Penhaligon's


Penhaligon's is a British perfume house. It was founded in the late 1860s by William Henry Penhaligon, a Cornish barber who moved to London and who became Court Barber and Perfumer to Queen Victoria.

History

Penhaligon's started life as a barber within the Jermyn Street Hammam. As was typical of barbers at the time, Penhaligon created his own products to sell to his clients, many of whom were politicians of the age. The first standalone shop was situated in Jermyn Street next to the street's Hammam, where William Penhaligon had been a barber. The second shop opened at 33 St James' Street, and was attached to the Jermyn Street store at the rear. In the late 1920s, the business moved to Bury Street. The original buildings were destroyed in The Blitz in 1941, however the store on Bury Street remained untouched. The Bury Street premises operated until the mid 1950s, when Penhaligon's was purchased by Geo F Trumper, continuing to be manufactured from the basement of Trumper's Curzon Street premises, and slowly fell into obscurity.
Penhaligon's is wholly owned by Spanish fashion and fragrance company Puig International SA. It made a loss of £2.5M on sales of £19.7M in the year ended 31 December 2016.

Stores

Besides the flagship store in Covent Garden, other locations in London include the Burlington Arcade, Canary Wharf, Regent Street, Mayfair, Kings Road, Islington, the Royal Exchange and a second Covent Garden store has opened. Other shops have also been established outside of the capital in Edinburgh, Cambridge, and Chester, as well as internationally in Paris, New York City, Hong Kong, San Francisco, Singapore, Taiwan and Macau.

Products

Between July 2009 and 2011 Penhaligon's reissued a selection of perfumes from their archives under the banner of the Anthology Collection:
In September 2014 Penhaligon's launched the Trade Routes collection, comprising four fragrances inspired by the explosion of trade in London at the end of the 19th Century:
In 2015 Penhaligon's launched two new fragrances inspired by the wilds of the British Coastline.