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Monthly Archives from March 2006

The Buzz

The Buzz

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The Scented Salamander Blog

A Culture & Beauty Blog: from Olfaction to Imagination in Perfumes, Movies, Beauty Products, Food, Literature, & Fashion, Mostly.

"Perfumes' & movies' common point: you smell and watch them better in the dark"

Latest Fragrance Reviews

Dior Escale à Parati

 

Prada Infusion d'Iris EDP Absolue

Ferragamo Signorina

Thierry Mugler Miroir des Majestés

Jo Malone Plum Blossom

Madonna Truth or Dare

Roberto Cavalli Eau de Parfum

Carolina Herrera 212 Sexy

8 Best Perfumes to Herald Spring

Stella McCartney L.I.L.Y.

Guerlain Parfum Initial L'Eau: Going Back to the Purer Language of Perfumery

Guerlain Parfum Initial L'Eau: Un Langage Plus Pur pour la Parfumerie

Fragrance Essays

Perfumes & Candies are Kissing Cousins: Anis de Flavigny & Guerlain Anisia Bella

Jicky, The Ultimate Aphrodisiac for Both Sexes?

Jicky, L'aphrodisiaque ultime pour les deux sexes?

Best Rose Fragrances for Valentine's Day: The 2012 Edition

How I Think about Perfume when I Review Them: a Practical-Theoretical Outlook on the Perfume Shopping Culture

Bint el Sudan, The Other, African Chanel No.5 - Interview with Nick Evans of IFF

Smelling Tommy Girl Now: When the 1990s Smell Like The 1940s

White Accords in Perfumery: So Long The 70s

Liberace Wore Perfume, So What? Homosexuality as Given Away by an Indiscreet Fragrance Trail in the 50s

Reviews of New Perfumes

Diptyque Eau Rose

Isabel Derroisné Eclat Eternel

Sisley Eau d'Ikar

Mary Greenwell Plum

Parfum d'Empire Azemour Les Orangers

L'Artisan Parfumeur Batucada

Les Parfums de Rosine Glam Rose

Clinique Aromatics Elixir Perfumer's Reserve

Prada No.11 Cuir Styrax

6 New Celebrity Fragrances to Try Out this Fall

The Body Shop White Musk Libertine

Cartier L'Heure Convoitée (English Version)

Cartier L'Heure Convoitée (French Version)

Karl Lagerfeld Karleidoscope

Maître Parfumeur et Gantier Cuir Fétiche

Estée Lauder Wood Mystique

Thierry Mugler Angel with Bitter Cocoa Powder

Diane Von Furstenberg Diane

Bottega Veneta EDP

From the Archives

Bath & Body Works Warm Vanilla Sugar: An Euro-American Curio

Reviews of Past Fragrance Launches

First Impressions on the Thierry Mugler Coffret Based on the Novel by Süskind.

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses Archive

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October 13, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: Santa Maria Novella Opens a Museum Wing

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The historic Santa Maria Novella store in Florence called in Italian L'officina Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella in Firenze opened a new museum wing on September 15 2006.

"The collection covers eight centuries and includes medieval flacons, hand-painted vases and urns and marble pestles and mortars. [...] It showcases earthenware used to create elixirs and perfumes by the Dominican monks who started the pharmacy in 1221". According to the director of the historic pharmacy, Eugenio Alphandery, these ceramics from the 1600s come from two boxes found in a disused well. Old distillery machinery will be added later on.

Santa Maria Novella plans to open new stores in Sydney, Bangkok, Switzerland, and Japan by the end of next year.

The address of the store in Florence is: 16 Via della Scala. You can read more about the history of the pharmacy here.

