Yearly Archives: 2015

MAISON FRANCIS KURKDJIAN – CIEL DE GUM & OUD SATIN MOOD

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by Olivia

I found it, finally, in Paris. I’d read about it months beforehand, my heart simultaneously skipping and sinking as I read through the notes and the ever-hyperbolic PR spin (it sounded wonderful/I knew I had to find this, inevitably Far Away Land exclusive.) Having just left the hushed purple womb of Serge Lutens Palais Royale – a shop like no other, beautifully suffused in pomegranate, shadows and stars like an empyrean antechamber – and leaving the lesser interested party dangling his feet in the mossy fountain in the Galeries de Valois, I spun off towards Maison Francis Kurkdjian. The day was hot and sticky and the crowds swarmed and bumped along like glistening dodgems as I veered along the Rue de Rivoli. Maison Francis Kurkdjian’s tiny boutique, cool, conservative with a carefully spare urbanity – was when I found it, a little entirely deserted oasis.

Released in 2014 to celebrate the 120th anniversary of the GUM department store in Moscow, and inevitably exclusive to that shop save for MFK’s miniature flagship in Paris, Ciel de Gum is a warm, spiced floral amber. The top notes present a somewhat deceptively transparent accord of pink pepper and cinnamon. These fiery spices are painted here with the trademark effervescence of the perfumer; rather than burn and tickle, they sparkle and glint as if seen through a kaleidoscope’s refracted sunlight. Soon though, these melt into a fuzzy, sepia jasmine and the same wash of loukhoum-like rosewater that suffuses the delectable Cologne Pour le Soir from the same line. The jasmine here, spun and spiced with cinnamon reminds me of the furry indolic Egyptian variety of The Different Company’s Jasmin de Nuit. The rose though is quite subservient, playing very much a supporting, sweetening role. Once the basenotes, a baroque recline of velvety amber, a scuff of leather and a blurry glaze of vanilla arrive the effect is that of being buried, suddenly swallowed, within the heaving chest of a hugging Aunt – a whoosh of warmth and skin and draped fabric. It’s thick and chewy, enveloping and decadent, familiar and yet somehow exotic. It is a closet of comfort, redolent of fur stoles and pain d’epices, as golden as the domes of St. Petersburg. There is a faintly tarry nuance that joins the comfort blanket of amber – specks of tobacco leaf and liquor, a warming nip of something sweet and strong clasped with frostbitten hands. Inside that glazed vanillic cocoon, there is a hint of fireplace, a dusting of coal perhaps, bringing to my mind snow melting on dark kindling and glowing tinder from the hearth. It smells like the place between battered boots, stamped icily on the doormat, and the toasty snug of heavy coats.

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Although it is undoubtedly vanillic, this is not a gourmand perfume. Rather its sweetness pays a homage to the lush balsamic Orientals of the past – Fendi’s Theorema, Coco, perhaps even a little Obsession. It has the same fudgy texture as Musc Ravageur, although the indoles lent by the jasmine here in no way combine to resemble the kitty tummy animalics of the Malle. The honey-and-hide quality also reminds me of the toothsome, musky nectar in Centerpiece extrait from 4160s Tuesdays.

Though this perfume, coloured like a lit Christingle, is certainly enveloping and rich (smoldering perhaps even), it has been made with the lightness of touch characteristic of Kurkdjian. There is plenty of air here between the notes, and it’s carefully steered away from anything sweatily overwhelming. This is the drama of Russian Orthodox liturgy refracted through a very contemporary Parisian lens. Despite its warmth, it is in some ways a nostalgic perfume: a bathetic tribute to the luster and pageantry of a Tsarist past. This edge of melancholia amid the grandeur of luxuriant balsams and comfort strikes me as a fitting scented token of the heirlooms of bounty and theatricality, personified (it seems from photos: I’ve never been there) by the grand and gilded GUM store.

Whilst I’d fired myself towards Maison Francis Kurkdjian specifically to find this particular perfume, once there the assistant introduced another, perhaps for me at least, even lovelier scent. Eyes wide and excited, she told me she’d been offered a bottle to have as her own (I know, right…) She’d tussled between Ciel de Gum (‘so beautiful for winter’) and the new Oud Silk Mood. The Silk won: ‘so sexy! So fabulous for the nights!’ ..I hadn’t even heard of it to be honest. Actually I probably wouldn’t have bothered seeking it out given that I wasn’t taken with the Oud trio (Oud’s Cashmere, Silk and Velvet) of a couple of years ago, all three of which were heavy handed and abrasive on my own skin – a whirligig carnival of industrial solvent and hot oily metal with a pulse of pure filth.

