Rose Damascena Absolute

TL;DR. This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a complex floral scent profile to perfumes, skin care, hair care, and bath products. It can also contribute minor masking effects in formulas with less pleasant base odors.

What does Rose Damascena Absolute do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used primarily as a fragrance material, adding a complex floral scent profile to perfumes, skin care, hair care, and bath products. It can also contribute minor masking effects in formulas with less pleasant base odors.

Is Rose Damascena Absolute clean?

From a clean-beauty perspective, this ingredient is accepted in many natural fragrance systems but carries the usual fragrance caveats. Naturally occurring scent allergens such as geraniol, citronellol, linalool, eugenol, and farnesol can trigger labeling requirements and IFRA limits depending on product type and concentration.

Is Rose Damascena Absolute sustainable?

This ingredient is plant-derived and biodegradable in the way most natural fragrance components are, but it is resource-intensive because large quantities of blossoms are needed for a small yield. Solvent extraction and agricultural inputs are the main sustainability watchpoints, so traceable sourcing and responsible solvent recovery matter.

Is Rose Damascena Absolute COSMOS-approved?

It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when it is made from approved natural raw materials and compliant extraction methods, with solvent residues controlled to the standard. Its Green Chemistry fit is moderate: renewable feedstock and biodegradability are positives, while low yield and solvent processing make it less cleanly aligned than simpler plant oils or fermented ingredients.

How does Rose Damascena Absolute work chemically?

This material is a complex natural fragrance concentrate made up of volatile terpenoid alcohols, esters, phenolics, and waxy nonvolatile fractions, with common markers including citronellol, geraniol, nerol, phenethyl alcohol, eugenol, and farnesol. Use levels are typically well below 1% in finished leave-on products and are guided by IFRA category limits, oxidation control, and allergen declaration thresholds such as 0.001% for leave-on and 0.01% for rinse-off products in the EU.

Last updated 2026-05-15