Browse by application
Japanese OEM raw materials for fragrance
Perfumes, body mists, and fragrance products.
11 ingredients in this view.
Cosmetics · Oils & lipids
Aomori Hiba
Aomori hiba · INCI: Thujopsis Dolabrata Wood Oil
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Camellia Japonica Flower Extract
Tsubaki-hana ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Chamaecyparis Obtusa Extract
Hinoki ekisu · INCI: Chamaecyparis Obtusa Leaf Extract / Chamaecyparis Obtusa Wood Extract
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Citrus Aurantium Amara Extract
Daidai ekisu · INCI: Citrus Aurantium Amara Fruit Extract
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Citrus Junos Fruit Extract
Yuzu kajitsu ekisu
Cosmetics · Oils & lipids
Citrus Junos Peel Oil
Yuzu kahi-yu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Cryptomeria Japonica Leaf Extract
Sugi-ha ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Gettō (Shell Ginger)
Gettō · INCI: Alpinia Zerumbet Leaf Extract
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Lindera Umbellata Branch/Leaf Extract
Kuromoji ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Mentha Arvensis Leaf Extract
Hakka-ha ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Prunus Yedoensis Flower Extract
Sakura-hana ekisu
Source fragrance ingredients from Japan
Browse verified Japanese suppliers in the Cosmetic raw materials catalog with MOQ, regions, and certifications.
FAQ: Fragrance ingredients
Q. Why browse Japanese ingredients by product application?
Browse Japanese ingredients by the type of finished product they fit into — skincare, supplements, beverages, etc. This page lists 11 ingredients tagged with the Fragrance product application, helping formulators and brand planners shortlist candidates by use case rather than by category alone. Examples include Aomori Hiba, Camellia Japonica Flower Extract, Chamaecyparis Obtusa Extract, and Citrus Aurantium Amara Extract.
Sources
- OEM JAPAN — glossary navigation taxonomy
Q. What does 'Fragrance' mean in this glossary?
Perfumes, body mists, and fragrance products.
Sources
- OEM JAPAN — glossary navigation taxonomy
Q. Are all ingredients tagged with 'Fragrance' suitable for the same finished product?
No — application tags signal a relevant product family but not interchangeability. Always check ingredient-specific compatibility (pH stability, solubility, regulatory fit) on the individual ingredient pages and confirm with formulators before substitution.
Sources
- Industry knowledge — cosmetic and food formulation practice
Industry-knowledge claim — not yet pinned to a single primary source