Tuesday, May 31

Smoke, candles and scents of time

At the beginning of the XXth century something completely new occurred in the life of many ordinary people. Electricity, huge buildings and central heating represented a new olfactory paradigm for several generations, affecting mostly those who came in big cities to start a new life. Suddenly, the fire, the smoke and the scent of candles, basic elements for many centuries, had almost disappeared from everyday life. But this amazing change, the new income and the help given by advertising, allowed the success of 2 other notes that came to fill the "emotional gap".
The scent of London and its color in the golden era of the Industrial Victorian Age was highly specific. New York with its high buildings, central heating and electricity was rather different at the turn of the new century.
The "house pipe" became the cigarette, smoked by women. True emancipation came much later. The "modern maiden" (also a song in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1917) or the working girl, smoking on street in highly fashionable clothes, was the opposite of the maiden working in large kitchens, almost always around fire and its scents (smoke, grease, oil). The cigarette was the unconscious response to the sudden olfactory change and its association with freedom and sex only increased the sales, when Edward Bernays applied the teachings of his uncle, Sigmund Freud, to the American market.
The disappearance of candles, with their specific strong scents, was simply translated worldwide by the success of aldehydic perfumes worn with beige dresses under opulent furs. The new girl was like a burning candle and the devotion and piety of the old world were replaced by the explosion of hidden desires. She had a slim slihouette in her beaded dress and a diamond Cartier tiara with a feather, sparkling in the night like a candle in a cold winter. "The Little Match Girl" of H.C. Andersen became the Queen of the Night. In this social transformation of an entire generation, the scents of cigarette and the aldehydic perfume played their role.
The fatty aldehydes, behind their characteristic notes, have all a fatty waxy note that is related to the main molecules found in a candle (stearic acid). Smell the warm drops of a raw candle, the C11 and C12 L aldehyde and then rub your fingers with some "beurre d'iris".
When women gradually found the aldehydic perfumes, and some in the 20's were even more aldehydic than Chanel No5, they adopted them immediately. This note was filling a recent gap inside their unconscious and this essential note became "beautiful".
Cigarette and strong aldehydes were the sublimated versions of two notes found in an universe both beloved and rejected - the small poor house before the arrival in the new Metropolis.
Scented candles are easy to produce and very effective to scent a room, but their popularity came much later. When electricity was new and was the symbol of modernity in the 20's and 30's, why would women buy a candle when other were still using them in their less modernist houses?
Something even more spectacular happened in the past 10 years. Aldehydic perfumes became old fashioned, but also "fat" became less popular. People became more conscious about their weight through diet. Meanwhile, they washed their body as they never did before, eliminating everyday the small molecules with a subliminal scent of fat / wax. Natural furs, with their faint "fatty" note, hidden behind the animalic connotation, are no more fashionable. Even cosmetics used other ingredients, as I explained in a different article. The modern universe has completely eliminated the wax / fatty note. The immediate response was the burst of the candle market. In fact, a candle in a very modern minimalist apartment, where cooking and heating are done without direct contact with fire, has a profound symbolic meaning. Another change was the success of a certain type of note indirectly related to wax that has been used widely in the past 10 years (it has been rarely a dominant note in perfumes).
Another big change is about to happen in our society. As smoke is seen as unhealthy and even forbidden, something else is replacing right now this element.
Our society is ruled by archetypes and these "rules" are as old as religion. The beauty of the perfume is universal but the adoption of a scent by a market follows the archetypes of scent, their relation and their presence within a specific scented area, from fragrance to the scent of home and the scent in your streets. Everything is lost and reappears under a new form. Everything is rediscovered.
Photos: Chanel dresses 1923/1924 from my collection


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Sunday, May 29

Saharienne (Yves Saint Laurent) - new fragrance review

Soviet cheap cologne

Behind the Iron Curtain, millions of people were dreaming about Yves Saint Laurent, Paris and the exquisite French perfumes, but the soviet factories were not always able to create fragrances with the same degree of perfection and refinement. For my conference I was not sure if I should present or not 2 creations (one from the Osmotheque, the other from my collection) because there was something too simple, raw and brutal. The "cleaning product" connotation (fresh synthetic bergamot + herbal jasmine Jasmonal H type + terpenic notes) was too obvious. If you cut many soviet perfumes from the 60's and 50's in 2 parts (the fresh accord + the heavy element) and keep only the "dry fresh soapy floral herbal" facet you get Saharienne (YSL). I am under shock since the other day when I discovered this hideous "minimalist" perfume. First, the bottle and its glass details are terrible ugly, second, this is not a perfume but a "cleaning product" formula of the lowest imaginable quality. It is the formula of a mass market soap from the 80's, "savon de Marseille" type. There are millions of consumers who knew the cheap colognes sold in the East. I invite them to smell Saharienne (YSL), 20 years after the fall of the Iron Court, and to remember the extremely cheap "eau de cologne" (actually synthetic bergamot compositions with the most humble materials) and the scent of the soap produced at home.
I have little to add about the death of YSL as a luxury brand, I've been repeating it since at least 2 years. But one thing became clear to me after I assisted to a conference given by a big boss from l'Oréal. This huge cosmetic group is the direct descendent of the soviet ideology. Have an eye on their perfumes, formulae and world domination in the following 5 years and you'll understand my shock.
The 5 year plan, as it was expressed during this L'Oréal conference, starts with a dramatic raw materials cut. L'Oréal formulae will become much simpler, easy to produce, easy to control. For me it sounds very familiar. It is the Five Year Plan of Madame Molotova, head of the cosmetic industry under Stalin, and strangely it becomes reality today in Paris
Today, the brands of L'Oréal reflect the same problem of quality found in the former soviet perfumes. They do not have the right ingredients because they are too expensive in the 5 Year Plan, as the target of L'Oréal is to have 2 billions consumers in the next future. They do not have the fragrance savoir faire because the people who select the compositions (proposed by gifted perfumers from IFF/Givaudan/Firmenich/etc.) have extremely low olfactory standards and fragrance culture. In the 30's, Madame Molotova put the bases of the soviet mass production (cosmetics and perfumes) with the same goal in mind. Peasants and workers did not use fragrances before the 1917 Revolution. However, something was very different. Molotova and her perfumers had an ideal (french perfumes) despite their difficulties. Today L'Oréal has also an ideal - the world domination of the shampoo scent, the universal 10 ingredients formula, cheap to produce, easy to sell.
Marketing can sell you dreams but the perfume cannot lie - the cheap quality is obvious to anyone unless it is your first perfume experience. With 2 billions of consumers in mind, there are plenty of innocent people to be seduced.
Saharienne (YSL) is the beginning of the New World Odor.



