Putting scent into language is among the hardest—but most fulfilling—skills a writer can master
Unlike sight or sound, scent exists in the realm of memory and emotion
There’s no shared dictionary for smell, so describing perfume, incense, or petrichor means opening a door to someone’s private emotional archive
Replace generic descriptors with tangible analogies that anchor the abstract in lived reality
Don’t settle designer perfumes for ladies the first word that comes to mind
Ask: what scene, moment, or feeling does this scent conjure?
Does the rose evoke the quiet hush of a grandmother’s bedroom, curtains stirring in afternoon light?
Does the amber note feel like the warmth of a blanket pulled close on a winter evening?
Readers feel them because they’ve lived them, not because they’ve read them
Let your words have weight, warmth, and rhythm
Some scents caress like silk, others slash like citrus zest, and some cling like the memory of a voice you once loved
Consider time too
Does it reveal itself in whispers, like pages turning in a quiet library, or crash into you like a forgotten photograph slipping from an old journal?
Avoid overloading your paragraph with adjectives
Let your metaphor carry the weight, not your adjective list
Say a scent smells "green" instead of "refreshing" and then clarify—like crushed mint underfoot after rain, or the damp bark of a forest tree just after a storm
Make the unseen feel real through concrete detail
Trigger their personal nostalgia
Say: "remember that warmth of fresh bread steaming beside the bakery’s glass?" or "it’s the scent that clung to your aunt’s coat every Christmas Eve"
Fragrance is tied to memory, so let your words unlock that door for others
Truth matters more than polish
Some smells are raw, awkward, or strangely imperfect—and that’s where authenticity lives
Let it be what it is, without adornment
The art lies not in making something sound perfect, but in making it feel real
You’ve given them back a moment they thought they’d lost
