‘GRAND AMOUR’ by ANNICK GOUTAL ( 1996 )

 

 

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“Brenda lay on the dais. Her tray was beside her and the quilt was littered with envelopes, letters, and the daily papers. Her head was propped against a very small blue pillow; clean of make-up her face was almost colourless rose pearl…….a nereid emerging from fathomless depths of clear water…”

 

 

 

 

 

On the cusp of embarking on a desperate, pointless and finally unfulfilling affair with a handsome cad down in London, Evelyn Waugh’s beautiful but bored Lady of Hetton Manor (in his 1934 novel ‘A Handful Of Dust’), would have sat in a spring-scented, flower-filled room perfumed like this:  breathy, on-the-brink hyacinths; roses, lilies, and  honeysuckles, strewn decadently over tender balsams and the faintest memory of vanilla.

 

 

 

A romantic homage to Chamade (but less powdery, animalic, and ultimately less tragic), Grand Amour has effortless grace and classicism, but still, at its heart, a slightly wilted reminiscence –  a sigh,  like a chamber of beauteous hyacinths on the point of dying.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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a picture I took today

 

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SUBTERFUGE

 

 

 

 

ELIZABETH TAYLOR'S GRADUATION

 

 

 

 

 

 

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クチナシの花

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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….is what I feel in my new work perfume for spring: Gardenia by Elizabeth Taylor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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ON PERSONALITY, VERSATILITY, AND HERMES EAU DE NARCISSE BLEU (2013)

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JUST A GLIMPSE……… DOBLIS by HERMES (1955 : 2004)

 

 

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Reorchestrated in 2004 in a strictly limited edition batch of 1000 (extortionately expensive) worldwide bottles, I found myself one day in the Tokyo Marunouchi Hermès boutique panicking:  racking my brains financially and deliberating whether there was any feasible way in which I could possibly buy one. Rarity. Preciousness. Utter exclusivity. Standing there on the shelf, before me:  peerless and irreproachable, and one of the only bottles left in Japan; a mythical gazelle, about to disappear quietly, but forever, behind the leaves….

 

Though a modern reworking of a timelessly classic genre,  as soon as I smelled this beauty by genius perfumer Guy Robert (Madame Rochas, Dioressence) I knew that it was one of the most superb aldehydic florals I had ever smelled.  Victoria from Bois De Jasmin – and this woman certainly knows her perfume -cites this as her all time favourite scent. Now I understood why: it was like a dream. All the perfume’s notes were truly glass-like, crystallized, effulgent, clear –  a moment in history brought to life. I had never smelled the original, but I could imagine that this formula had possibly even been improved upon by the perfumer’s son, Francois Robert: divinely eliding past and present with no budgetary restrictions , cutting out fust and extraneity and reviving the formula to the most sublime proportions within his artistic grasp: a grand, fresh cut-flower bouquet of green florist flowers; sparkling, delicious neo-classical aldehydes, and a gentle, soft-wood finish of tender, tactile calf-skin leather. I was stunned, moved even, desperate to have it, though I knew that it was impossible. Doblis was the perfume equivalent of the Venus De Milo, angelically dignified and love-inducting: as beautiful and stainless as  Calèche, but played on celeste.

 

 

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MORE IS MORE : : : : : JARDIN D’ARMIDES by ORIZA L. LE GRAND (1909 – REISSUE: 2013)

 

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SOMETIMES YOU MUST FLOUNCE IT AND FLAUNT IT AND GLOAT IN THE NOSE CLOUDS OF FUMES

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOVE IT , BATHE IN IT, CHOKE ON IT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DROWN  IN  IT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOOKER OR NO ,    YOU CAN WEAR IT LIKE A HO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A BABE COMING DOWN FROM HEAVEN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SOMETIMES, THE CELESTIAL CLOY OF FEATHERS AND PINK AND POWDER, OF  SWEET, PUTRID UNGUENTS, OF THIGH SLAPPING GLEE

 

 

 

 

IS A GLORIOUSLY GIGGLING KNICKERBOCKERGLORY IN THE FACE OF STALE INDUSTRIAL DULLNESS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OF DANCING GIRLS AT THE FOLIES BERGERES 

 

 

AND ALL THE FRILLS AND THE SPILLS AND THE  BELLYACHE,

 

 

 

ALL THE TEARS AND THE FRUSTRATIONS AS

 

 

 

 

WISTERIAS TRUMPET THEIR ALMOND HYSTERIA

 

 

 

AND HELIOTROPES AND ORCHIDS SEETHE IN THROAT-SWIMMING HONEY

 

 

 

AND ORANGE BLOSSOMS AND CHEEK – PINCHING ROSES

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

KISS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AND VIOLETS AND TUBEROSES PILLOW FIGHT AT GLOWERING MADAME’S,

 

 

 

 

 

AND PRACTITIONERS SWOON

 

 

 

WITH THE SUGARING FROTH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Vintage Photos of Cabaret Dancers from 1900–1930 (1)

 

 

 

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NEW ! EAU DES SENS by DIPTYQUE (2016)

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A very Diptyque-ish orange blossom.