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Saturday, May 28

Fragrance books & the "hidden" secrets of creation

The creation of pleasant scents is an activity that is as old as the preparation of food and remedies. Probably, most of us have experienced during childhood the desire to extract and to reproduce the scents around us, even before we knew the meaning of the word "perfume" and "perfumer". This desire to capture the odor of living things, bottling their essence (scent and taste are usually the first thing a child thinks when he says the name of a flower or a fruit) precedes all forms of art. The desire to capture a scent has a profound power and it can be detected in all historical ages, outside the perfume workshop and this process equals the definition of art in the most literal sense. You "trap" the invisible essence of things, both their objective and emotional nature, but being able to perform this act means understanding its inner nature and the balance of odors. You deconstruct a scent and then you reconstruct it from your available materials. The work is finally validated (or not) by others, because the "essence of things", both the scent and the emotion, have universal values, recognized by all individuals from the same group.
Before the personal preference, a perfume is subject to objective aesthetic criteria and these have a universal value.
It is interesting to see how frequent this "temptation" is experienced by kids who will later become artists / writers. However, I wish to make a clear distinction between perfume, as an act of discovery or sensorial exploration, and perfume as an act of creation.
There are a great number of fragrance amateurs (from amatorem, lover of), attached to the study of perfumes and without formal training in a world where the true training is extremely rare, but amateurism has rather a negative light in this art. "Do it yourself perfume" is more a game than a true possibility because this art is neither accessible, nor obvious or easy to understand.
The secret of the perfume is not the formula, but how to combine ingredients, how to separate the essential from the non essential with the purpose to recreate particular scents and later to invent other. When this love of perfumes is combined with entrepreneurial spirit you have a new market, for ingredients and for "information".
I have the privilege to own and read everything that has been published about perfumes since the early days of writing, but also the unique chance given by the direct experience with many historical scents and raw materials. Many years ago, a short and obscure text written by Guy Robert in the early 80's or late 70's had a profound impact on my thinking. The elegant, but also very subtle text (because it did not fully reveal the thoughts of the great perfumer) was certainly inspired by those who were writing about formulation or history of perfumes in those days without being perfumers or, at least, having a formal training in the lab.
In the era when all perfumes are subject to reviews it might seem unconceivable that you could write about history without smelling the "old bottles". But many wrote about perfumes in the past (before the 90's) without "bottles" under their nose.
When an amateur tries to learn or to understand, he will often search for books, but this is often a trap, because correct formulae of individual notes (not even perfumes) have rarely been published and those which were "unveiled" where never published with the intention to give the information or the "secret".
During the second half of the XIXth century, several books were published and some editions are still in print. No copyright to pay! It is true that Piesse, Rimmel and Atkinson, all perfumers and business men, were presenting correct information about plants and their extraction, but the formulae of their perfumes were neither correct, nor complete formula of a true fragrance. Before WWII, there were hundreds of small brands which sold their perfumes in all possible places. Entrepreneurship has never more appealing all around the world. In fact, these three famous perfumers were selling the dream of creating a fragrance at home or the dream to open a small shop with perfumes. For a small clientele the quality was satisfactory, but you couldn't even dream to compete with Guerlain, Piver, Lubin or even with the perfumes sold by the authors, Rimmel and Piesse. Too many things were actually missing from their formulae.
Later, at the end of the XIXth century, other formulae books appeared. They were actually a soup of these previous 3 works, they were not written by perfumers, but revealed something else: books about perfume industry sold very well. Just imagine the number of chemists and drugstores in USA and Europe. Some of them were selling their own cologne or floral extracts before the invention of "mass market perfumes" and these "books" were perfect for them.
As Germany became very powerful in the perfume industry (the study of essential oils and the production of first synthetic molecules) they invented the most clever way to sell their products in countries where they had a strong influence and presence before WWI. These were the perfume formulae books written in a very encyclopedic style.
You have certainly met the books of Mann, Wagner and Winter (at least 5 editions) and dreamt about all the formulae inside. In fact, these books are less innocent they would appear under their academic style, and they do not reveal many of the things their authors knew.
H.Mann was a "nickname" for Haarmann and Reimer. The first edition was in fact a "marketing tool" for the German industry. When later a new edition came, authored by Winter, it was in fact a new book proposed by the giant producer of essential oils called Schimmel (and signed by its chief perfumer).
Schimmel (reports), Gildemeister (the books) and Guenther (the books) had the same source of knowledge, a German company that became American after WWII. But you do not sell your essential oils with a huge, well written book detailing their chemical composition. You sell them "proposing" formulae easy to use.
The intention of these books was never to reveal the true creation or formulation of perfumes but to sell ingredients. The formulae were rich in natural (expensive) ingredients in a time when synthetic molecules and "artificial oils" were already used. Many are prototypes from the XIXth century and there are very few "modern" formulae (modern at the time when the book was written) and very few "famous" perfumes, as if they did not knew them. On the contrary, looking inside the old catalogues of Schimmel and Haarmann and Reimer, it is clear they were very aware about all the known perfumes of the era. A small entrepreneur in Budapest would buy the Mann-Winter book and he will order the many expensive naturals from the Schimmel representative, as they had a huge network before WWII, unlike their competitors from Grasse. But this small entrepreneur will never be able to produce a fashionable perfume, nor to make profits with such an expensive formula. It is extremely important to remember that the cost of a formula is not an invention of the modern marketing.
But what exactly these old and famous books did not reveal? The German industry was obsessed with innovation, price, efficiency and of course the protection of secrets. Already in 1899 they had patents on synthetic oils. Having a German book with formulae is like having a propaganda book. A "secret" in 1912 was a correct and complete formula of a lilac, a violet or a lily of the valley. You need 10 ingredients to make them, but their true identity and the correct proportion is not something obvious. When you are a perfumer with several years of experience, it is out of the question that you cannot "recreate" the scent of a simple composition / base if none of its ingredients is unknown to you.
One should remember that all German companies before WWII were selling also accurate artificial oils of flowers with a very good price compared to their friends in Grasse. So, why would a company reveal to the world the formula of their "flowers"? For this reason, you can find a lot of "incorrect" formulae. If I give you an unbalanced lily of the valley formula with an overdosed synthetic, if you have little experience, you will be tempted to use a natural to "cover" or "correct" the harshness. This was a very clever way to sell naturals. If I'm a producer of ionones I will show you a lilac with ionone a (which is an incorrect formula). Comparing the German perfumes I have, created before 1925 with the published "formulae", the differences are huge in style and intention.
The same method started to be used in France around the same period and it is useful to compare the "knowledge" inside these books with the true scents available in Paris, sold by famous houses or by known manufacturers.
René Cerbelaud, a pharmacist and owner of a perfume shop near Ecole Militaire, wrote his huge book in 1908 and it was reprinted until the 50's. But though he is right with many observations, he is wrong with many "formulae". Many were just an attempt because he was not a perfumer, but a formulator. Something even more bizarre happens in the 20's and 30's. A huge number of articles with formulae were published in a trade magazine in Grasse. Hundreds of formulae were "revealed", but all were using only natural, very expensive ingredients, without any reference to synthetics. Even the lily of the valley and the lilac were "revealed" in the late 20's with floral infusions of the XIXth century. In fact, they were not real formulae, their intention was to promote and sell the expensive floral absolutes produced only in Grasse. The author used a pen name, but he was very famous in the industry. Explaining what's inside a perfume, how it works and how you can build beautiful scents with few but precise ingredients meant loosing your job.
Another case is the famous writer Poucher who became the perfumer of Yardley, several years after he wrote his first book, but I do not believe he is the real author (or not 100% the author of the 1923 edition). 
In fact, the only book where important things were revealed, but hard to decipher because of other reasons, is a huge work published in 1931. The author, Félix Cola, worked for several known manufacturers of specialties and died mysteriously (!) in an accident in 1932.
When perfumer Paul Jellinek wrote his small book about perfumes, he presented long and strange formulae (quoted from other sources) for somebody who knew precisely what's inside a type of scent. He composed bases with modern ingredients but what he "unveiled" are useless formulae, built at least 30 years before, so different from the style of the 50's. I had the privilege to look inside several production formulae from the early days of Dragoco and Haarmann & Reimer. They had nothing to do with the "formulae" published by the same companies or those who worked with them.
All these books have been quoted without the proper criticism by other writers and the information was rarely taken with the necessary precaution. Many are "dangerous" books, unless you master the creation of perfumes and you are able of critical reading. Of course, it depends on your expectations from the book. In fact, despite their scholar or scientifically approach, these works published before the 60's, belong to the same tradition of "Segreti", a type of book extremely popular in Italy during the Renaissance.

