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Free perfume bottle CAD block in DWG and DXF

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 11 Aug 2025 · Updated 9 Oct 2025

A perfume bottle is a tiny detail block with an outsized styling effect. Set one on a vanity, a dressing-table or a bathroom shelf and the drawing gains a sense of daily life and a hint of luxury that an empty surface never conveys. This page offers a free perfume bottle CAD block in DWG and DXF — a fragrance bottle drawn in clean elevation — ready for AutoCAD 2004 or later, free for personal and commercial use with no signup and no watermark.

The perfume block is at home anywhere a grooming or beauty surface needs dressing: bathroom and en-suite elevations, dressing-room and vanity details, cosmetics and fragrance retail shopfits, and interior presentation sheets where small props bring a scene to life. As a real block reference, it copies, mirrors, scales and recolours onto a styling layer, so a row of bottles on a retail gondola or a single bottle on a console both come from the same lightweight download.

What the perfume bottle block depicts

The block is a small elevation of a fragrance bottle: a faceted or rounded glass body, a tapered neck and a cap or atomiser top, with a couple of highlight lines that suggest the glass and the liquid level. It is deliberately compact and clean, because at the scale it is used — a 1:20 or 1:10 vanity detail — anything more would just fill in as a black blob.

The silhouette is the point: a recognisable scent bottle that tells the viewer this is a grooming or beauty surface. As a single block reference it copies and mirrors as one object, so you can line up several slightly different bottles on a shelf, or place one as a hero prop on a dressing table, all from the same file.

A detail-scale elevation prop

Perfume bottles belong in elevation and close detail views. You place them on a bathroom or vanity elevation, a dressing-table detail, a cosmetics retail gondola elevation, or a styled interior visual. The bottle is small enough that it only really registers in these closer-scale drawings — on a whole-room plan it disappears, and that is fine, because its job is to dress the surface in elevation.

If you do want it on a styled top-view of a vanity, a tiny footprint can sit on the plan, but you would not dimension it. When you set out a bathroom or beauty retail floor in plan, keep the perfume block for the matching elevation and detail sheets where it adds the grooming-surface story.

Perfume bottle sizes to draw against

Keep these rough ranges in mind so the bottle reads true on a detail. A typical eau de parfum bottle stands around 90–140 mm tall including the cap and measures roughly 50–80 mm across the body; larger statement bottles can reach 150–180 mm tall. A small travel or sample bottle is much shorter, around 50–70 mm.

Those figures matter when you draw the shelf or surface it sits on: a vanity shelf with 150–200 mm of clear height above it comfortably displays most fragrance bottles upright, and a retail riser is usually stepped so back rows of bottles read above front ones. Because the block is drawn to a believable bottle size, dropping it onto a vanity elevation keeps the surrounding props — soap dish, tumbler, jewellery dish — in honest proportion to it.

Inserting and arranging bottles

The perfume bottle is drawn full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales on insertion. Use INSERT or drag the DWG from a tool palette, and snap the insertion point to the shelf or surface line so the bottle stands on it rather than floating.

To build a fragrance display, place a few bottles and vary them with small uniform scales and mirrors so they read as a range rather than clones. On a vanity, one bottle as a hero prop alongside other small accessories usually reads better than a crowded line-up. Keep the bottles on a styling layer with a light lineweight so they can be frozen for a clean tiling or joinery elevation and thawed for the presentation.

Who uses the perfume bottle block

Interior designers use it to dress vanity units, dressing tables and bathroom shelves so an elevation reads as a real, used grooming space rather than bare cabinetry. Bathroom and en-suite specialists add it alongside soap dishes, tumblers and toothbrush holders to bring a sanitary elevation to life. Retail designers stock cosmetics and fragrance shopfits with rows of bottles so the gondola elevation reads as merchandised.

It sits naturally with the other small accessories blocks — jewellery, necklaces and rings — when you are styling a dressing-table vignette, and pairs with the bathroom and vanity furniture blocks for the surfaces it sits on. A perfume bottle beside a piece of jewellery and a handbag instantly tells the story of how a dressing area is used.

Layering and reuse for small props

Small styling props like a perfume bottle should always live on a dedicated styling or accessories layer, separate from the joinery, tiling and sanitaryware, with a light lineweight so they read as soft content. That keeps your technical bathroom or vanity elevation clean when the props are frozen, while the presentation version thaws them on — one file, two outputs.

When you assemble a vanity vignette you reuse — perfume, jewellery dish, tumbler and a folded towel — WBLOCK the group as a styling assembly so a dressed vanity surface drops into the next bathroom or bedroom drawing in a single insert. A later edit to the source updates every placement, which keeps detail elevations consistent across a whole project set.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Is the perfume bottle CAD block free for commercial use?+

Yes. The perfume bottle block downloads free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and it is cleared for commercial interior, bathroom and retail drawings.

What size is the perfume bottle drawn at?+

Around 90–140 mm tall including the cap and roughly 50–80 mm across the body — a believable eau de parfum size. A small uniform scale adjusts it up to a statement bottle or down to a travel-size sample.

At what drawing scale does the perfume block read well?+

It is a detail-scale prop, best on close elevations and details at around 1:20 or 1:10 — vanity, bathroom and retail-gondola elevations. On a whole-room plan it is too small to register, so it lives in the detail views.

What other blocks pair well with a perfume bottle?+

On a dressing-table vignette it pairs with jewellery, necklace and ring blocks; on a bathroom elevation it sits with soap dishes, tumblers and folded towels. Group a favourite arrangement with WBLOCK to reuse a styled vanity surface.

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