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MIND OVER MATTER: : : : : : : :: MEMOIRE DU FUTUR, PARTICULES IMPREVISIBLES, ABSTRACTION RAISONEE, IRIS PALLADIUM, CHAMP D’INFLUENCE & MOMENT PERPETUEL by LES EAUX PRIMORDIALES ( 2015 )

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‘Les Eaux Primordiales’ is a series of new perfumes created by 28 year-old perfumer Arnaud Poulin. Intellectual in inspiration, with a very French emphasis on philosophy, culture and the abstract, the key concept behind the brand is apparently ‘atemporality in movement’, the Cinquième Sens-trained perfumer basing his creations on the foundations of the traditional ‘Great Perfumery’ while seeking to ‘redefine contemporary classics with the use and reinvention of sometimes forgotten olfactory families.’ In essence, all six scents are well made and attractive, with enough personality to perhaps achieve Monsieur Poulin’s goal of creating emotions ‘able to make body and soul come closer to each other, to be an imaginary addition to one’s persona, to create a world of one’s own’.

 

IRIS PALLADIUM

Notes: Italian Orris, bergamot, carrot seed, sage, ‘solar jasmine’, violet, sandalwood, cedar, tonka bean, labdanum, patchouli, white musk.

 

‘Duality between two materials: a flower and a precious-metal. The smell of a time when ladies would use perfume and powder. Our iris comes from Italy and diffuses smells of makeup powder, violet, and also, dust’.

 

From the above description you might imagine that Iris Palladium is a feminine, maquillaged iris along the lines of Frederic Malle’s Iris Poudre or even Chanel’s girlish, lipstick-smeared Misia, but nothing could be further from the truth. Rather, I find this staid and savoury iris to be more akin to Armani Privé’s La Femme Bleue (though without that perfume’s inherent mystery).

I do love iris, particularly when it is on the more melancholy tip: Hermès Hiris, Iris Silver Mist, Le Labo Iris 39 and N0 19 immediately spring to mind, but I can also enjoy a more sawdusty, mellow, almost salty orris number like Iris Palladium. Androgynous, subtle but diffusive, this makes an intriguing skin scent that would draw people to you even if it is perhaps lacking the wow factor that would make me want to buy it. For the fiercest iris aficionados, though, those who want to have an orris for every shade along the irisian PH spectrum, this new take on the powdery, dusty classic is certainly worth sampling.

 

MOMENT PERPETUEL

Notes: lavender, violet, blackcurrant, blackberry, fir balsam, hedione, musk

 

‘The name comes from the mechanical universe, perpetual movement. By definition, a moment has a beginning and an end, therefore Moment Perpétuel is the idea of an infinite moment, infinite joy, and why not, infinite love’.

 

Ahem. That is quite the spiel to introduce what is essentially a fruity lavender, but fortunately, the opening of this perfume is rather joyous: a very beautiful, and original, high quality, French lavender top note tinted with violet, and aureoled quite inspirationally with a beautifully optimistic, fresh, and bucolic  note of blackcurrant and blackberry – a purple fusion of happiness that really works. Both I and my other half immediately took to this one, and I insisted that he go out into town later to do some shopping wearing it to see how it progressed. It smelled lovely. An hour or two after he had come back home though I kept wondering where the smell of Gucci Envy was coming from, or if he had sprayed something similiar in the bathroom. It was a smell I was quite enjoying – fresh, clean, green, soapy – as I do like Envy, that stilettoed green classic from the nineties that was inexplicably, along with Rush, discontinued (coincidentally, we had just got a miniature Envy For Men the other day from a recycle shop – lord that stuff is sexy, a virile ginger swooner, I had forgotten) and I was actually planning to do a review, soon, of both. Nice though that scent might be, however, it was a strange ending – and one that he smells quite strongly of this morning – for a scent that began with a totally unconnected, and very natural smelling, burst of provencal lavender. A curious scent, then, this ‘perpetual moment’ and something of a schizo, but one I can imagine one of us, if the right multiple-personality mood should suddenly take hold,  probably wearing again.