This is different. Again playing with texture and the evocation of fabric, this is an altogether more feminine scent (though not girly, and the distinction is always important!) Taking the recently revived idea of a lipstick accord (seen in Malle’s Lipstick Rose, Chanel Misia, Guerlain French Kiss) – a combination of rose, violet and sweet powder – and blending that dainty, quite French association with the rich jamminess of an Arabian rose perfume, this is truly a gem. A ruby wrap of a perfume, the opening is heady with a crimson confiture of rose and sweet violets conjuring skin swaddled in burgundy. This burnt muscovado sugar and dark rose is full bodied and throaty, a vibrant ‘come hither’ shower of lush petals. It definitely has a boudoir and bodice feel to it, referring again to the playful, cheeky feminity of lipsticky perfumes.

But as this elixir like potion warms on the skin, a smoky baritone curls up through it and anchors the macaroon-flecked florals to a ballast of chocolaty amber, peppery oud and dry woods. The auburn thrum of benzoin and treacle-like labdanum sing a sonorous baseline with the oud, whose woody and smoky facets are teased out leaving behind the funk and rot it can imbue. The whole thing is blurred with a dusting of rich vanilla, which serves not to make it edible but to bind and blend. It wears like a radiant shroud, soft and lovely, with a wonderful ruby like interplay of light and dark. A decadent, dark loukhoum oud, as sexy, and as fabulous for the nights as promised.

While the rose-oud thing is obviously nothing new, and for many of us has reached total saturation point, I think this one is worth seeking out. It’s a beautiful perfume, combining sensuality with wearability and showcasing Kurkdjian’s masterly treatment of florals under a Middle Eastern gaze. While much of the MFK line could be classed as having an almost android perfectionism – attractive, beautiful even, but all so conservative and hermetic – these two perfumes represent the most interesting releases since Absolute/Cologne Pour le Soir. As with other scents from the brand, they exhibit the gingerly constructed compositions and the steady hand of a craftsman with an innate feel for his materials. But while that same precision in other fragrances can augment too streamlined (sterile, even) a feel, here it is bolstered by a more forthright voluptuousness. Both these perfumes are expansive and vivacious, but also possess the lush and fleshy oriental feel of the best of Kurdjian’s work.

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NARCISSISM : : . KISS MY NAME by RAMON MONEGAL BARCELONA (2OI3)

I quite like this.

 

But then I suppose I would.

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I love (and hate, actually) the name, for a start – so imposing, so absorbed and self-centred and aware; gutsy, forthright and on the ball (and when you know that we are talking about a busty, ribald Piguet Fracas-ish affair – but less coutured, less of that ilk, more vulgar, if more vivid and contemporary – you see how this Tunisian neroli and Egyptian jasmined modern and urban furnished apartment take on the self confident tuberose could quite nicely work,  taking in self-consciously the ideas of me me me me; I will stamp myself upon you when I meet you at the party because for once I don’t smell like strawberry chemicals and bullshit, I have a bit of sass, and some pizazz, and smell quite sexy and nice)………………

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But what is the name of the perfume you are wearing?

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” KISS MY NAME”.

..

“What?”

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THE GOOD LIFE……..28 LA PAUSA by CHANEL (2007) + SILVER IRIS by ATELIER COLOGNE (2013)

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IT’S MY MUM’S BIRTHDAY AND AS SHE WASN’T HOME JUST NOW WHEN I CALLED (PROBABLY OUT AT THE BUTCHER’S ARMS HAVING LUNCH OR SOMETHING), I THOUGHT I WOULD JUST DO A QUICK TOP TEN, ALL THE SCENTS THAT REMIND ME OF HER

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Like most perfume maniacs, a mother’s own interest in perfume, even if she had them on the dresser, and wore them frequently, or all the time (which is half the reason why you are now so besotted with them yourself) is no way near as deep, nay maniacal, or obsessional than us weirdos, who rather than just using les parfums as mute accessories, as something that you just do, plunge for them five dimensionally and wax on and on and blah blah blah about them ad nauseam because we we are sick in the head or mad in the nose or just horrendous Baudelarian sensualists who just can’t say no.