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Friday, May 27

Les Eaux de Cologne ou l'histoire d'une "Grande Eau"

Le samedi 18 Juin de 10h00 à 12h30 par Yves TANGUY

Découvrez la formidable histoire de cette Aqua Mirabillis qui fit la conquête de Napoléon. Découvrez son évolution depuis les vinaigres aux Colognes musquées du XXIème siècle comme :
L'eau de la reine de Hongrie (1340), le vinaigre des 4 voleurs (vers 1630), l'eau sans pareille, le vinaigre aromatique de Bully (1818), l'eau de Lubin (1798), l'eau de Cologne de Napoléon (1820), l'eau de Cologne Impériale de Guerlain (1853), l'eau du Coq (1894), l'eau d'Hermès (1951), l'eau de Patou (1976), l'eau de Thé vert de Bulgari (1992)...

SUR RESERVATION UNIQUEMENT
Par téléphone au 01 39 55 46 99
Par mail osmotheque@wanadoo.fr

Public : à partir de 12 ans

Tarifs :
Plein tarif : 15€
Tarif réduit : 10€*
*(enfant, étudiants, membre SAO et groupe à partir de 10 personnes)

Conférencier : M. Yves TANGUY

Durée : 2h30
Heure de rendez vous : 09h50
Lieu : Osmothèque - 36 rue du Parc de Clagny, 78 000 VERSAILLES
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Honoré des Prés - Les Verrines - new packaging idea for organic perfumes

Honoré des Prés, the 100% organic French brand, has recently launched a new packaging for their first line of perfumes. After the "take-away" cups used in their NYC collection, for the first time gorgeous and well balanced fragrances with an Ecocert label, it is time for a traditional glass jar or "verrine", used by grandma's for the delicious French "confiture". The packaging and the idea is charming, modern and innovative, the fragrances (Chaman’s Party, Nu Green, Honoré’s Trip and Sexy Angelic) are not because they are from the first collection. I reviewed them when they were launched and 3 years after, smelling them again, I maintain my view. These are not fragrances, not even ideas and I'm not sure if the formula is 100% the same. No construction (volume, diffusion, tenacity, trail, etc) but mixtures and unhappy blends. None of them can stand near the classic Eaux de Colognes from Guerlain, 100% natural, created in the XIXth century and small masterpieces in their unique genre (freshness, diffusion and harmony of notes).

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Thursday, May 26

FIFI AWARDS 2011 USA - New York - and the winner is "Bleu de Chanel"

With Bleu de Chanel as an official winner in France, UK and USA, the fragrance industry showed its incapacity to reinvent its present for a brighter future. The hypocrisy of the official complains ("people don't buy perfumes any more", "there are too many launches") got the right answer in Paris and New York.
When a perfume is voted because it's already famous, with such a name, such a huge advertising investment and above all with so many prejudices ("it is Chanel, it cannot be bad", "it is Polge it cannot be a bad creation") there is little to add.
In fact, it was a vote for the past and not a vote for the future. An award should not glorify the past, nor the sales, but enlighten the future. It should arrange the things on their right scale of value and should be inspirational. This inspirational value is both for the consumer and for those who work in the fragrance industry. The consumers "vote" everyday when they buy a perfume and their choices perfectly reflect the society. There is no need to reconfirm that, but there is a need to show that a fragrance is more than a commercial equation. A perfume can be "ugly", "mediocre" or exceptional, a choice made by a consumer is never good or bad, it is History and the reflection of the present. There is no need to tell what everybody knows inside perfume labs (Chanel sells). I was furious last week when the big boss of a huge cosmetic group (with several good brands & perfumes) underlined that perfume is NOT art and shouldn't even aspire to ART.
There were many good masculine (and feminine) creations in 2010, but not all have the fame of Chanel. In fact, the vote for Bleu de Chanel expressed one of the most basic rules - you choose and appreciate what you are programmed to. In the past 2 years, with their giant fashion shows in Paris, their beautiful collections showed in extravagant places and their huge investment in perfume / make-up ads, Chanel made the headline every week. This effort is extraordinary because it is for the first time that a house manages to give such a global, constant and consistent institutional message. The image was perfect, the fashion new and amazing. For the first time, the image was stronger than the scent, even for the professionals in the industry who gave the award to this creation as the best masculine fragrance on the globe.
When Chanel 19 took the FIFI award in 1973, the year when this award was invented, it was a revolutionary perfume - new ingredients, new olfactory shape, beautiful construction, a masterpiece. In 2011 with Bleu de Chanel as a global winner, the brilliant idea behind what was considered the Oscar of the fragrance industry is gone. FIFI Awards became obsolete. It is painful to say, but this is the truth and I insist on the fact that, as a member of Expert Jury for FIFI Awards in Paris, the brands did not supply samples the day of the vote, when they produce millions of samples in the world every year.
Unlike Chanel No 5, No19 or even Coco Mademoiselle (a very original creation the day it hit the market), "Bleu de Chanel" doesn't inspire. It is the summum of mediocrity with good ingredients and it can generate only other mediocre perfumes with less good ingredients. It is not the case for other 2 original feminine awards (Balenciaga and Untitled) where the accord is new and original. Both could generate a variety of new fragrances. Bleu de Chanel has not this ability, not even for an inexpensive body-spray line, because it is already a deodorant formula bottled in a beautiful blue bottle.
When Belle d'Opium won an award in Paris it was as if the fragrance industry assisted at its own funeral. Giving the award of the best feminine creation to the brand who has recently mutilated Opium, one year after the death of Monsieur Yves Saint Laurent, was a shame and an insult to this Art.
But Bleu de Chanel in New York and Belle d'Opium in Paris are part of the game and they mirror the world we live in, with a myriad of choices, tastes and above all the freedom. Today consumers can make their choices in a vast universe with all type of perfumes, they can inform themselves if a creation is original or not and this ability did not exist 20 years ago. A consumer can decide if he is the "victim" of brilliant marketing or if he buys the best for himself.
The fragrance industry can chose its future and she actually did it. Bleu de Chanel brings a lot of money to Chanel and it's their right to produce the perfume that fulfills the dreams of the company. But why should it receive a global award meant to celebrate the scent and not the brilliant management of a private company? In fact, very few professionals speak in good terms about Bleu de Chanel and this is why I am extremely surprised with the results of FIFI AWARDS. The industry complains about mediocrity, lack of inspiration and original products, but the vote reveals something very different.
The good news is that very beautiful perfumes are still created and the following months will bring a spectacular dose of creativity.