 

PARTICULES IMPREVISIBLES

NOTES: pink pepper, rose berries, cumin, elemi resin, cypriol, guaiac wood, ginger, thyme, rosemary, smoked woods, incense, labdanum, vanilla and amber

 

Unfortunately, I detest the synthetically enhanced wood trend in current perfumery to the extent that I can’t be rational or objective. I can’t even test this sort of fragrance on my skin, nor even stand to have the room I am in smelling of it either if I were to spray some on a card (seriously), but fortunately, for the sake of perfume fairness, my best friend in Japan, Junko, can. She is the opposite of me, and thus the recipient of any and all boisés I might receive in the post. Perfumes that I would immediately simply want to throw out of the window usually without getting to know how they actually develop on the skin because I really just can’t stand that rasping, harsh dessication for even a moment, I get to experience (and even quite enjoy, bizarrely) on her. She is my ‘wood model’, if you like, and in this way I have been able to get different perspectives on such intense unalloyed woodies as Sacred Woods By Kilian and Bois d’Hiver by Ex Nihilo, a scent she has become so obsessed with she is now in London, as we speak, trying to  find it. She would probably also like Particules Imprévisibles (and I will of course give my sample bottle to her), so named because it is ‘absolutely unpredictable, the numerous spicy and woody raw materials giving it the peculiar property to react to every skin in a unique manner’. I like how Junko’s skin reacts with these more traditionally masculine accords – such smells make her fierce and stubborn independence in such a simultaneously girly and sexist place as Japan even more manifest – and this dry, warm, spicy, almost YSL M7-like blend (not at all original; we have all smelled this kind of thing many, many times before) would probably smell great on her brown leather jacket when we meet up for our occasional, tête à tête conversations over wine and Japanese food, and I smell her subtle, but noticeable, incense- like dryness (dignified, magnetic) – from where I sit across the table.

 

CHAMP D’INFLUENCE

 

NOTES:  Lemon, lavender, evernyl, geranium, Aldehyde C12 MNA, vetiver, oud, patchouli, white musk, amber woods

 

Speaking of gender and masculinity, Champ d’Influence, a classically butch kind of perfume if ever there was one, is a ‘homage to my grandfather, a childhood olfactory memory. Each morning before school, my parents would drop me to my grandparents’ house. There, my grandfather, while being a farmer, still took the time each morning to soap his face, then to apply a traditional shaving cream with a vintage shaving brush, finishing that routine with an aftershave balm. I’ve always wanted to recreate this precise and peculiar fresh smell: this fougère base with lemon notes, lavender, geranium and vetiver, so typical of the odours emanating from a barbershop. A very manly fragrance that still appeals to a lot of women’.

I would agree. I do know women who still like the smell of Brut, the suave, hunk-chested, smooth-cheeked precursor of this kind of fragrance. It’s a classical formula that works very well if you like that sort of thing (and I sort of do: on the right man – one with a good sense of humour who doesn’t take himself too seriously, it can be quite sexy), even if Mr Poulain tries too hard, perhaps, to bridge the gap between the past and the present with a harsh note in the base accord that brings to mind more metallic, aggressive fougères such as Diesel Life Fuel. With similarities, also, to YSL Rive Gauche Pour Homme (the best of this type of new skool/ old school fougere, in my view) Champ D’Influence is a very effective scent – generously replete and full (though some might say a bit too full of itself) that will probably have a certain type of woman or man who is genetically programmed to go for the big bulge kind of guy champing at the bit; getting all riled up and horny and bothered and ready to ransack him thoroughly, though personally, I think I would much rather be chatted up in a bar by someone wearing Iris Palladium.You could probably expect better conversation.

 

ABSTRACTION RAISONNE

NOTES: Grapefruit, bergamot, rhubarb, hedione, violet, tobacco, nutmeg, benzoin, amber woods, vetiver.

‘The paradox between abstract and reason. This perfume is the definition of it. Vetiver is usually heavily used for masculine fragrances. Here, this material is twisted with an acidulous rhubarb note which reminds me of the delicious rhubarb pies my mother used to make. Also, some greener and more fruity notes evoking passion fruits and a hint of mangoes. Finally, a benzoin and tobacco base to infuse leather and amber tones’.

