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Browsing by author: Angela

What to Do With All that Perfume

Posted by Angela on 31 January 2011 178 Comments

It’s such a conundrum. I have more than enough perfume for life, yet the occasional bottle or split still finds its way into my crowded perfume cabinet. While I return to my favorites and exciting, newer bottles, perfectly good perfume sits and risks turning. What’s a girl to do? Find more ways to use perfume, that’s what. Here are a few uses for perfume you like enough to keep, but fear you won’t use before it spoils:

Scent your curtains. Diaghilev reportedly sprayed his curtains with Guerlain Mitsouko so when the wind ruffled their fabric, his rooms were filled with Mitsouko’s sepia peach and moss. Such a romantic idea. A few years ago I followed his lead and spritzed the cotton velvet curtains in my living room with Mitsouko EdP. I nearly threw up. For about a week I couldn’t spend time on the couch without occasional forays to the kitchen for air. Fragrant curtains are a terrific idea, but I recommend something with less presence than Mitsouko…

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Avon Unforgettable ~ fragrance review

Posted by Angela on 24 January 2011 107 Comments

In 1960, Avon launched a perfume it called “Unforgettable”. By 2011, it had forgotten all about it. “It is a very, very old fragrance,” the polite Indian gentleman with the unlikely name of Fabian told me on via Avon’s customer service phone number. “It has been wiped from the database.”

“Someone must have records on it somewhere,” I told him. “Do you think you could get me the phone or an email for Avon’s PR firm?”

“Just a moment, ma’am,” Fabian said. “I will see what I can do.” While I waited I fed the cat with my free hand and started stripping the bed for the wash. I didn’t have a lot of confidence even if he did come through with a contact number that Avon’s public relations people would be very helpful. In my experience, PR firms for niche fragrances are really responsive, but for the big boys — Estée Lauder and Nina Ricci, for instance — Now Smell This’s million-plus monthly page views don’t seem to mean a lot.

Fabian was back. Skirting my request for a contact in public relations, he said, “Thank you for waiting, ma’am. I tried very, very hard to get information about Unforgettable, but it is very old. It was wiped completely from the database.” Well. Unforgettable indeed…

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Perfume and Perception

Posted by Angela on 17 January 2011 200 Comments

Toujours un peu perdu dans les nuages

Last week on the radio I heard about a study that had been done on how the cost of wine — or at least how much people think it costs — affects how much people enjoy it. In the study, participants tasted what they thought were seven different wines. As they sipped each wine, they read information about the wine, including its price. At the same time, researchers monitored their brain’s responses. What the participants didn’t know was that they actually only tasted five wines, but they tasted two of them twice. For these two wines, the researchers first told participants the wine was low cost, and the second time they tasted the wine, participants were told it was expensive.

You’ve probably already guessed the study’s results: when people thought they were tasting a costly wine, they reported liking it better. Not only that, but the pleasure centers of their brains were more active, too. When they drank the exact same wine but thought it was cheaper, they didn’t like it as much.

Of course, my first thought was how a similar study would play out with perfume. What if I took two similar fragrances, one downmarket and one upscale, and asked people to compare them? Would they be able to tell the expensive from the cheap in a blind sniff? Would they prefer the cheaper one if I told them it cost a lot?

For perfume lovers, factors other than price would play in…

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Nina Ricci Fille d’Eve ~ fragrance review

Posted by Angela on 10 January 2011 39 Comments

Nina Ricci Fille d'Eve

I first smelled Nina Ricci Fille d’Eve on a business trip to Seattle about 10 years ago. Before we left town, a colleague and I stopped by Parfumerie Nasreen and sampled perfumes, none of which I remember at all now. The owner of the shop stopped us as we left. She pulled a small, apple-shaped bottle from a high shelf behind the cash register and asked if I’d like to try it. “This is very special. Fille d’Eve,” she said and held the bottle as if she were presenting it at a game show.

Eve’s daughter. How could I resist trying a fragrance with a name like that? She dabbed a bit on my wrist, and I asked the price. It was something exorbitant, so I left without giving it more than a cursory sniff. Half an hour out of town I sniffed my wrist again. It smelled not quite clean. Not dirty as in body odor, but like an accumulation of skin oil. Not pretty, really, but intriguing.

Over the years I’d thought about Fille d’Eve and wished I could smell it again…

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Nasomatto Nuda ~ fragrance review

Posted by Angela on 3 January 2011 39 Comments

Nasomatto Nuda perfume

From its name, you’d think Nasomatto Nuda was a skin scent. From the ultra-cool and slightly irritating Nasomatto website (hint: turn off your speakers), you’d suspect Nuda was assertive and on the rock and roll side of Comme des Garçon’s indie style. What you wouldn’t know were the notes, since Nasomatto doesn’t list them, instead preferring to toss out thoughts about the perfume such as “the unexpected tranquility of giving up oneself without concern for boundary”, “hazy intuition of a depth that undoes distance”, and a “quest to find a vanishing point in nature, the translucence of our senses, nude desire”.

Nuda isn’t a skin scent or a “bad boy” fragrance but is a whopping indolic jasmine. Nasomatto nose Alessandro Gualtieri is frank about basing his fragrances partly on his experiences with drugs (see the Nasomatto manifesto), but in the case of Nuda, I’d say the PR copy is more likely than the fragrance to be the result of a trip. As loud as Nuda is at first, in the end it’s elegant and calm — almost ladylike…

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