In 1919, the Roaring Twenties were just around the corner. After the war and suffering, it was time for fun. It was at this time that Ernest Daltroff created Tabac Blond. He imagined an avant-garde fragrance for men, inspired by Virginia tobacco, brought back to Europe by the Americans. This fragrance became a symbol of emancipation: women adopted it en masse. Women who fought for gender equality, who wore pants and a boyish haircut, who worked and who smoked chose it and assumed it, as an act of rebellion.

Tabac Blond is also the very first leathery trail. A new olfactory family was born: leathers. Marking the history of the house, Jean JACQUES, Caron's perfumer, decided to develop a collection entirely dedicated to tobacco: Les Beaux Tabacs. An olfactory illusion, since no perfume in this collection is composed of tobacco absolute.

"A true Caron signature, tobacco is infinitely rich. After the ambivalence of Tabac Blond, the opulence of Tabac Noir, the greedy intensity of Tabac Exquis, Jean JACQUES presents the last opus of this collection: Tabac Blanc. Here, it is a fresher, brighter side of tobacco that is explored. Something comforting and enveloping.