 

I must admit that I don’t quite get what the perfumer is going on about here: ‘the paradox between abstract and reason’ nor, his assertion that this fairly typical contemporary vetiver is the ‘very definition’ (quite an immodest claim to make, actually) of anything whatsoever. The perfume is quite nice though: fresh, sharp, almost sour, the citrus and rhubarb mingling nicely with the rounded vetiver note that works in harmony with the other softer and more balsamic ingredients, although in truth this accord is already very familiar to me in perfumes such as Aedes De Venustas  – which is also based around rhubarb and vetiver, and fresh, fruity vetivers such as Atelier Cologne’s Vetiver Fatal. If I were going for a vetiver of this type ( I occasionally do when I feel like hiding myself), I would probably plump instead for Vetiver Moloko by Ex Nihilo (another recent Parisian start up), which includes a Bulgarian rose and cypress note in the heart and takes this overdone fragrance type to slightly more restrained and rarified tenure.

 

 

MEMOIRE DU FUTUR

NOTES: Italian bergamot, aldehydes, rose, jasmine, carnation, violet, tonka, violet, hyraceum

 

Arnaud Poulain’s ethos for his brand  – a blend of the brand new and the classical – is probably best encapsulated in the ideas around this curiously unfashionable blend:

 

‘In order to invent the future, a prerequisite is to master the past. For this perfume, I wanted to recreate and do justice to the great fragrances created between 1920 and 1940. A floral perfume revolving around a chypre base. A perfume with some of the most noble and traditional perfumery elements while still being completely contemporary, by combining them with modern ingredients’.

 

Possibly the least successful of this sextet, I would have to say that Mémoire Du Future, for me personally, fails in its mission. This scaled down skeletal attempt to bring le grand parfum back to life is far too dominated by simplistic and overpowering aldehydes that drown out any other naturals that might be in the blend and remind me of the dirt cheap, roll-on oil perfumes you find at Arab and Indian markets masquerading as Chanel No 5. Granted, the base is quite sexy and animalic (because of the hyraceum, or African Stone, a potent animalic ingredient blended possibly with some vanilla), reminding me of the original, eponymous perfume by Moschino – that naughty, buttery oriental that had no class really, despite its Milanese credentials, yet sure smelled big-thighed down n’ dirty when it ripped off its fur coat later on in the evening – but it’s hard to realistically compare this with the more orchestral, deep and fully rendered classiques of the Golden Age, alluring and curvaceous though it may be.

 

 

 

LES EAUX PRIMORDIALES: VERDICT

 

 

Quite nice. All six of these are competently made with a solid savoir faire, and you would probably be quite happy to work with people wearing these perfumes at the office. Admittedly, worn at high dosage, Champ D’Influence, Mémoire Du Futur and Particules Imprévisibles might occasionally be discovered groping and shagging frenetically in a three-way session behind the photocopier, unable, by 3pm to resist their surging impulses, bored at their desks and turned on hopelessly by their ruggedly pre-ordained sexual tropes; while Iris Palladium – assured, warm, enigmatic; Abstraction Raisonnée – fashionable but unforthcoming, and Moment Perpetuel – clean, soapy, ‘lovely’, if smiling a bit too incessantly, you wouldn’t mind at all sharing some desk space with and having a late morning meeting over coffee.  You would get used to them. Their perfumes would blend with their personalities. Their scents most definitely become them and they would not offend. At least not most of the time. Still, as you daydreamed from the window, thinking of your perfume collection back home, you would still sometimes find yourself, as the working day progressed , smiling to yourself knowingly, eyes closed as you smelled your wrists- defiantly, surreptitiously – when no one else was looking.

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IT MIGHT AS WELL BE SPRING…………JARDINS DE BAGATELLE by GUERLAIN (1983)

 

 

 

 

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Perfume Godfather Luca Turin famously hates this scintillating floral gem, alongside two other thumbs-down Guerlain creations that received the terse, Turinian shortshrift: the prim and proper Champs Elysées (1996), and the tropical, big-boobs-on-a-beach, slug-all-ya-tropicalia-in-a-sweet-wooden-vat-and-and-mix-it-all-up Mahora (2000), all of which I personally like. The man may be a perfume expert and at times a very brilliant writer, but you sometimes do wonder what’s wrong with his nose (L’Instant and Insolence over these three? I think not).

Anyway, for me, Jardins De Bagatelle –  a sharp, swooning, French flower fantasia/ cedarwood musk from 1983, has always been a delight. It has perhaps the best sillage I know in all perfumery, leaving a beguiling, feminine and intriguing trail in its wake that makes you want to stand up and follow the wearer to her source. Up close and at first, the picture can admittedly be less harmonious – the sheer, plosive, almost metallic, thrust of flower notes, all (synthetic?) gardenia, tuberose, violet, orchid, ylang ylang and jasmine – shiny and shimmering, fountainous as the Tuileries and heady as a self-absorbed love affair in Paris-  enough to bring on a stroke in the most phobically inclined of flower haters. I get that. This perfume is certainly not subtle. Unlike, say, a vintage Ricci, whose watercolour floral bouqets are all about delicacy, prettiness and balance, Bagatelle is a frivolous, nose-painting renegade with absolutely no regard for those around her. She wants to smell lovely and delicious and arresting, and she wants to smell like that now.

