia