



You spray a perfume and it says “I’m here!”
Two hours later you think, “Where did it go?”
You roll or dab a fragrance oil and it says nothing loud.
But five, six, eight hours later, it’s still on your wrist.
That difference is the whole reason oil-format fragrance keeps showing up in personal care, home fragrance, candles, hotel scenting, even private-label perfume. And it’s exactly the format I’Scent works with every day as an OEM/ODM fragrance oil & perfume raw materials manufacturer.
Below is the full rundown — with real product pages linked — so you can plug it straight into your site.
At the root, you’re comparing a concentrated, oil-based scent with a scent diluted in ethanol/water. One is built to stay. The other is built to project.
| Aspect | Fragrance Oil (Oil-Based) | Alcohol-Based Perfume / Spray | 
|---|---|---|
| Typical longevity on skin | ~6–12 hours; some blends hold even longer in mild weather | ~4–6 hours before re-spray feels needed | 
| Evaporation speed | Slow, forms a light film, releases with body heat | Fast, ethanol flashes off and takes top notes | 
| Projection / sillage | Closer, more private, good for office/spa | Strong first hour, then falls | 
| Skin feel | Less drying, friendlier to sensitive or dry skin | Can dehydrate or sting | 
| Best product type | roll-ons, soaps, candles, diffusers, hotel scent | fine fragrance bottles, body mists | 
If you want to show buyers what you mean, link them straight to Fragrance Oils — that’s the core oil category on your site.

Ethanol was picked for classic perfume because it flashes. It throws aroma into the air fast. That’s great for “first sniff,” not so great for “all-day wear.” Oil systems don’t rush. They sit on the skin, mix with natural sebum, and release in a slow curve. Slow curve = longer wear.
Most oil-format perfumes — like your Fine Fragrance range — carry a higher perfume load than a quick alcohol spray. More perfume in the same space means more hours of detectable scent.
Oils cling. Alcohol can dry and leave. That’s why a customer will say, “The oil is still on my wrist but the spray is gone.” It’s not that the spray was bad. It’s just the carrier.
This is where brands in personal care and cosmetics care the most.
That’s what your Personal Care Fragrance page is talking about — skin-friendly, formulation-stable scents that don’t break the base. If a copywriter mistypes “frangrance” (→ fragrance), that’s an easy fix, but the point stands: skin-safe + long-wear sells better.
I’Scent also works under IFRA, ISO, GMP, and Halal and runs an advanced ERP system, so once you get a version that stays in your shampoo, you can repeat it. For buyers that’s huge.

People often confuse “I can smell it far” with “it lasts long.”
That’s why oil-format scent is such a good fit for:
If you need even scenting in public areas, point them to your Air Care Fragrance category — that range is literally made for controlled evaporation.
Shampoo, conditioner, body lotions, scrubs, hand cream. These need scent to survive washing, heat, and packaging. Oil-format materials do better here. Your personal care page already says “formulation-stable,” use that as proof.
A candle can’t afford to smell strong only on the first burn. It has to smell on the 4th and 5th too. That’s why you have a dedicated Candle Fragrance Manufacturer OEM & Custom Oils page — because candles, wax melts, and diffusers all need slow scent release, not alcohol flash.
These industries want a scent that doesn’t spike, doesn’t fade mid-day, and can be reproduced in bulk. Oil-format fragrance is simply easier to control across batches.
More and more buyers ask: “I love this perfume, but it stings. Can I have it in oil?”
With I’Scent, yes. Because you’ve got 40,000+ formulas and can replicate up to 98% accuracy, you can move a target into oil and keep the olfactive profile. That’s a very good upsell and it’s what your Fragrance Oils Perfume Oil OEM/ODM Customized page is for.

This part matters more than people admit. Long-lasting fragrance is not only chemistry. It’s also supply.
I’Scent has:
All of that is described on your About Us page. It tells procurement teams that the scent they loved in the sample will smell the same two months later. That’s the real buying fear you’re solving.
So the argument becomes:
That’s a full commercial story without over-selling.