The more lingering appeal of Jean Paul Guerlain’s most florid and exuberant creation, though, lies in its more deep-seated fusion with musk (the central pillar of the perfume’s construction along with an adventurously large amount of cedarwood and vetiver), a drier, and more sober accord that clings to the spiralling hysteria of the flowers and gives them all a dose of much needed reality. The perfume thus sings its spring-joyous song in its own inimitable voice (there is nothing else that smells like Jardins De Bagatelle – I find it totally unique), while simultaneously grounding itself in the woody and sensual musk notes that soften the perfume and give it its compelling, womanly, allure.

 

 

 

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Back in the days before the internet, the perfume fora and the vast deterioration of quality in the perfume industry generally, before the flankers and the limited editions and the bi-monthly new releases; before Les Matières and the Acqua Allegorias, Les Parisiennes and Les Elixirs Charnels ( I could go on), Guerlain had a far smaller, but still faithfully curated, and quality-controlled collection of perfumes that had brilliantly stood the test of time – at least for those who really knew and appreciated good perfume. There was the exquisite quintet of unperishable beauty created by Jean Paul’s father Jacques: L’Heure Bleue, Apres L’Ondée, Mitsuko, Vol De Nuit and Shalimar– masterpieces of mystery and olfactory poetry whose sheer inventiveness and artistry have made them treasured and loved by perfumists to this very day. There were the citruses – Eau De Coq, Eau De Guerlain, Eau De Cologne Impériale, and the Citrus Dirties – Mouchoir De Monsieur, Jicky. There were the masculine, velveted debonairs : Habit Rouge and Vetiver, and the moody, reticent Parure. But aside Nahéma, a gorgeous rose-peach confection, the hyacinth heartbreaker Chamade (one of my favourite perfumes of all time) and the delightful Chant D’Arômes – a mossy, floral chypre that is also lovely this time of year, there was nothing really bright, floral or even modern in the Guerlain contemporary lineup by the eighties. To remain relevant, or at least current in the more extroverted and colourful climes of that incorrigible decade,  the house had to try and remedy this. And although the perfume was most certainly a very new departure for Guerlain – luminous, aggressive, and almost painfully iridescent,  rather than the aesthetic failure that Luca Turin makes it out to be, Jardins De Bagatelle, so sweet and full of energy, so new, was an intuitive and very inventive volte face for the house by Jean Paul Guerlain that was, in my view,  very clever.

 

My friend Emma wears Jardins De Bagatelle and it is her signature. It smells utterly fantastic on her, the musk and the flowers somehow subdued, yet with always enough confidence to let the perfume’s notes sing unhindered. In essence this perfume is Emma – they are a natural match and it brings out the best in her. Jardins De Bagatelle also smells quite marvellous on my mother, whose skin was just born to wear jasmine: again, that sillage  – so appealing to my senses – just lingers in every room that either of these women have been in:  not in a cloying, or intrusive, manner –  just resting on corners of the air like a sly, floral fingerprint of their identity.

 

Seemingly relegated to obscurity in the Guerlain current line up – the original, glass-angular, very eighties oblong flacon now replaced with the generic bee-bottle, Jardins De Bagatelle is perhaps not as fashionable as it once might have been, if it ever actually was (did Jean Paul Guerlain’s efforts to bring some power zazz into the hallowed Guerlain halls actually work commercially? I’m not quite sure. Perhaps Brielle, who used to work at Guerlain, can enlighten us). But whether it was, or was not a ‘success’, to me personally, in its sheer vivacity, its volupté, its unrepressed, full-bloomed and light-filled buoyancy, for me, Jardins De Bagatelle  – the finest kind of floral anomaly – will forever remain an annual, bright, and always very uplifting, pleasure.

 

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PACO RABANNE METAL (1979) : CHAMPAGNE JACUZZIS, BIANCA; BUBBLE-FOAMed ECSTACY, AND THE LAST DAYS OF DISCO

 

 

Ah, to be on Spring break…..

 

 

PACO RABANNE METAL (1979) : CHAMPAGNE JACUZZIS, BIANCA; BUBBLE-FOAMed ECSTACY, AND THE LAST DAYS OF DISCO

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