The workshop
in pictures
Finished flacons, presentation vials, Grasse raw materials, filling lines, shipping pallets. A visual walk through the daily matter of INTERESSENS — no names, no clients, no faces. Only the craft, its tools, its gestures and its Provençal landscapes. Each image bears witness to a know-how forged for thirteen years at the heart of global perfumery.
Ten plates,
one workshop
This gallery gathers ten views chosen from the daily life of the house. They show what an ISO 22716 filling workshop based in Montauroux — thirty minutes from Grasse — actually looks like: the sensitive matter of perfume before it leaves for its markets.
You will find the four silhouettes we produce — presentation vial, signature roll-on, signature mini-spray and edition flacon — as well as the raw materials that feed our compositions: Grasse rose, Provence lavender, notes inherited from eight centuries of regional savoir-faire.
The last plates show less glamorous but equally essential steps: the Sollas line for crimping and final packaging, pallet storage, logistics preparation, ADR road loading, and IMDG air export to the GCC and Asia-Pacific.
A house
in the light










What
the images don't show
Behind every plate, invisible steps: olfactive composition, sample iterations until final validation, quality control before crimping, regulatory export documentation — safety data sheets, IFRA declarations, CLP, REACH and EC 1223/2009 compliance, ADR declarations for road, IMDG for sea and air.
So many gestures that make the difference between a perfume packaged and a perfume packaged properly. For a workshop visit — olfactive validation, packaging review, quality audit — we welcome our partners by appointment, at Le Plan Oriental in Montauroux, thirty minutes from Grasse and one hour from Nice-Côte d'Azur. Visits are conducted under NDA by default; no client identity, no third-party formula is ever disclosed.
To go further, see the filling & packaging page, the turn-key project page, or our samples & mini formats service.