But this was supposed to be about my mother, All About My Mother (don’t you adore that film?), and the perfumes that I associate with her. Or the ones I project onto her, which is quite a different thing, possibly, though maybe it isn’t.

Anyway, I have to go to bed, and should be in bed already, and have just got in from a mind bending teaching session, but I just can’t resist the idea mum of doing a quick random review of the scents you smell in best. It will come out randomly, and I might have to rejig it half the way through, but here goes:

I0. ESTEE LAUDER YOUTH DEW.

This never suited you. Too spicy. Too patchouli chypre-ish. Too….Mediterranean (Daphne, Duncan’s mum, does these things very beautifully: Opium; Coco, anything patchouli and earthed like Magie Noire, perfection; but somehow they don’t quite work on Judith Chapman). And yet: THAT BOTTLE. It is my very first perfumed memory. And you in a fur coat, some time in the eighties, glamorous and ready to go out….

Still think it smells a bit like coca-cola though.

9. MADAME ROCHAS

Again, you would probably deny even having ever owned it, BUT I KNOW BETTER, BECAUSE I WAS A NERVOUS, ‘POETIC’  AND OVERWHELMED LITTLE BOY WHO NOTICED SUCH THINGS. You never wore it. It went rancid eventually, but that bottle was most definitely there on your dresser or in the bathroom at some point with its strawberry chypre mannerisms and that fact alone has seared it quite fully into my consciousness.

8. CHANEL NO 5

Because you have always had a whole load of it in all its concentrations, and it suits you beautifully, even if it doesn’t quite do you justice.

7. CHANEL ALLURE

I associate this with you for all the opposite reasons. Because it was so wrong on you that it basically made me literally angry.

6. GIVENCHY YSATIS.

God this should probably be much higher in the list, and I wrote a whole rhapsodic and traumatized piece about this and Givenchy Gentleman and how they affected me so much, but I can still smell this when you first bought it and how it ROCKED MY F*&%& WORLD ON THE STAIRCASE LANDING. SO beautiful. So complex, and yet sensual as a mink-kissed jungle. J’ADORE.

5. OSCAR DE LA RENTA.

DALLAS. DYNASTY. This WAS that time. SO Santa Barbra, SO liltily, guiltily, American. Yet although this was a departure for you (my mum worked in a department store for years so was always getting sprayed with the latest releases) this somehow smelled very lovely. It reminds me of babysitting, and being a teenager, and loping around upstairs when you were both out, and, basically, STARTING ME QUITE EXTRAVAGANTLY ON THIS PATH THAT I STILL FIND MYSELF ON.

4.  CARON INFINI

We are now in the realm of perfumes that I have introduced YOU to rather than the other way round, but this utter beauty is one that we are now fighting over (readers you should have seen the LOOT that this woman took back home with her in her suitcase, it was obscene).

Infini is elegant, it is that aldehydic floral that suits you way more than anything else, it is rare enough to be distinctive (because only Japan seems to have an unlimited supply of the vintage parfum; it pops up EVERYWHERE), and you wear it so much better than me that it is embarrassing. Mater, in Infini I salute you.

3. BALMAIN IVOIRE

You never really liked it. You said it was ‘too sweet’. And yet I spent an entire Saturday in Birmingham fretting over it, trying to buy you the ultimate perfume. I would go into Rackhams and smell different perfumes ( I think I was seventeen), smelling them on scent strips in books on the lawn down by the cathedral), then go back and suss out more, and then try to imagine what would suit you…….I suppose ultimately I was obsessed with this perfume all on my own, and the thrill of buying it. And when I went to Rome in I992 I sprayed an entire expensive leather bound note book with this scent and it thus reminds me of that now.

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Realizing now that there are more scents than I had realized. I know you fell in love with No 22 when you came to stay this April during the cherry blossom season, and it is definitely a winner on you. No I9……nah…… sorry that one’s mine. Guerlain Jardins De Bagatelle (possibly the finest perfume silage in the whole world, I love it, and you kind of like it but it’s still not quite holy grail material (Emma wins the contest with this one, no holds barred). Chanel Gardenia, YES, I am liking that one on you big time but I can’t quite bear to part with it somehow……there’s something about that paper embossed Gardenia on the box that gets my inner otaku going……pure collector-ism…… RIVE GAUCHE most definitely deserves a mention as I did love that one on you, and, yes, god how did I think this could be just ten, but ESTEE LAUDER WHITE LINEN is a massive mum hit: gorgeous. Remember that time when you were working and someone asked you if you were wearing white linen and you said no, actually it’s muslin, or silk or whatever and then you realized  what they were in fact asking? This one is perfection. Which is why you most definitely didn’t say no to the vintage parfum that I presented you with from the collection this spring (Readers: my parents stayed and slept AMONG the perfume collection like the pharaohs and queens of Egypt, surrounded by perfumes, it was inescapable; and then mum would espy a bottle she liked (let’s face it, she likes the bottles as much as the scents) and we would tussle over it. Many I could relent to. Some others (Vol De Nuit, say, no f*&*&g way).

