
Indie line GoodTrueBeautiful has launched their second fragrance, Lovelily…
Posted by Robin on 4 Comments

Indie line GoodTrueBeautiful has launched their second fragrance, Lovelily…
Posted by Robin on 5 Comments
Two new commercials geared at young men. First up, a very short piece for John Varvatos Star USA. Below the jump, a slightly longer spot for the new men’s fragrances from Topman.
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New at first-in-fragrance (Germany): Six Scents Series 3, L'Artisan Batucada.
New at harrods (UK): L'Eau d'Issey Gold Absolute.
New at kohls: Jennifer Lopez Love & Light.
New at saksfifthavenue: Bond no. 9 I Love New York.
New at selfridges (UK): Yves Saint Laurent L'Homme Libre.
New at ulta: Givenchy Ange ou Demon Le Secret Elixir.
Posted by Robin on 290 Comments

Same old open thread: talk about anything you like — the perfume you’re wearing today, the perfume you wish you could afford to buy this week, the perfume you wish you'd never bought at all, whatever.
Or, ask a question about fragrance, then see if anyone else has asked a question that you can answer…
Note: image is flowers by a wall by Per Ola Wiberg ~ Powi at flickr; some rights reserved.
Posted by Erin on 47 Comments

Like many others who share my hobby, I believe, I was wary of florals when I started my perfume education. I was willing to countenance many a gourmand or woody amber barbarity, but I avoided flowers — and especially white flowers. I was going through a phase of sampling niche series perfumes — the Comme des Garçons incense fragrances, the Bois line of Serge Lutens — and I regarded white flowers as unsuitable material for such elaboration. Comme des Garçons White, purporting to be a more floral alternative to their original Eau de Parfum, instead smelled quite properly of sour spices and wood, and I viewed Lutens’ Un Lys and Tubéreuse Criminelle as singular and humorous experiments, fascinating to sniff on a blotter, I thought, but created with a kind of magisterial, Gallic indifference towards anybody wearing them. As a smell, white floral notes were heady, insistent and complex: in a word, “perfumey”. In perfume, didn’t that make them too, well… obvious?
But I couldn’t help noticing I was drawn to ylang-ylang. I had dried blotters all over my place at that time, and still do: I use them as bookmarks, clothing or car fresheners and post-its. Though I was doggedly wearing my modern roots and resins, my incense and tea scents, I was forced to admit that I stood transfixed when a lush tropical cloud of ylang breathed up out of my reference books, purse or underwear drawer. There were so many facets to the smell…