I keep a drawer of bottles that I rarely open. Not because they're precious in the collector's sense — nobody is bidding on half-used flacons of discontinued Dior — but because each one carries a specific temporal charge that I'm not always prepared to encounter. Opening them is not like playing an old record or flipping through photographs. It's stranger than that, and more destabilising.
The world of 1990 vanished so completely that even infinite resources couldn't reconstruct it. I've written about this before — the cold clarity of realising that entire atmospheres have disappeared without ceremony. But fragrance is unlike almost any other surviving artefact from that period, and it's an idea worth dwelling on.
A compact disc from 1990 plays back identically to how it played in 1990. The data is frozen. It gives you the music but nothing of the room, nothing of the moment, nothing of you. A photograph, if you had one, would show you a surface — a face, a place — but flattened, stripped of dimension and sensation. These are recordings, but they're recordings of information, not of experience.
Fragrance is different. When you open one of those bottles in the drawer, what reaches you is a chemical substance that was actually present in the era you're grieving. Those molecules were manufactured in the late 1980s or early 1990s. They sat in department stores that no longer exist, were worn by people who have aged or died or disappeared from your life entirely. In a very literal sense, you are inhaling something that belonged to that world. It's not a representation of the past — it's a remnant of it.
But here's where the drift comes in. Fragrance degrades. Top notes evaporate over decades. Oxidation shifts the balance of a composition — terpenes and aldehydes break down into new compounds, hydroperoxides forming and collapsing into ketones and alcohols that weren't part of the original design. What you smell when you open a thirty-five-year-old bottle of something is not quite what it smelled like in 1990. It's close — recognisably close — but altered. The signal is still transmitting, but it has wandered. And that wandering is what makes it so uncanny, because it sits in a space that is neither faithful reproduction nor complete loss. It's the past almost reaching you, but not quite. A hand extended across time that falls just short of touching yours.
There's a reason smell does this more violently than sight or sound. The olfactory bulb feeds directly into the amygdala and hippocampus — the brain's emotional and memory centres — without the interpretive detour that visual and auditory signals take through the thalamus. A photograph gives you time to brace yourself. A scent does not. It arrives before you've decided whether you're ready for it, which is why opening an old bottle can feel less like remembering and more like being ambushed.
Jacques Derrida coined the term hauntology in his 1993 work Spectres of Marx to describe the persistence of things that are neither fully present nor fully absent — ghosts in the philosophical sense, not the supernatural one. Mark Fisher later applied the concept to culture and sound, exploring how certain recordings and artefacts carry the residue of futures that never arrived. I've spent time with that framework before, mostly through music. But fragrance may be its most literal expression.
A record from 1981 can be hauntological because it evokes a cultural moment that has vanished. A fragrance from 1990 is hauntological because it is the vanished moment — or what remains of it after thirty-five years of molecular decay. The distinction matters. One is a representation of loss. The other is loss actively happening, right there on your wrist.
And that near-miss is arguably more painful than total absence. If the fragrance were gone entirely, you could grieve cleanly. If it were perfectly preserved, you could close your eyes and almost believe. But instead you get this third thing — a haunted version, a ghost of a scent carrying just enough of the original to remind you of exactly what has been lost, while simultaneously proving that even the physical traces are slipping away.
I wrote recently about objects that outlive their context — things that become unsettling not through decay but through persistence, surviving into a world that no longer makes sense of them. Fragrance fits that description, with a cruel additional dimension. The object isn't merely out of time. It's actively changing while out of time, drifting further from its original state with each passing year. The drawer doesn't preserve the bottles. It slows their departure.
Perfumers understand this intuitively, even if they frame it differently. The IFRA regulations and serial reformulation of classic compositions have been debated exhaustively in fragrance circles, often with genuine anger. People talk about "vintage batches" the way audiophiles talk about original pressings — as though the earlier version contains something sacred that the new one has lost. They're not entirely wrong. But the reformulation debate concerns commercial products altered by manufacturers. What I'm describing is different. It's the slow, unauthorised revision that time itself performs on a sealed bottle. Nobody decided to change what's in there. Chemistry did. And chemistry doesn't care what the bottle meant to you.
I sprayed some Escada Pour Homme the other day — a bottle from approximately 1993, discontinued and long forgotten by anyone who doesn't haunt fragrance forums. The opening was thinner than I remembered. Sharper. Some of the warmth had retreated behind a veil of something slightly medicinal, which I suspect is the aldehydes shifting after three decades. The heart was still there, though. That particular woody amber signature that I associate with a very specific period in my life, when that fragrance was ordinary enough to buy in any department store and unremarkable enough that nobody commented on it. It reached me the way a voice reaches you through a bad phone connection — recognisable, but with parts missing. And those missing parts were precisely what hurt, because they confirmed that even the most intimate physical traces of a period are subject to the same entropy as everything else.
That's what makes vintage fragrance such a powerful hauntological object. It doesn't just represent the passage of time. It enacts it, right there on your skin.
Sources:
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Why Some Fragrances Change Over Time: The Role of Oxidation — International Master in Fragrance Formulations
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Specters of Marx — Wikipedia
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IFRA Standards — International Fragrance Association