Sources: Women's Wear Daily and Santa Maria Novella 

 

August 26, 2006

Fragrance News& Shopping Tip: Elixir des Merveilles by Hermès Now Available

The Hermès boutique in Boston just received the latest release by Hermès, Elixir des Merveilles, which is officially due out in September 2006:

Hermès of Paris

320 Boylston St

Boston, MA 02116-3917 

(617) 482-8707

Source: Hermès boutique 

 

August 21, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: JoAnn Bassett's Le Bijou Natural Perfumery

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Le Bijou (Jewel in French) is the precious name of a natural perfumery boutique and studio located in La Jolla, California and headed by perfumer JoAnn Bassett since 1993. She is an International Certified Aromatherapist...

 

Continue reading "Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: JoAnn Bassett's Le Bijou Natural Perfumery " »

July 1, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: New Rancé USA & L'Aile des Anges

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Tre Noté has opened a new etailer site through which you can now order Rancé perfumes that were available not long ago only through their Milan and Rome boutiques. They carry several lines of Rancé perfumes as well as Bath and Body products...


Continue reading "Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: New Rancé USA & L'Aile des Anges" »

June 27, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: New L'Artisan Store in New York

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L'Artisan Parfumeur opened its third New York store on June 19 2006 on Madison Avenue and 82nd Street. A fourth New York store should open in the fall on the Upper West Side. A total of 7 New York stores are planned as well as 10 others accross in the USA in cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Chicago.

As the President of  L'Artisan Parfumeur US François Duquesne stated, "We're reviving the tradition of a perfumery [as] a destination where you're able to visit a [fragrance] expert in your neighborhood.

The two remaining stores in New York are located in SoHo and on the second floor of Henri Bendel. 

Source & photo: Women's Wear Daily 

June 16, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: The Most Aromatic of Stores in Harvard Square

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A sense of coolness and quiet welcomes you as you step into the store and divest yourself of the summer heat, leaving the bustle of the street behind you. Although you are stepping into a tobacconist's shop that has been in existence for 123 years, there are no intriguing smells of exotic tobacco lingering in the air. Rather, you smell the aroma of something slightly candyish. Perhaps, one of the central wooden tables plied with mounds of fancy soaps explains this olfactory non sequitur.

I have read old newspaper articles alluding to the smells of the store's wooden floor mixed with those of tobaccos. The floor is now covered with a black and white checkered linoleum. These past descriptions have made me realize that I cannot muster any recollection of the store in terms of its smell. I have entered it before, many times, but without really paying attention to the smell of the place and am at a loss as to being able to define its olfactory identity. This time, I try to find out what its particular aroma is. I am not even certain whether past customers were alluding to the smell of tobacco as found in the bins or to the tobacco that used to be smoked by customers whiling their time away in this temple of the good life, enjoying themselves in its many nooks and crannies. There used to be a tobacco room at the back of the store. Was it predominantly a smoky smell or a sweet one that pervaded the premises?

This place, which has remained in the same location since 1883, is the famous, quaint, and atemporal abode called Leavitt & Peirce. It was originally established in Harvard Square right across from the yard as a branch of the tobacconist Ehrlich, itself the oldest Boston tobacconist, founded in 1868.

I call it a temple because it becomes obvious as you study the place, read reviews of it, and discover its lore that Leavitt & Peirce used to be an unoffical temple dedicated to manhood, and in particular, to the Harvard brand of manliness. It must have constituted one of the most cherished rituals of Harvard men to bond within its premises with friends over pipes and cigars while playing in the pool room doubling as a tobacco room at the back of the store. The painter Waldo Pierce admitted to spending most of his time in this popular haunt, smoking and playing away while preoccupying himself as little as possible with the academic curriculum. This habit of his almost prevented him from graduating. He has left a doggerel dedicated to Leavitt & Peirce that is now buried somewhere in the store amidst the dozens of frames that decorate it. I attempted to locate it, as I read it is hanging somewhere in the shop, but the young man I asked was not certain as to its whereabouts and after a while started looking pained that he could not be more helpful. So, we left it at that.