No, ultimately no 2 must be I would say…

2 NINA BY NINA RICCI (I987)

No, not the red toffee apple shite dumbo, I would rather die than give that to my mother, but the original perfume, which she wore when it came out, which is so lovely. Again, an aldehydic floral, lilyish, green; complex and mossy, but just so diaphanous and lovely. In fact I found, the other day, a 50ml PARFUM for three dollars (Brielle I know you are dying reading these words) and I am obsessed with it. I added just four drops of bergamot oil to revive it (it was unboxed) and now it is unfurling itself and blossoming itself into the feminine masterpiece that it always was. I wrote about this recently, actually. You at the races in summer. Wearing this.

This is why I love perfume.

I.

Obviously, there is no contest. Nothing else could ever compete for the title of THE ONE. It could only be

FIRST by VAN CLEEF & ARPELS.

So funny the way one particular perfume works so brilliantly on someone’s skin. In fact I have smelled this on other women, girls at university who made it smell different, somehow, gorgeous in their own way, but my brother and sister

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( I wonder what you would have been wearing here (at left, obviously); me, Deborah, Greg, nan, and Dad (looking very dashing)

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will attest to the fact that this IS you, utterly and supremely. An aldehydic green floral with jasmine galore (always your favourite) and blackcurrant buds to boost it, this just smells perfect on you every time. Almost heartbreakingly so.

But look at the time.

I have to get to bed.

Mum, happy birthday

Neil

xxxxxxx

Incidentally, chers lecteurs, what are you own maternal masterpieces? I’d love to know.

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DRINKING PERFUME:::: CLEOPATRA & THE QUEENS OF EGYPT by MARIAGE FRERES (20I5)

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At the end of the summer holidays I went to the National Museum in Tokyo to see an exhibition called Cleopatra & The Queens Of Egypt, an event in collusion with various collectors and institutions worldwide that presented the finest of jewels and headdresses, decorative objects and bas reliefs (exquisite, actually) from the periods in Egyptian history when queens were on the ascendant; ending, naturally, with Cleopatra’s reign.

I sometimes love being immersed in exhibitions like these, where you feel not only the chill of air-conditioning on a hot summer’s day but also the chill of history; unmovable energies that touch you in strange but peculiarly palpable ways and that dislodge the mundane daily mould of the modern day existence, separating you, for a moment, from your more naggingly familiar self and plunge you into a state more of the mass, and of humanity; the feeling inside that at least momentarily, you belong to something bigger.

Japanese Big Exhibitions also always have serious souvenir juggernauts attached to them  (do any other people in the world love the endlessly reciprocal gift-giving and souvenir dispensing as much as the people of this country?), including much more than the usual postcards and posters and mugs and key rings and all the rest of it but also specially crafted food items, stationery, whole lists of unnecessary things that you don’t need to buy that needless to say are always bought anyway (it’s almost as if you can’t go anywhere in Japan without having to then give a souvenir to someone to say that you’ve been there).

I myself am quite selfishly happy to usually resist all these ‘goods’, except, of course when I espy a limited edition fragrant tea created especially for the exhibition by those masters of Parisian élegance du thé, Mariage Frères, the kind of crème de la crème of high crafted tea producers that place them at the very top of covetable tea brokers, in the eyes of Tokyo at least, more, even, than any British establishment such as Fortnum & Mason. Mariage Frères is expensive, and obviously this is precisely the reason why it is such a success here. Marco Polo, a tea I have bought on occasion, is a divinely comforting vanillic tea, drunk either with milk or without, but it is one of those leaf blends that really takes you out of yourself for a moment; whisking you away in the hot moments as you sip it, and banishes the blues. Smelling the Cleopatra from the little glass bottle (don’t you just love the smell of thés parfumés, dry as cork, but fragrant as anything when you release the stopper and sample their aura?) I knew that I would have to buy it , that the time would be right for such a flavour, even if is just waiting on the kitchen shelf a very long time for its moment to come.

