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Browsing by author: Kevin

Boucheron Pour Homme fragrance review

Posted by Kevin on 27 November 2006 10 Comments

Boucheron Pour Homme

I remember when Boucheron introduced Pour Homme Eau de Parfum in the early nineties. It was considered rather decadent, rather gay, to have a man wear something called “perfume”. In retrospect such concerns over one simple word are hilarious, but at the time it took some days for me to muster up the courage to go into Saks Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills to investigate the scent. Thankfully, a kind salesman guided me to the tester. I immediately loved Pour Homme and bought it.

You may chuckle at my trepidation, but times were different 15 years ago for men and toiletries. Just before searching out Boucheron Pour Homme, I had been openly laughed at, ridiculed!, by two young female customers at Robinson’s department store when I bought some moisturizer and skin cleanser from the (now discontinued) Lancôme men’s skin care line…

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Home fragrance: Papier d’Armenie

Posted by Kevin on 19 November 2006 16 Comments

Papier d'Armenie home fragrance

In the late 1800s, Auguste Ponsot, a Frenchman, traveled through Armenia and noticed that many people fragranced and disinfected their homes and businesses by burning benzoin (a resin produced by trees of the genus Styrax). Personal and public hygiene were hot topics at the time in France, and Ponsot felt Europeans, too, could benefit from burning benzoin at home. Realizing most ‘modern’ European families would not go to the trouble of burning raw benzoin, he sought the help of a pharmacist, Henri Rivier, to come up with an easy way to burn the resin.

Rivier dissolved raw benzoin in 90% alcohol, added some “secret” aromatics to the mixture, and soaked paper in the sweetly scented liquid. The paper was put through a saline bath to make it burn slowly. This fragrant paper was then burned and its smoke scented and cleansed the air. The new product was called Papier d’Arménie and became popular immediately. It has been produced for over 120 years in the Paris suburb of Montrouge…

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Nu Essence Kyphi Incense ~ home fragrance review

Posted by Kevin on 12 November 2006 10 Comments

Kyphi

The romance of the past drives many of us to seek out ancient fragrances — antique recipes and perfume formulas that have been resurrected for modern-day use. Egypt casts a spell on fragrance lovers, with its aromas of lotus, mint, papyrus, spices and resins. Add these aromas to images of pyramids and imposing sculptures of the gods, chanting priests (who would recite religious texts while mixing incense), pharaohs and queens, glittering scarabs, gaping-mouthed mummies grasping gold and lapis lazuli scepters between fragile bony fingers, and you have a heady mix of sight, sound and scent.

First mentioned in the Pyramid Texts (dated 2400 BCE or earlier), the recipe for kapet (or kyphi in Greek, meaning “welcome to the gods”) was also mentioned by Plutarch (c 46-127 CE) and Galen (129-200 CE) in their writings — linking kyphi with religious ritual and with medicinal uses. Instructions for the preparation of kyphi are found on wall inscriptions at the temples of Edfu and Dendera…

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Montale Blue Amber fragrance review

Posted by Kevin on 27 October 2006 10 Comments

Blue Amber

Before I became a bony, arrogant, and selfish teenage snob, I was a shy, chubby bookworm with a crew cut, thick glasses, and a sense of modesty that bordered on the nutty — I wouldn’t even let bare ankles show between pants and shoes.

My prepubescent self was inhibited and stubborn, but also kinder than the “Teen-to-Come” — I would actually do things to please others. My father loved fishing and wanted me to love it too, so I humored him and always said “yes” when he asked me to go on fishing trips. I didn’t like handling the smelly crabmeat bait or seeing and hearing fish struggle after being caught, or getting seasick as monstrous swells would almost capsize the boat, but I enjoyed the fragrant sea breezes, the warm sun, the boat rides, navigating around old buoys and isolated lighthouses, seeing the herons, hawks and ducks that flew near us…

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Ofrenda: The Dream Eau de Parfum by Parfumerie Imaginaire

Posted by Kevin on 21 October 2006 10 Comments

Day of the Dead Sugar SkullsOfrenda (“offering” in Spanish) is the first perfume from Parfumerie Imaginaire. It was inspired by a day spent in Oaxaca, Mexico, during Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations — held each year on November 1-2.

Ofrenda contains pungent, spicy marigold (its rich scent and brilliant orange color are believed to guide the deceased back ‘home’ — thus its designation as the flower of the dead), heady tequila, powdery masa, fresh chili, “hot” vanilla (think vanilla pods simmering in boiling sugar that will be molded into candy skulls), beeswax, and haunting copal incense.

Ofrenda comes in a milky-white bottle with a “melted” gold skull stopper (imagine the worn face of a marble angel in a cemetery, eroded by a hundred years of rain, sun, wind). The bottle is wrapped in a black tissue paper cut-out, or papel picado, showing a skeleton spraying on some perfume.

This is the perfect scent to wear on a cool autumn night while leaning against a tombstone, sipping some warm chocolate atole, eating a tamale, singing songs and welcoming the “visitors” — the dead — who are returning for a night of feasting with their families who still live and breathe…

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