In 1958, a little book was issued bearing the title, 75 aromatic years of Leavitt & Peirce in the recollections of 31 Harvard men, 1883-1958. Did you say "aromatic"? I plan then to go read it in the library. In the summary, I learn that John Updike is one of the 31 Harvard men reminiscing about the so-called aromatic years spent at Leavitt & Peirce and that his contribution constitutes one of his earliest known writings. I am very much intrigued by the subjective accent put on a place and its smell in general and moreover, here, on the experience of smoking seen as a primarily fragrant one when smoking is now mostly presented in terms of the deleterious and unpleasant stinking impact it has.

Leavitt & Peirce also sells board games, in particular chess games. This leads me to another part of the store that offers a faint mystical aura, the loft. The stairs leading up to the loft are closed with a rope nowadays but the young man with the pained look on his face has invited me to go upstairs in recognition of my sincere interest for the historicity of the place. There, you can still find a single row of small wooden chess tables on which retro green glass desk lamps continue throwing their circles of light. It is now quiet and empty; only muffled sounds coming up from the store below stir its respose.The floor boards creak a little as I walk past the tables and distinguish antique pictures of young men in the shadowy light posing in their baseball or football uniforms, looking at an invisible camera from the not-so-distant shores of the end of the 19th century and early 20th century. 1898, 1910,...perhaps the young men on the last picture were to experience directly the impact of WWI? For now, they are still living in a pre-WWI world, hoping for a future that will be kind to them as well as to humanity in general, unaware of the fact that they will come to be known as the lost generation. 

People used to sit in the loft playing chess and smoking. The city of Cambridge had made an exception for Leavitt & Peirce because the ban on public smoking would so obviously hurt their business. And so, smoking was allowed in the store. An old metallic ashtray like the kind you see in old movie theaters is still screwed onto the wall. After taking a few pictures, as I go down the stairs, back to the store, I spy a striking picture of a gathering of hundreds of freshmen dressed in dark jackets assembled for a "smoker" in 1924. This is a ritual one could not imagine witnessing today in Annenberg Hall, not the least because there would have to be hundreds of young women disrupting the concentrated atmosphere of a man's club. Then, you could overtly express unabashed manliness through cigar smoking and male-only presence on Harvard grounds. This ideal, today, appears almost charming in its quaintness and naïveté.

Next, the perfume corner (to be continued). 

Next time, I will also upload some of the pictures I snapped. 

Photo Mimi Froufrou. The plaque features a poem by Mark A. Dewolfe Howe Class of 1887

Salute to Leavitt & Peirce

Narrowly parted from the yard

A little college long has stood

No flunkster ever yet was barred

From gaining all he might of good

About a brand of special knowledge

Untaught within the larger college

To know a good pipe when he tried it

And lips and teeth and breath had plied it

To know besides the weed that burned

The most rewardingly of all 

And spread its cloud of incense where

Had hitherto hung only care

O little ancient shop and college

Still teach your priceless brand of knowledge

Proving all minor ills surmountable

Teach on through years and years uncountable 

 

June 9, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: Meet with Nicolas de Barry at Le Château de Frileuse

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Nose Nicolas de Barry, whose perfume, George Sand, I reviewed yesterday, is also the owner of a castle, the Château de Frileuse and a developer of perfume tourism, a rather popular business trend in France. If you feel like spending some time in "douce France", learning the art of perfumery while resting and enjoying yourself in the Loire Valley, one of the historical regions of France, then head for the Château de Frileuse...