In Hanoi this summer I also had the most sublime experience on the upper floor of a beautiful art shop where we had a tea tasting session with a lovely relaxed girl who brewed what we asked to and let us smell various oolongs and green teas (and the most delightfully fragrant lotuses and jasmines, the best I have ever smelled, which are still wrapped and ready, unopened in their boxes, for when the time is right, probably in the summer or springtime I would imagine). The Mariage Frères teas, though, feel exactly right right now, as the cold of Autumn is finally properly descending on the Tokyo area and dreamily scented, otherworldly brews are just the ticket.

Like its namesake – surely the most famously perfumed woman in the history of mankind – this tea blend pushes to the limits, almost, what is acceptable in terms of fragrance for something that you are consuming. Drinking. It is perfume; a ‘sensual floral citrus black tea’ that is just what it says; flowers and flowers, vanilla and sweet oranges, and after a bit of afternoon delight ourselves upstairs following the shenanigans of the Halloween party last night, I have just come down here to make a pot and wake us up a little before we walk to the local shops and buy provisions for a Sunday roast later this evening. “It’s nice, isn’t it”, says the lover, the perfect post-nap pick me up; the robustness of the perfume entering the body; dilating the senses.

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THE LOOK FOR HALLOWEEN: CHINESE OPERA MEETS ZOMBIE DALLAS STAR……….. THE SCENT: : FANTASQUE by LOUIS FERAUD (I982)

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October 31, 2015 · 9:40 pm

THE SECRET PARFUMS OF SHISEIDO

 

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‘We both know that it was a girl

back in Bethlehem

And on that fateful day

when she was crucified

She wore Shiseido red’

 

 

 

sings Tori Amos on Boys For Pele, cementing once gain the iconic status of Shiseido in the western eye, its rarified, aloof and untouchable Franco-Japonicity.

 

 

 

And yet the Shiseido that we know way out west and the one I know here are really quite different. The gleaming, curved beauty of the feline Serge Lutens collaborations such as the groundbreaking and quite brilliant Feminité Du Bois, or the now almost mythical Nombre Noir, have almost nothing in common with the far more homey and almost pedestrian fare that one finds here on your local Shiseido counter: sweet, and outdated, aldehydic nothings such as More, the original old musty fresh Zen, or Mémoire; or the powdery, green and irisian Chanel N°I9 wannabe, Murasaki.

 

While the best of the standard contemporary lineup, available in every high street Shiseido store, is possibly Koto, a fresh floral chypre that has a certain very refined and patchouli-touched atmosphere, it is nothing compared to the criminally discontinued Inouï (which is perfection) or Kamakura, a beautiful rose perfume whose existence I would probably have doubted ( I can’t find any information about it anywhere), had I not myself physically decanted a little from a Japanese friend’s rare bottle.

The same thing goes for the perfume Concerto. You become inclined to believe that though you are holding a miniature of the scent physically in your hand, that there must be some mistake, that it can’t actually exist, as there seems to be no mention of it anywhere on the netosphere, that if it isn’t written about, somewhere, on the great cosmic spider’s web of information technology that dominates our universe that it is almost as though it had been redacted out of our collective consciousness and cannot be allowed to have ever been there in the first place. But there it is: again, a copy of a western perfume (this time, Jean Patou’s exquisite I000; nice, well crafted, intriguing).

Before I continue with this properly, and illustrate for you my amazing find of a rare, untouched cache of vintage miniature Shiseido extraits, I think I am going to first just pop out now with Duncan’s iphone around the corner and show you my local Shiseido. I think you are going to be surprised. Less than minute’s walk away from my house, the ‘Shiseido Chain Store’ as they are called here, is a zillion, zillion miles away from the glamour of a a Shiseido concession in a department store of Paris or of Tokyo, and is more, in fact, like a Boots or a Walgreens ( except in my local case it is a total endearing shambles: more Sally-Ann, than rigidly covetable cosmetique. The proprietor knits woollen frogs and tunics with ladies from the neighbourhood and puts them in the shop window (and her is the photographic evidence)

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oh the glamour

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, and you can buy anything there from expensive Shiseido cosmetics and perfumes (so artfully arranged!)

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to pens to cellotape, washing powder and glue; cigarettes; magazines; candies, hairclips and medicines .