FIFI AWARDS 2011 USA

LUXE (more than 250 doors)
• Women’s: Guilty (Gucci)
• Men’s: Bleu de Chanel

SPECIALTY LUXE (26-249 doors)
• Women’s: Balenciaga Paris
• Men’s: Azure Lime (Tom Ford)

BROAD APPEAL (drugstores/chains)
• Women’s: Pure Orchid (Halle Berry)
• Men’s: Herve Leger Homme (Avon)

SPECIALTY BRAND
• Women’s: Bombshell (Victoria's Secret)
• Men’s: Essence of Man (Banana Republic)

DIRECT TO CONSUMER
• Women’s: My Life (Mary J Blige)

INDIE BRAND (25 doors or less)
• Women’s, Men’s, and Unisex: Six Scents Series 3

THE 2011 FIFI CONSUMERS’ CHOICE
• Women’s: Bombshell (Victoria's Secret)
• Men’s: Twilight Woods (Bath & Body Works)

FIFI PERFUME EXTRAORDINAIRE
• Givaudan for Untitled (Maison Martin Margiela)

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Wednesday, May 25

Hidden accords in Fragrance Design - Unity and Variety


Minimalism in perfumery can be a great temptation for the intellect, their very short formula with an overdose of something (Eau d'Iso E Super, Eau d'Hedione, Eau de Musc T, etc) might seduce in their first seconds of life, but they will never pass the test of time and will hardly be popular. All great perfumes are complex structures, either by the use of a sophisticated olfactory shape, or by the use of some ingredients that are already complex scents. They follow the same principle found in Nature - unity and variety - and their hierarchical structure (main accords, secondary accords and so on) is often enriched by a selection of "hidden accords". Despite their mysterious name, these are not really the extravagant bases known by few perfumers. They are accords with a very low threshold, often hidden under the obvious tonality of a perfume. In many cases, they are quotes from other perfumes, reduced to their essential notes. You will not detect them, but your brain will respond to the very delicate texture of accords found in the background of the main idea. I compare this to the painting technique used by Leonardo da Vinci. While the subject is clearly detached, the background is always a universe in its own. We'll rarely pay attention to it because it is done in sfumato, but the eye will notice. You might call it "subliminal fragrance design". The variety of possible accords in the background allows a perfume to become a huge success.
Chanel No5 is a perfume "known" by everybody, but how many did actually pay attention to the small details? To illustrate the technique of hidden accords, I propose you to smell by contrast 2 perfumes that are very different, but from their opposition something unusual will be revealed. Try on 2 blotters Chanel No 5 EDT (so famous in the 50's) and Kenzo Amour EDP, but smell them after at least one hour. In the famous perfume you will discover something quite known in the 50's and this will change for ever your understanding of the most celebrated floral aldehydic fragrance.
This quality, being at the same time extremely precise in the character of the note and extremely vague in the texture of infinite details, was the main "specialty" of French perfumes. It started with Paul Parquet and Jacques Guerlain, but it truly found its sublime expression with Ernest Beaux, André Fraysse and Guy Robert, and many other great perfumers who worked in the 60's and 70's.
Today we say the consumer is different and less loyal to a perfume. But how can you hear the same "melody" between Iso E Super and Hedione for years? The lack of variety inside a perfume will cause the consumer to abandon it, unless a special natural ingredient is present with its unique and never ending story.
With the arrival of minimalism and conceptual perfumery in the past 10 years, the notion of purity and quintessence has been brought to the core of the 8th Art allowing its complete resurrection. To understand the importance of "Unity and Variety" in fragrance design, I propose you a short list of the main aesthetic notions that have been used in the past 200 years (without being named), which I will explain in detail in a future post.

Extreme Unity
- Molecular beauty
- Minimal expression
- One idea, simple details: many contemporary perfumers
- One idea, complex details: Ernest Daltroff, Jacques Guerlain
- Several ideas, simple details: Sophia Grojsman, Dominique Ropion
- Several ideas, complex details: André Fraysse, Guy Robert
- Baroque expression
- Chaos (grisaille & millefleurs)
Extreme Variety

Every composition which attempts to achieve Unity and Variety in its aesthetic form is built with the following hierarchy:
primary theme - accord / element
secondary themes - accords / elements
tertiary themes - accords / elements: "hidden" & ornament, characteristic, unusual, dissonant and contrast accords / elements
background (nothing to do with drydown)
Each level of the composition contains its own degree of complexity and it can be expressed by an Element / Accord / Theme, always with a rule in mind "more you add, less easy it is to control and you are closer to Chaos".
        