Continue reading "Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: Meet with Nicolas de Barry at Le Château de Frileuse" »

May 30, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: "Scent is Life" Exhibition

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•An exciting new exhibition, which bears the title "Scent is Life" has opened and will be running through July 1 at the Esther M. Klein Gallery in Philadephia. The exhibition features 16 interractive installations incorporating 106 scents. Organizers, namely, perfumer Christopher Brosius of CB I Hate Perfume, the Monell Chemical Senses Center and the Esther M. Klein Gallery want people to become more aware of the role of smell in their lives and of the power of the fifth sense. One part of the exhibit is called "Autobiography" and showcases vials containing evocative scents such as Melting Snow, Crayon, Old Fur Coat, Doll Head, and Mitten. Another section called "Interpretation" regroups three different types of lillies scents to illustrate the significance of context and memory associations. There is a field of lillies, a perfume centered around lilly, and finally, an arrangement of lillies at a funeral. There is also an installation called "Pink Box Smells Green"; visitors are invited to put their heads into a box the color of bubble-gum and inhale the scent of freshly cut grass. The experience proves out to be slightly disorienting. There is also a section called "Day at the Beach". In it, people are given the opportunity to sniff scents such as Car Interior, Asphalt, Boardwalk, and Seashell.

Source: Article by Joann Loviglio, Associated Press Newswires, 29 May 2006. 

Photo Credit: Esther M. Klein Gallery

 

May 17, 2006

Fragrance News: Marie-Antoinette's Perfume To Be Released in June & July 2006

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Following its success as well as repeated requests from the public, a recreation of Marie Antoinette's fragrance by perfumer Francis Kurkdjian from Quest International called M.A. Sillage de la Reine (Marie-Antoinette The Queen's Silage) will be more widely available in June and July 2006. It was first created in January 2005 and offered to a select group of people at a party at Versailles on the occasion of the publication of a book on the original 18th century author of the perfume. It was also sold to some patrons in 2005 but at a very high price, around $2500. This perfume was originally composed by one of the perfumers of Marie Antoinette (Houbigant was one of them) called Jean-Louis Fargeon. It was originally named Trianon.

Elisabeth de Feydeau, a French perfume historian, has written this book focusing on the details of the relationship developed between Marie-Antoinette and Jean-Louis Fargeon. Her book has recently been translated into English in Great-Britain under the title, A Scented Palace: The Secret History of Marie-Antoinette's Perfumer and is available here. It will also be available on Amazon, here in the US, starting June 22; you can place pre-orders now.

One day, Marie-Antoinette asked Fargeon to come meet her at Trianon and showing him around she requested from him a perfume that would capture the charm of her beloved retreat. Later, Fargeon was to see her just before she attempted to escape from France through Varenne. He tells us that on the day of his last visit to her and as a sort of premonitory sign of her impending demise, the queen seemed to smell more strongly and almost sickeningly so of the tuberose found in her perfume Trianon

Elisabeth de Feydeau says that the perfume unleashes unknown emotions in people, something qualitatively different from what you experience with contemporary perfumes.

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Le Sillage de la Reine has been recreated using 18th century techniques and 100% natural essences. Its notes include orris, rose, jasmine, tuberose, orange blossom, cedar wood, sandalwood, Tonkin musc and ambergris. 10 prestige copies of it, bottled in Baccarat crystal bottles will be available in June; the price has not been divulged. In July, 1000 limited editions copies will be released in crystal bottles made at the crystal manufacturies of Portieux (founded by Marie-Antoinette's grand-father) and will be available for between 300-400 Euros for a bottle of 25 ml. You can reserve a bottle of M.A. Sillage de la Reine here. Proceeds will go towards the remodeling of parts of the palace that were historically linked with Marie-Antoinette.

Visitors to Versailles can currently smell the queen's perfume in Marie-Antoinette's bathroom through June 2006.

 

Photos are from the Château de Versailles and Osmoz. 

May 10, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: Salon Parfums & Arômes, May 18-21, 2006, Paris

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The Salon Parfums & Arômes (Perfume & Aroma Show) will open its doors for the second time in Paris from May 18 through May 21. Its aim is to reach a wider audience and bring for a few days the expertise of professionals and scholars to people interested in educating themselves about the fifth sense.

There will be conferences as well as perfumery workshops. Scientists, historians, writers, chefs, perfumers and others will participate in the event. As the SPA states, the show aims to explore the new olfactive techniques available, ask questions about the role smell plays in our gustative experience, and finally, study the impact that odors have on love.