Let me go now, actually – and I will take along my box of long lost, ‘secret’ Shiseido parfums (one of my truly great ‘recycle’ finds of the last few months, an exhilarating find,) to see exactly what she makes of them.

Just look at the drab dowdiness of ‘my’ Shiseido! Are you not surprised?

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As I expected, the Shiseido lady was with her Saturday late morning knitting companion. They sit there with the radio on and chew the cud on neighbourhood gossip, as Shiseido perfumes malinger on shelves and the whole feels rather more like somebody’s in-need-of-a-tidy-up kitchen. I got three boxes of laundry detergent, some toilet freshener and some headache pills, and then whipped out my box to see what she made of them. ‘Wow!’ she said, or the Japanese equivalent, and then, ‘natsukashi’i, which is one of my favourite words of the language actually, for its ease of use, and its concise encsapulation of much longer English expressions we use in these situations such as ‘God that takes me back’, or ‘Haven’t seen that for a long time’ or ‘Wow, that really reminds me of the long and drawn out summers of my junior high school days’. As I pulled out the draws with the tips of my nails (though I haven’t really got any in truth as I bite them) – this set certainly isn’t very ergonomic – the ladies broke up their knitting to come and have a peer, and how lovely it is: like a chocolate box with a guide map written to what is within, a selection: mmm………..what perfume shall we wear tonight?

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White Rose is the first one she takes out of its felt indentation (each perfume fits snugly into its own), and in fact this also takes me back a few years or two because I vividly remember when I first moved to this neighbourhood – almost twenty years ago – there being a precious big bottle of the extrait of White Rose, a perfume I had never heard of before and was very excited to be discovering, under the counter: a very expensive, made to order, haute couture number that Princess Michiko, now Empress, apparently as she has just told me, wore on her wedding day. Of the collection, this is the one in fact that stands out, probably : transparent and pure – it is in fact the smell of a white rose , and I really like it. ‘Jasmine’ seems like a weirdity, somehow: ‘Shiseido Jasmine’, but it is also quite nice in a perfumey, aldehydic kind of way, a bit like something by Le Galion. Concerto is there, as is Mémoire, with its bathtime heliotrope softness, and the still available More.

More excitingly, however, there is Sylvia (what a great name), which one immediately of course hopes is an olfactory homage to Plath. It could be, who knows, though it certainly lacks her savage wit. The lady at the shop reckons this collection is probably thirty to forty years old or so though and it smells it: Sylvia is a nondescript, but sweet and pleasing woody aldehydic in the manner of Givenchy’s L’Interdit – but nothing to get your knickers in a twist over- while Prior (pronounced Pree-orr, according to the Japanese katakanization) is a dead ringer for vintage Miss Dior (in truth it does often seem that pre-Lutens, and with the exception of Inouï, blatant plagiarism was the order of the game for the perfumery division of Shiseido). Yet, like Koto, Prior is a very well made green chypre and has reall life to it: I can certainly imagine a I960’s well-kempt secretary clicking her heels along a pavement in Shimbashi, a touch of this latest perfume release by Shiseido gracing her neck and wrists, then when it has faded on her post-work skin, changing later into Tonight, described, if I am reading it correctly, as an enchanting and ‘relaxing muguet’ bouquet over sandalwood, and indeed it is (how nice to smell that genuine sandalwood again; still with integrity after all this time, like a genie from a lamp: you do sense that with a touch of Tonight (“Tonight, Tonight, It all began tonight. I saw you and the world went away”, god I love that song) she will be happy and perhaps let her hair down a bit; yes, you can imagine her going to a production of West Side Story at a theatre in Hibiya, snug in her Shiseido Tonight, happy in the economic brightness of the era she has brimmingly and luckily found herself in.

Primax, which now would be like calling a luxurious extrait Walmart, is yet another classical rose jasmine woody aldehyde (you would think that the only perfume ever invented in the history of humanity were Chanel N°5 sniffing this box), while Jyakko, on the other hand, is a more interesting and heady chypric white floral with slightly more lift.

