Lavender has a faint scent. Lavender is a dry plant that requires little water, and an annual rainfall of 600-800mm is more suitable.


The plant grows faster and requires more water during the greening and budding periods.


Lavender needs less water during the flowering period, the amount of water should be appropriate during the fruiting period.


Winter irrigation or snow cover should be carried out during the dormant period in winter.


Therefore, the ideal distribution of rainfall in a year is to have abundant spring, moderate summer, and sufficient snow in winter.


Lavender has a well-developed root system and likes deep, loose, well-ventilated, and fertile soil rich in silica and calcium.


Acidic or alkaline soils, heavy viscosity, poor drainage, or high water table are not suitable for planting.


Lavender is also known as the "tranquil perfume plant", the flower language is "fragrant".


The whole plant is aromatic and the fragrance remains the same after the plant is dried, and the flowers can be used as scented sachets.


Lavender is also used medicinally and is a good nectar plant.


Lavender has been a common herb since Roman times and is known as the "queen of herbs" because it has the most effects.


Lavender is also known as the "aromatic herb" and is suitable for all skin types, promoting cell regeneration, accelerating wound healing, improving acne, abscesses, and eczema, balancing sebum secretion, working wonders on burns and sunburns, inhibiting bacteria and reducing scars.


Rutan's Light Grey Lavender Perfume This lavender looks at abstraction, and the perfumer uses a clever brush to recreate this lavender on canvas in post-modernist style colors.


The natural lavender petals are deconstructed piece by piece, reconstructed by minimal and straight lines, and the original biting fragrance of lavender is gradually withdrawn, abandoning the tedious details and leaving a large area of white space.


The original bright colors are unstintingly painted out and replaced with large, powdery gray blocks.


A very different post-modern style of painting was born, where the natural product, originally untouched, was artificially given an artistic touch.


The lavender fragrance by Penhaligon is the closest thing to natural lavender, smelling almost unaltered, similar to the original essential oil.


It also uses a "light" approach to lavender, with a light fragrance that avoids the overpowering and penetrating parts of the floral scent.


If you believe in aromatherapy and want to try the sleeping effect of lavender, spray a few sprays on your pillow before going to bed.


Its soft fragrance like a whisper on the pillow will help you fall asleep quickly.


Hermes Blades Lavender Perfume.


The licorice and lavender in this perfume are like a pair of sisters, the two scents have similar parts, and together they can be perfectly articulated as if they have become one to form a whole.


The taste of licorice is bitter-sweet, like a mixture of herbs and honey, bitter in taste but somehow delicious.


The lavender born in this flavor, as if it had been soaked in a medicine jar, became more characterful and exuded deep undertones.


Although named Blade, the aroma as a whole is rounded and unedged, like lavender petals in syrup, and does not give the impression of sharpness or pointlessness.