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Tuesday, May 24

The quote and the 8th ART - quotation & fragrance design

Last weekend I was in Switzerland to smell some new molecules and to bring in Paris several documents I was searching for years (you'll read very soon a short report). It was also the occasion to speak during the dinner with several perfumers about some aspects related to the 8th art, including the history of the Swiss patent law and how it affected the fragrance industry 100 years ago.
Revealing the true formula of a perfume, let's say of a floral reproduction, is a delicate subject. Everything can be bottled easily everywhere in the world and the "subject" (a revealed formula of a lilac and not a "fake formula") has more chances to be "produced" than to be "discussed". If I present here on the blog the exact reproduction of the scent of Parma Violets, a small formula representing 10 months of work for the right ingredients and their proportions, will I be quoted somewhere? Today, there is 0% chances for that. It is more likely that somebody using my short formula would consider the "reproduction of the Parma violets" as something that belongs to Nature and not to me.
There is a myth about the "revealing" power of chromatography (GC), but the past 20 years since it has been used around the world shows something else. Without the written original formula, the correct proportions of ingredients and their precise "position", a GC is useless for someone without enough experience.
Maybe, before speaking about protection, we should invent a way to quote a perfumer and his ideas. If I create a perfume and I use a very old idea from a Chuit Naef specialty, no more in production, which I wish to "quote" inside my creation, what should I do it?
In a book we have footnotes that help the attribution of an idea / information, but also help the reader if he wants investigate further the subject. In music, the quote was often used and it can be instantly recognized if you have a basic musical culture. In a painting we might see this quotation or reference to other famous works when Picasso or Dali were quoting the masters. This practice is old as art and was never hidden by creators.
When it comes to a perfume, it is not very easy because the "originals" are not always known by the public, many of them are simply lost. How could you quote the original Khasana perfume when the pre WWI bottles are impossible to find and no museum / conservatory preserves the scent if a consumer would love to test the inspiration?
Before being able to speak about the protection of their own works, perfumers should find the way to speak about their true inspiration and to quote the scents they loved. A "quote" already exists in a perfume, but how do you make it "visible" to the audience, how do you show respect to the previous creators?
An original perfume or scent is a complex texture of ideas that can be compared to a book - it has a structure, key words (important ingredients) and phrases (extended accords). You can take the skeleton as a new prototype or you can quote a distinct element, a specific proportion of ingredients that is unique to the character of that fragrance.
Perfumers rarely speak in public about other perfumers unless the masters were dead long before their birth. It is even rarer to hear "inspiration" and "a perfume that is not mine" in the same phrase. Jean Claude Ellena did it for Après l'Ondée and Pierre Bourdon for Chanel No5, but their case is unique because it's Frédéric Malle. A classic "book" can be reprinted and quoted and this is the spirit of the house.
In many cases, the homage paid by perfumers to other creators and their masterpieces is genuine and touching, and this homage to a beloved scent should not be mixed with plagiarism ("I copy what sells right now"). It is not very rare even today, but it is not known to the public because the use of another name is unconceivable with modern marketing.
Unfortunately the first word that comes after "protection of a perfume" is money and the world will not advance if the only purpose it to make the other pay for your "brilliant idea".
I believe that being able to speak about things you admire (old or new) and to express your admiration via a "quote" used in a perfume, made visible and understandable to the consumer, is more positive.
The quotation has a double function: the scent you quote becomes a cult perfume (because it is quoted often) and the fragrance that explicitly use quotes becomes an erudite creation, with a sense of history and value. It suddenly becomes more than a product in Sephora.
In fact, one of the biggest problems in this industry is the trademark. For the moment, a perfumer creating an original fragrance for the brand X, but thought as a homage to the creation Y still in production from a different brand, cannot express his true homage. This hypocrisy ("if you use my name, without my consent, I will sue you") stops many great perfumes to achieve a higher artistic degree in the eyes of the public and unfortunately they will stay forever on shelves as a "product". Last week I assisted to a speech given by the big boss of one of the major fragrance groups and I was shocked how he refuted the artistic status to the perfume. Several fragrances produced by his brands are exquisite and at least 4 are masterpieces. But how can I speak about them as Art when there is a very clear denial of this quality, even an obvious rejection inside the house?
When H&R published their first genealogies in the 70's it was a small scandal. They showed through horizontal and vertical lines how perfumes are related on a time scale. This did not please many brands even if the chart was used only by professionals. The later editions removed the lines and the genealogy became a classification. Inspiration is still a taboo subject even today.
I believe that packaging should radically change in the next future. The European legislation about labeling is useless and extremely ugly. Why should you write a huge amount of information on a box when everybody is using a cell phone with access to Internet? A simple code and a database is the answer to ugly bottles with too much text, read by nobody but written in all possible languages. This will undoubtedly provide more answers / recommendations to those with health problems. Instead, the perfume box should contain information about the perfumer, his art and the work you buy. A product is consumed and thrown away, a valuable item / book is put on shelves and preserved. The education of the consumer starts with the fragrance he buys.
Going back to my Swiss dinner, the notion of secret formula should not be seen as a conspiracy of great perfumers to hide their work. In many cases it is a form of protection and a reaction to the hypocrisy of this world. A perfume is not protected, a perfumer is hardly recognized as a creator, his ideas cannot be quoted and there is no official attribution of ideas. For this reason, asking the original formula to a perfumer or asking too many questions is considered extremely impolite.
Many old formulae, no more in production, are still hidden from the eyes of the public and from the eyes of many perfumers. Before "revealing" the beautiful formulae of François Coty one should think how their ideas could be defended and quoted. An original accord from L'Or and Le Styx can be easily translated in a modern niche creation, but will the author / the brand quote the original Coty inspiration?