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No. In all honesty, while I was certainly thrilled to find this set, dusting away as it was at the back of a Yokohama antiques shop, because it is rare and probably extremely collectible (and I have already collected it), although I was hoping to torture and tantalize you drippingly with the exclusiveness of my acquisition, in truth the perfumes themselves, though pleasing, could never really be described as exciting. Only Deluxe, the final scent in this collection, has that extra, animalic, almost Bal A Versailles like heft and texture (actually, it is quite similar, though not quite as good (but then, what is?)), hinting, perhaps of that brief spell of gloriousness Shiseido was to have soon in the future, in the eighties, when the wizard from Marrakesh Monsieur Lutens melded the f philosophical chic of his art fashion brain with the grande dame reputability of Japan’s most highly held cosmetic conglomeration, and inspiringly opened the magnificent Les Salons Du Palais Royal Shiseido, that mesmerizing magnet of covetable elixirs that puts this anachronisitic little bunch rather in the shade.

And yet. How beautiful it is, nonetheless, to have found it. And to have had the opportunity to discover its contents, and share them with you here on The Black Narcissus today on this grey and cold October afternoon. A portal into another time; housed secretively and hermetically; in its drawer-like, jewellery collection box.

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The only Austrian I know

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Olfactoria’s Travels was one of the perfume blogs I was always instinctively attracted to. There was humour; there was intimacy, and there was immediate, and beautiful writing. And the writer, a person I knew nothing about, named Birgit from Vienna, was not even writing in her first language (which I always found  SICKENING, because to be honest, although I can ‘speak’ some foreign languages, myself, I will never even come close to being able to express myself so naturally, and so exquisitely, in any foreign tongue the way that she so effortlessly does; nowhere near).

When I started The Black Narcissus, and no one was reading it, and I was somewhat despondent, as I couldn’t quite see the point in continuing it otherwise, because in that case you are just addressing a void, for some reason I intuitively one night decided to write to this mysterious woman in the land of Freud before I contacted anybody else, and asked her ( rather desperately, and dramatically, I have to say), for advice. She responded immediately, and very sweetly,  suggested I do some guest posts for her (and I did, a whole Vanilla Series), and as a result, I started to finally receive some visitors on the blog (and before you know it was invited to do the Perfume Lovers London talk on vanilla, a still from which you can see here in this picture taken two summers ago, if I am correct, though it feels more in truth like it was a lifetime).

We met; we looked each other in the eye, and it was, I have to say, a bit like Vertigo. I was somewhat awed, even quite bashful, that she had come all the way from Vienna just to meet me (and had decided to give me a vintage Shalimar extrait as a ‘souvenir’); that she was so self-deprecating, while contradictorily bathing all the same in her own inimitable golden glow.  In the pub around the corner afterwards,  where I think I bought her some prosecco or something sparkling (though I could of course be quite wrong as there had been gin, and beers and the whole thing was getting rather boozy during the evening beforehand), I know that  we were talking about psychology, and perfume and various other aspects of our lives, both quite strangely intimately dark and light; there was a depth (and dare I say it,  Birgit, even almost mystical – for such a brief encounter –  connection). Of course I was projecting my own Hitchcock Blonde obsessions onto you, probably (no: definitely), but I do have to say that I felt that you had a presence that can only truly be described as shimmering. So dignified, and Mysterious. A touch sad, perhaps. Gilded; intelligent; and beautiful.

This is a picture of us both here, meeting for the first time. At the end of the evening, a  I began to properly recover  from my nerves ( I had been hySTERICAL, as anyone who was there will gladly testify) and when I was able to finally enjoy and gloat in the truly pleasurable feeling of recovering from the trauma of my first dose of real public speaking; meeting new friends;  bonding over scent, and truly delighting in the late summer London moment. In this photograph here I was definitely properly starting to unwind a little. We had just met. But I definitely felt that there was some connection.

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Birgit, thank you for everything, and the very best of luck for the future.

And if I am ever in Vienna, I hope that we can go out for coffee and Viennese swirls; spray the perfumes at Hermes; and continue our conversations in some wintry, dream-laden, statued; snow laced; and out-of-the-way city park.

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OCCIDENTALISM: : FRANGIPANE by SANTA MARIA NOVELLA (1828)

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THE SARACEN AND THE COSSACK: TWO CHEST-BEATING LEATHERS – YATAGAN by CARON (1976) & CUIR DE RUSSIE by PIVER (1939)

YES. Finally found Yatagan at the flea market yesterday, very vintage, leathery and silvestrian, for three dollars.

Duncan smells spectacular in it.

Source: THE SARACEN AND THE COSSACK: TWO CHEST-BEATING LEATHERS – YATAGAN by CARON (1976) & CUIR DE RUSSIE by PIVER (1939)

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