• About
  • Login to comment
    • Bluesky
    • RSS
    • Twitter

Now Smell This

a blog about perfume

Menu ▼
  • Perfume Reviews
  • New Perfumes
  • Archives
Browsing by category: perfume books

Perfume books: Le Parfum by Edmond Roudnitska

Posted by Marcello on 12 June 2006 7 Comments

Edmond Roudnitska Le ParfumIf you read French, you may be familiar with that excellent series of cheap booklets published by Presses Universitaires de France called “Que sais-je?”. Each volume in this encyclopaedic collection covers a specific subject, and the good news is: there's one about perfume too! None other than Edmond Roudnitska is the author of this little marvel, first published in 1980 and simply entitled Le Parfum. Unfortunately there's bad news too: it's not available in English.

Most generic perfume books focus on production methods, raw materials, and the history of perfumery. Roudnitska's approach is rather unique, in that he explores perfumery from an aesthetic point of view…

Read the rest of this article »

A note to subscribers

Posted by Robin on 6 June 2006 2 Comments

Starting next Monday (6/12), Now Smell This will no longer send email announcements of new articles. Apologies to those of you who liked this service, but it has drawbacks on my end, and in fact, I have just now realized that I inadvertently turned off the notifications a few days ago when testing. Oops!!

Caron by Jean-Marie Martin-Hattemberg ~ perfume book review

Posted by Marcello on 22 May 2006 2 Comments

Caron by Martin-HattemburgThe story of modern perfumery would be incomplete without a chapter on Caron. It’s a name that evokes a world of sumptuousness and distinction, founded on an impressive list of classics ranging from Narcisse Noir (1911) to L’Anarchiste (2000). The history of one of the most venerable brands in perfumery is presented in this bilingual, lavishly illustrated monograph by Jean-Marie Martin-Hattemberg.

Caron was published six years ago, and is undoubtedly the most comprehensive book available on the subject. It covers a timespan of almost one century: from the early beginnings, with Ernest Daltroff and Félicie Wanpouille (1904), to the acquisition by current owner Patrick Alès (1998). It has all the characteristics of a coffee-table book, featuring stunning pictures of old bottles, powder boxes, poster ads, and other pretty specimens; but the luscious imagery aside, it paints a picture of real people, involved in a real business, against the backdrop of troubled times. The relationship between Ernest and Félicie plays a crucial role in the first part of the book, which at times reads like a romantic novel…

Read the rest of this article »

Marie Antoinette’s bath, and other perfume news

Posted by Robin on 21 May 2006 12 Comments

A Scented Palace by Elisabeth de FeydeauElisabeth de Feydeau, author of A Scented Palace, on Marie Antoinette's daily bathing habits:

Each day, she dipped in a tub laced with a confection of blanched sweet almonds, pine nuts, linseed, marshmallow root and lily bulb, then rubbed her body clean with a sachet of bran.

A Scented Palace is about Marie Antoinette’s perfumer, Jean-Louis Fargeon. You may remember that last year Francis Kurkdjian recreated Sillage de la Reine, one of the perfumes Fargeon developed for the Queen, after Feydeau discovered the recipe in the French National Archives…

Read the rest of this article »

Trailer for the upcoming movie version of Suskind’s Perfume

Posted by Robin on 17 May 2006 2 Comments

Movie Still Suskind's PerfumeEarlier this year I linked to a brief trailer of the movie version of Patrick Suskind's Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, directed by Tom Tykwer and starring Dustin Hoffman, Ben Wishaw, Rachel Hurd-Wood and Alan Rickman. Here is a longer trailer, in German, and perhaps even creepier than the first despite the fact that I don't understand a single word. According to Cinematical, where I found the link, it is due for release in Germany in September; the US in December.

More reading: see Marcello's review of the Perfume novel. Note: image via rottentomatoes.

Update: see Marcello's review of the Perfume movie.

« Newer articles
Older articles »

Advertisement

Search

Recent reviews

Atelier Cologne Love Osmanthus
Moschino Toy Boy
Arquiste Misfit
Diptyque Eau Capitale
Zoologist Bee
Parfum d’Empire Immortelle Corse
Comme des Garcons Series 10 Clash
Frédéric Malle Rose & Cuir
L’Artisan Parfumeur Le Chant de Camargue
Yves Saint Laurent Grain de Poudre
Régime des Fleurs Chloë Sevigny Little Flower
Chanel 1957
Gallivant Los Angeles
Amouage Portrayal Woman

Blogroll

Bois de Jasmin
Grain de Musc
Perfume Posse
The Non-Blonde
More blogs...

Perfumista lists

100 fragrances every perfumista should try
And 25 more fragrances every perfumista should smell
50 masculine fragrances every perfumista should try
26 vintage fragrances every perfumista should try
25 rose fragrances every perfumista should try
11 Cheap Perfumes Beauty Outsiders Love

Favorite posts

The Great Perfume Reduction Plan
Why I Love Old School Chypres
New to perfume and want to learn more?
How to make fragrance last through the day
Fragrance concentrations: sorting it all out
On reformulations, or why your favorite perfume doesn’t smell like it used to
How to get fragrance samples
Perfume for Life: How Long Will Your Fragrance Collection Last?

Upcoming

List of upcoming Friday projects

6 January ~ damage poll

31 January ~ winter reading poll

Back to Top

Home
Archives
About Now Smell This :: Privacy Policy
Perfume Reviews
New Perfumes
General Perfume Articles
The Monday Mail

Glossary of Perfume Terms
Perfume FAQ
Perfume Books

Noses ~ Perfumers A-E :: F-K :: L-S :: T-Z

Perfume Houses A-B :: C :: D-E :: F-G
H-J :: K-L :: M :: N-O :: P :: Q-R :: S
T :: U-Z

Copyright © 2005-2026 Now Smell This. All rights reserved.