        
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Monday, May 23

Khasana - Dr. Albersheim - 1906 - lost oriental perfume

With an unusual name and a lost tale, Khasana belongs to the mysterious history of German perfumery, rich in unexpected molecules and a special aesthetic vision. What exactly is an Oriental perfume, how did it all begin? In the article about the forgotten perfume "Chez Poiret" I unveiled some elements behind the genealogy of this family.
Like other cultural notions, "the Orient" has not an eternal definition, but several meanings, changing with time, place and dominant culture. Take Paris, Berlin and London, from 1800 to 1950 and you will discover several interpretations of the mythical Orient, from official art to popular culture across Europe.
If in Paris the Orient had a certain flavor given by the colonial past and was depicted by the Orientalist painters between 1830 and 1870, other meanings were attached to this universe in Berlin, at the end of the XIXth century. Since 1860's, archeologists started to uncover the ancient Mesopotamian and Assyrian cities like Babylon, Nimrud or Nineveh, and, for the first time, the true splendor of this ancient art could be admired in museums in Paris, London or Berlin. The "Ishtar Gate", the eighth gate to the inner city of Babylon, excavated between 1902-1914, is now at the Pergamon Museum in Berlin. One of the major personalities involved in this fantastic adventure was Sir Austen Henry Layard and he was quite popular in Berlin, mainly through his books, written around 1850's, presenting the discoveries and the ruins of Nineveh and Babylon.
If the popular culture in Paris was inspired more by the "medieval" Orient, the Islamic world and the erotic vision of harems, Berlin took a lot of interest in the "ancient" Orient, in Mesopotamia and later Persia, in their philosophy and the unexplained. The depths of the past and the depths of the soul were the subjects of the day, whether it was an academic conversation between archeologists, a patient and Dr.Freud or the first writings of C.G. Jung, who would later state that the human psyche is "by nature religious".
When Dr. Moritz Albersheim, a chemist and a Jew, founded his company in 1892, the fashionable vision of the Orient from Paris was certainly not his main cultural reference. Also, the Belle Époque floral style had a very different expression in Berlin and Wien.
Khasana, one of his major successes in the first part of XXth century, hides in this unusual name a forgotten legend. The word Khasana means "treasure" and it is related to a book written by Henry Layard where the British archeologist speaks about a mysterious "treasure gate" found in an underground cave excavated in Wan (now Turkey). This was held to be a sacred spot both by Christians and Muslims. Behind an iron gate, guarded by genii, is found a vast hall with riches. This "khasana gate" can be open only with the magic words contained in the cuneiform inscription beside the entrance. The city located near the Van lake (now Turkey) was considered by that time the ancient city of Sémiramis and legends spoke about the true location of Garden of Eden.
Like several other German perfumes with strange names or design, Khasana was actually hiding the inspiration and its "secret" mission. It was not accessible, nor easy to understand. It was one of the first creations where the Oriental essence was expressed in a profound way: strange sonority, bizarre name, mysterious but captivating, heavy odor, legendary inspiration. It was the opposite of products like "Pâte des Sultanes", a cosmetic from the XIXth century, where the idea was obvious and accessible to anyone.
For the creator, the perfume was the mysterious essence capturing the spirit of the Tree of Life or the divine flower, as I presented in another article. The famous Assyrian relief with the Tree of Life was discovered and presented at the end of the XIXth century, many other were found in the same area with the Khasana gate.
Like the Khasana gate, protecting the entrance to a sacred, but very real world, where the seeds of the Tree of Life were preserved, the perfume opens the doors to a new and different world, rich in symbols and meanings. It was an aesthetic vision highly unusual, but with other examples like the special perfume called Le Styx (Coty).
Created before the arrival of the marketing and the economic expansion of the brand, Khasana belongs to a period when the perfumer could afford the luxury to speak about unusual concepts, certainly hard to understand by most of the consumers.
The perfume is rich an heavy, with sweet notes balanced by aromatic fougère elements and a strong dose of new orris ingredients. It precedes in style Emeraude and Shalimar and is much lighter than both of them.
The perfume was extremely famous in Germany before WWI and after the death of Dr. Albersheim in 1919, Khasana started a new commercial adventure loosing its mysterious original interpretation. With the trend set by Paul Poiret and other brands, the advertising of Khasana became explicitly Oriental in a "1001 Nights" style, like the 1923 animation movie, a very original new promotional tool, or the 1925 illustration presenting a sensual harem slave girl served with perfume. Hollywood changed for ever the vision about the Orient and behind the once mystical "treasure gate" a new world appeared. It was a mixture between Aladdin and Rudolph Valentino.

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Sunday, May 22

Egyptian Enigma

Ida Rubinstein, 1920 in "Antoine et Cleopatre". 
A famous perfume with an Egyptian theme was fashionable those years in Paris and hides an enigma in terms of chemistry.

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Saturday, May 21

Aqua Allegoria Jasminora (Guerlain) - new fragrance review

With its latest introduction in the Acqua Allegoria line, Guerlain takes us into an oriental garden where soft sensual flowers are hidden under the immaculate lightness and watery freshness. The floral delicacy, with bergamot, freesia and tea accents as found in Cherry Blossom, but underlined with strong lemony accents, as depicted in many classic Guerlain colognes, protects the petals of a shy and fragile jasmine. It is not the opulent sensual flower from the classic Jasmiralda perfume, where jasmine absolute and ylang-ylang found their most opulent expression, but an evanescent flower bouquet. Here, a green star jasmine note (not animalic) becomes a honeysuckle. The freshness of the perfume subtly recalls the beauty of Herba Fresca, but as the floral allegory is depicted in this sparkling watercolor with a deep sense of lightness, soft sensual and powdery orris elements appear in the background. The precise dose of sweetness required by an Acqua type balances the lemony crispness, which recalls a magnolia. The delicate green top note, brought by galbanum, and the watery lily of the valley, a cyclamen note, combined with the fresh jasmine (with a peach accent) subtly recalls the beautiful Cristalle (Chanel), while the jasmine interpretation suggests the precious tonality of Chanel No5 Eau Première. But despite these delicate quotes, even with a modern moss-musk-amber drydown as found in Jasmine White Moss (Estée Lauder), Aqua Allegoria Jasminora (Guerlain) avoids with elegance any direct reference and remains a typical Guerlain perfume in a lemony floral context where Hedione almost dominates the soft drydown. Because ideas are in the air in Paris, this beautiful Acqua could become a perfume if the lightness of the jasmine meets the sensual accord created by Dominique Ropion for the Poulenc event.

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Friday, May 20

A secret lab

A secret lab in the 60's. Millions of consumers used their creations. The man on the left was one of the most powerful perfumers in Europe.

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Thursday, May 19

Relique d'Amour (L.Legrand)


An unusual name for a perfume - Relique d'Amour or Love Relic.
An unusual inspiration - gothic in 1912 when the trend was sensual and oriental
An unusual text - "Le plus artistique des parfums de luxe. Le plus puissant des parfums ténaces" - the most artistic luxury perfume, the most powerful among tenacious perfumes.
L.Legrand - Parfumerie Oriza - a very old french house 
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Wednesday, May 18

Perfume for fans

There was a time when the perfume was not applied directly on skin, but used on handkerchief. It was called "handkerchief perfume" and this expression survived more than one century after, still used in the text of american patents in the 1990's. But in the late XIXth century, when the Chinese and Japanese inspiration slowly entered the world of art and fashion, the fan became a highly fashionable item. This Legrand perfume ad from 1912 (my archive) was created with a very precise purpose in mind - to scent the fans - matching the oriental (persian) fashion of the day as it was proposed by Paul Poiret. At the same time, paper fans started to be used as advertising items and some delicate examples from the perfume house Piver have survived. But as the Belle Epoque glory faded with WWI, the fan got bigger and the dress smaller. In the 1920's, huge feather fans were fashionable and we can imagine the decadent mood of parties with rich and tenacious perfumes like l'Origan, Emeraude or Shalimar floating in the air. The deep décolleté of beaded dresses with low waist and the flower or bow placed right at the pubis level were strong sexual messages enhanced by the use of perfumes and fans. Freud and sex were on everybody's lips. It was the time when his nephew, Edward Bernays, used the new "science" in advertising, but that's a different story.
The most important thing to remember about a "scented fan" is its huge ability to diffuse scents. This idea has been brilliantly used by Francis Kurkdjian for his recent anniversary in Paris.

