01 / Botanical identity
Rose gives a blend instant premium floral recognition.
Rose is positioned for buyers who need a soft, elegant floral direction for relaxation, emotional balance, spa, or premium room fragrance products.
02 / Genus and family
Rosa in Rosaceae gives the material a clear botanical identity.
Clear naming helps buyers specify the material, compare it with other floral profiles, and communicate the source with confidence.
03 / Flower architecture
The bloom is the strongest product signal.
Petals, sepals, and bloom maturity help buyers understand why harvest timing and careful handling affect the final rose impression.
04 / Petal handling
The fragile part is the valuable part.
Rose petals can lose aromatic quality when handled roughly or left too long after harvest. ArtoOil presents rose as a material that needs softness, speed, and care.
05 / Aromatic alcohols
Citronellol, geraniol, and nerol define the rose direction.
Rose aroma is shaped by a group of terpene alcohols, supported by phenethyl alcohol, linalool, and trace compounds that create lift, body, and nuance.
06 / Extraction discipline
The process must protect delicacy rather than force yield.
Rose material needs controlled handling because heat, time, and storage can change the final profile. The production goal is clarity, not just output.
07 / Formulation value
Rose gives emotional softness to wellness blends.
Rose can support calm, elegance, emotional balance, and premium sensory positioning for blends that need a warm floral heart.
08 / Quality read
A good rose direction should feel clean, rounded, and recognizable.
The final quality check looks for a balanced floral body, no harsh green note, and a scent that remains graceful after the first impression.
09 / Product translation
From botanical bloom to a sellable floral product.
Rose can anchor sleep, relaxation, spa, and emotional balance products with a scent customers already understand and trust.
10 / Plant parts
Know which part of the plant shapes the product.
The flower is the sensory center of rose material. Harvest timing changes freshness, softness, and the balance between green, honeyed, and classic rosy notes.
Petals hold the delicate aromatic fraction. They need careful handling because bruising, heat, and delay can flatten the final scent profile.
Sepals protect the bud before opening and help explain botanical maturity, harvest timing, and floral freshness.
Vegetative parts give visual identity and traceability context, but the premium aromatic narrative is concentrated around the bloom and petals.
11 / Dominant aroma chemistry
Key aroma compounds help buyers understand the profile.
Fresh rosy lift and one of the reference alcohols in many rose oil profiles.
Bright floral sweetness, important to the familiar rose impression.
A fresher rose nuance that helps the profile feel less heavy.
Soft floral body, especially important in rose water and rose-derived aromatic products.
A lighter floral-citrus accent that supports diffusion and elegance.
12 / Complete ingredient story
Choose the botanical direction for your next ArtoOil blend.
Use this plant profile to discuss samples, blend direction, aroma positioning, and the production notes your retail or wellness product needs before launch.