The program promises to be rich and interesting. It offers, for instance, conferences by Annick Le Guerer on the future of the sense of smell, a pairing up of a chef, Alain Llorca, with people from the Molinard perfumery to investigate the perfumes used in cuisine. Specialists of wine, bread, and chocolate will discuss the aromas found in these products. The Givaudan school will be presented by its director, Jean Guchard, nose Mathilde Laurent will give a talk on custom-made perfumes and love, Elizabeth de Feydeau will talk about the perfumes of love in literature, Oleg Curbatov will present the world of the "perfumed internet" based on technologies of the future etc. Perfume activities for kids are also planned.

You can find more information on their website: Salon Parfums et Arômes 

May 8, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: The Ultra Peau Exhibition, Roger Hiorns, Barfumista

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•A very interesting exhibition is currently taking place in Paris devoted to a renewal of our perception of skin. For instance, a sort of wall-skin called "emotional skin" has been designed so that people can see it move or blush when they touch it. Artists comment on their visions of skin on videos and the visitors are invited to watch them, lying down on a mattress. The relationship between skin and identity is explored. And last but not least, a section of the exhibit is devoted to how the skin smells depending on the state it is in, for instance, depending on how soft or dry it is. The exhibit runs at the Palais de Tokyo from April 25 to June 21 2006.

Ultra Peau 

 
•British sculptor Roger Hiorns, well-known for his use of scents in his sculptures, is currently holding his first major exhibition at the Milton Keynes Galllery. It runs from April 8 to May 28 2006.

Milton Keynes Gallery 

 

•A new niche scent boutique may open in New York city by the end of the year according to Cosmetic news. It will be a branch of the already existing Barfumeria in Spain. The owner, an American, is hoping their planned move will come through. You can check their site in Spanish:

Barfumeria 

 

May 3, 2006

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses: Of Scents and Spaces

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I am inaugurating a new column and in it, I will offer information about travel intineraries, promenades, and places that are perfume-related.

The search for perfumes leads to travel in time and the discovery of new imaginary geographies that are enhanced by the spatial setting, the place in which we may find ourselves. Oftentimes we may think that the experience of a fragrance is limited to the liquid art form itself, then perhaps sometimes extending our perception to the bottle in which it is contained as the architectural form that gives shape to fluidity and transiency incarnate. But we cannot stop there, for if, we become conscious of the influence emanating from one's physical environment and which impresses itself on our thoughts and emotions, then we become aware that the perfume, as an object to be seen, apprehended, and not simply inhaled, is contained in a room, a space ot its own. At the same time, the scent will open up the confined limits of that particualr space and tear down the wall of that particular room, for we are transported elsewhere, while being irremediably present.

In the 17th century, special perfume drawing rooms were created to, not only attract a clientele of perfume connoisseurs, but also to have them stop their steps and engage in the sensory plenitude of a reserved space dedicated to the cultivation of the fifth sense as well as to the visual, tactile pleasure of holding bottles and aesthetic contemplation. Conversations in these "Salons de parfums" were lively too. Today, we can see a distant echo of that more complete, elegant, and insightful practice in the design of a Maître Gantier & Parfumeur store or of an Annick Goutal store.

But we do not need to rely solely on a pre-designed architecture, we can also mentally compose that geography of desire, following paths, taking the road, meandering through the streets, and stopping at last in   scented havens of our own choosing. We may also stroll in gardens or near fields and in doing so associate promenades, spaces and scents more closely. We thus become connected to the world in ways richer and fuller, imagining and remembering and searching, always.

My scented address of the day is a store address:

Parfums de Capucine, 18, rue des Capucines, Paris 2ème. Tel: 01.42.96.02.46.

This store specializes in niche perfumes and hard-to-find vintage fragrances. 

Scented Paths & Fragrant Addresses Archive

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