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Tuesday, May 17

Les Parfums Changeants

An unusual concept proposed 100 years ago by a less known French perfumer was the fragrance that changes 3 or 4 times a day, using ingredients with very different volatility. What could be often seen as a technical problem was once a short lived trend, the opposite of the linear perfumes of the 80's.

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Monday, May 16

Unusual honeysuckle

It took me at least 5 years to understand why a famous and extremely old base called Chèvrefeuille had a particular unforgettable scent. It did not smell like honeysuckle, not even the most subtle reference to these beloved flowers... Until I found this weekend in a garden this glorious bush. Meet the flowers that have inspired the perfumers at the turn of the century to create an extremely versatile composition! It is a honeysuckle with a very unusual scent, soft, delicate and creamy and above all it gave me the full explanation and the structure of the forgotten De Laire product. The truth is that the botanic identity behind the inspiration of perfumers is as secret as the captive molecules used inside their unusual fragrances. We have no access to the olfactory universe of Jacques Guerlain, many scented plants from early 1900 are not known to the public today, some of them do not produce scent any more, like several types of roses. Creation has rarely been abstract.  

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Saturday, May 14

Jacques Guerlain & the polyphony of perfume (part 1)

A polyphonic perfume
One of the reason behind the enduring success and unsurpassed beauty of many Guerlain perfumes is the structure of their composition. Most of them are polyphonic perfumes, as it is the case of Après l'Ondée, L'Heure Bleue or Vol de Nuit. Their structure can be compared to the polyphony of Bach and this is the reason why I do not use the more obvious term, "poly-osmic".
The preferences for several particular basic notes are different inside a group and can change cyclically with time. The polyphony ensures that a great perfume will please as long as possible. From the very beginning of his career, Jacques Guerlain understood that simple perfumes, those based exclusively on a single idea and usually called solinotes, will rarely pass the test of time. He was one of the first to create "fantasy" scents, actually polyphonic perfumes with a complex scent, but a simple formula. Even his "soliflores" were not always quite "solinotes".
But before speaking about Jacques Guerlain, I wish to explain the meaning of the concept of polyphony applied to fragrances.
The harmony of classic perfumes represents the use of simultaneous accords and its study involves their construction / generation and the principles of their "vertical" connection. The voice or melody of a perfume is the succession of notes perceived as a single entity. Several "melodic lines" can be interwoven inside a perfume while the polyphony refers to the relationship of separate independent voices. The tension expressed through dissonant elements in relation to the main theme was often used to "resolve" the main idea, creating a balance between consonant and dissonant elements.
To understand the polyphony of a scent, a quality that belongs to several natural materials and to perfumes created according to biomorphic principles, let's see the relation between 2 ingredients A and B inside a very simple melodic line or accord.
- A can be subordinated to B and acts like a modifier of the main olfactory characteristics of B.
- A and B are both main ingredients and there is no subordination between them, their olfactory characteristics coexist either by tension or by mutual support. The tension or contrast appears when A and B are located in opposite directions on the olfactory space, while the mutual support happens when they belong to the same family of related families of odors. The contrasts of scents is vast subject and there are at least 24 types, only a third was often used.
- A and B are major or minor ingredients inside a simple "melodic line" but from their proportion something new emerges, more powerful than the mutual exaltation. It is a rare case and depends on both the nature of ingredients and their proportion.
The second case (ex: the structure of notes inside the jasmine absolute) when 2, 3 or 4 independents elements coexist is characteristic of the early perfumes of Jacques Guerlain.
This type of polyphony refers only to the perception of odors and not to the number of ingredients inside a formula. It is opposed to the type of scent with just one voice (monophony) or to the scents with a dominant voice / theme accompanied by secondary similar themes in homophony.
The most known example of monophony, a scent made by hundreds of distinct voices but acting as a block, is the residual scent floating around the perfume labs or the scent of "mille-fleurs". It is the expression of chaos.
A simple basic reconstitution of a rose with 8 ingredients is usually a monophony. If you mix a "head space rose" with "rose rouge accord", "rose blanche", "rose thé", rose oil, rose absolute, adjusting the levels of APE, citronellol, damascone & adding some musk, you will end in a homophony. Each fraction of your perfume will recall the perfume and will be subordinated to it. Replace "rose" with "my idea based on fruity rose + patchouli ambery" and you will have the same homophonic structure with one difference, instead of being horizontal (the different roses) it is vertical (a rose with a variation on top and one on the drydown).
You can instantly recognize a perfume with a dominant carnation note. This is the "carnation melody". But the recognizable carnation can be built in many ways and this is where the art of the perfumer can be seen through the expression of the same theme through contrasts, variation of polyphonic texture. For instance, N'aimez que moi (Caron) is more a beautiful simple rose-violet perfume, while Paris (YSL) is a polyphonic construction.
The GC of a perfume tells the ingredients but doesn't show how they work, thus the real structure of the perfume remains mysterious. In complex mixtures, starting with 10 elements, the ingredients start to rearrange according to their own "laws". In front of 10% linalool many questions appear: does it belong to the citrus accord, does it enter in a jasmine, in a freesia, or is it just a fresh element?
The role of the perfumer is to arrange the ingredients according to his own rules. Without order in a formula, there is chaos. Usually the chaos in terms of fragrance is a pleasant non descript scent like that one floating around perfume shops.
A polyphonic perfume means bringing together several very individual accords and generate a scent where all these elements coexists, are not subordinated and doesn't represent a variation. You cannot built polyphony by the simple mixture of components inside a bouquet. If you mix a rose and a jasmine you will not get Joy.
Inside a perfume the polyphony is ruled by the odor value. Knowing the intensity of your ingredients and of your accords is a key to understand how the scent works, what is the hierarchical position of a molecule and how the structure can be improved. Eugenol and Eugenol 10% will not act the same when you have jasmine absolute or patchouli inside the formula.
An scent is polyphonic not because you smell 2 things at the same time, but because its unity spreads over several zones of the olfactory space. This principle of complexity was applied in the creation of perfumes since the late XIXth century.
Every time you increase the amount of a secondary element and you transform it into a major element of the final perfume, you increase the degree of complexity and the polyphony of the perfume, if it was built according to this concept. It's precisely what Ernest Beaux did with Chanel No5. But increasing too much this element could determine also that another part of the perfume would not be anymore a major feature and thus the complexity number decreases. That's what happens when you overdose the Ambroxan in a perfume. Building complex polyphonies is extremely difficult and it can easily lead to a chaotic non descript pleasant perfume, a fragrance with grisaille and no structure. Both Chanel No5 and Arpège have high polyphonic "numbers" and right after them you find Origan and L'Heure Bleue, but also a list of modern perfumes.
In the next post about Jacques Guerlain you will understand how he created polyphonic perfumes, a type of composition that was taken to a new level of complexity by Ernest Beaux and André Fraysse.

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Friday, May 13

Francis Kurkdjian - 10 years of luxury perfumes

About a month ago, a mysterious perfume blotter without any name but a glorious floral scent arrived in my mailbox. It was a secret invitation to an unusual event that took place last Friday in Paris. Francis Kurkdjian enchanted the audience with the celebration of 10 years of luxury at "Le Grand Palais" the famous monument built for the 1900 Universal Exhibition where he created last year a symphony of scents.
Maison Francis Kurkdjian, is still a young and bright star in the galaxy of perfumes, but the perfumer started the creation of exclusive scents in 2001, composing perfumes for the Opera, Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres, Versailles Museum and also several parfums sur mesure, which made him famous all around the world. For this event, Francis Kurkdjian invited all his collaborators from the luxury industry, masters of French craftsmanship, expressed now through his works and future scent projects.
In early May, "Le Grand Palais" is surrounded by the blooming mock orange (seringat) with its white intoxicating scent during the evening. Inside the building, the perfumer imagined a white space with white elements where the bottles where glittering like champagne in an air rich with a sophisticated floral perfume blooming near the 120 white porcelain roses created by La Manufacture de Sèvres.
In the center of La Rotonde de la Reine, I was delighted to see a mirror anamorphosis with column where Francis Kurkdjian's name and the interpretation of the famous engraving "Habit de Parfumeur" by Nicolas de Larmessin were appearing on a curved mirror (see also my old article about anamorphosis and the 8th Art). One of the most unusual design element brought by Francis Kurkdjian was a big fan, a masterpiece of patience and delicacy, created from at least 100 paper blotters by Sylvain Le Guen and scented with an amazing perfume. The idea is highly ingenious because it offers an unusual 3D experience of the perfume, similar to the engineering of scent under a linden tree.
For this special anniversary, Francis Kurkdjian created an impressive opulent floral fragrance, a limited edition with 20 crystal bottles of pure perfume (200 ml) created by Cristallerie Saint Louis. 10 are decorated with gold and 10 are decorated with platinum and they are sold for 5500 EUR while the 200 ml perfume extract costs 1100 EUR (a very good price given the quantity of pure perfume). The white leather boxes have mirrors and secret drawers with a hidden solar nanolight to cast the unusual quality of the Saint Louis crystal.
During the evening, other 2 special perfumes (for Monte Carlo and Trianon) were presented on the new ebony desk (cabinet de curiosités) created sur mesure for the new Francis Kurkdjian boutique by Nicolas Basile.
Another amazing luxury creation was "Le Mètre parfumeur", a tape measure created from a white silk ribbon and highly scented with perfume, an exquisite floral aldehydic jasmine-orris creation to die for, still embalming my desk one week after the exclusive event.
Francis Kurkdjian is creating perfumes for major brands and his own house, but one thing is clear after that evening: in his drawers, the perfumer hides several great surprises and great creations with an impeccable taste. There is one which brings the unusual tea - maté note in an opulent floral context with the precise dose between classicism and a very modern aesthetic.
Here you have some photos I took at the event.

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Wednesday, May 11

Mystikal - the new Givaudan secret molecule (part 2)


Part II (Mystikal, the molecule)

The mysterious journey of incense history (see part 1) with the complicated olibanum chemistry takes us in 1903 when something unusual took place in Paris. Just before 1900, the new dawn of the 8th art, Jacques Rouché, director of the famous L.T.Piver house (and later director of the Parisian Opera) gave carte blanche to the new perfumer, Pierre Armingeat, the genius of invention, and to professor Auguste Georges Darzens, the famous chemist from Ecole Polytechnique. From their collaboration appeared the most unusual, daring and controversial perfumes using what we call today captive molecules. These were secret ingredients developed only for Piver. None of these perfumes have survived because after 1925 the house was oriented to a less luxury clientele and what can be found is usually the low quality fragrances, reformulated and with little relation to the glorious Belle Époque era. Very few are reconstructed at Versailles.
In 1903-1904, prof. G. Darzens came with a new reaction, known today by his name, and with a new set of molecules for Piver - the superior aldehydes - with the famous, strange and unusual MNA aldehyde (methyl nonyl acetaldehyde). The same year, another team synthesized the other fatty aldehydes, which will be soon incorporated in bases and perfumes. For instance, there is a very beautiful amber-opoponax base with a light MNA note which made it very special compared to the traditional accord invented at the end of XIXth century.
MNA aldehyde has something highly unusual compared to the other aldehydes and in fact, starting with C11, everything changes - the olfactory profile, the volatility and how it can be used inside a perfume. There are also C13, C14, normal and alpha branched, and many curiosities. Unlike the lower aldehydes and their powerful freshness with green-citrus-rosy facets combined with their waxy character, MNA aldehyde has an important incense and amber note under its orange freshness recalling the C10 aldehyde, with facets of pepper / elemi / nutmeg and a honeyed sweetness sitting between the note of jasmine absolute - rose absolute - chamomile - genêt absolute. It is also a deep and very long lasting ingredient, a dry-down note, but again, if it is used in a greater concentration its effect would be noticeable in the top.
As soon as it was discovered, the MNA aldehyde started to be used by some perfumers who had access to this note. It is important to remember that, as it was an exclusive ingredient for Piver, it took a long time until other perfumers were able to find a MNA bottle. Both Pierre Armingeat and Jacques Guerlain used it in very precise way, and there are several Guerlain perfumes where this molecule is essential for the unusual beauty.
The first major application of the MNA aldehyde (but not the first historic use), where it is quite overdosed, is the original Pompeia (Piver), a perfume created in 1907 and with a short existence (later versions are not good). This creation was highly unusual and mystical, conceived after theosophical principles, from the bottle to the perfume, something that would be too avant-garde for modern tastes in 2011 but was perfect in 1907 and not the only perfume with such an aesthetic.
In fact, the beautiful red box with garlands is the reproduction of an ancient coffin, it preserves the crystal bottle like legendary crystal sarcophagus, and the perfume is imagined as an elixir. It is the quintessential soul of ancient Rome, built around 2 symbolic ingredients, rose and incense. Life, death, resurrection - this is meaning of Pompeïa and the opening of the bottle releasing the spirit in the room was said to have unusual effects. It was the opposite of the seduction principle and nothing inside this perfume was carnal. In fact, it was quite avant-garde in 1907 Catholic France because, unlike opopanax, the scent of incense was still a taboo. We might consider today the perfumes of Comme des Garçons as daring, when people go to church as tourists, but the real avant-garde creation was imagined 100 years before. For this reason, the perfume, more than 50 years after its glory when the formula was changed but still preserved its principles, can be seen in photos of shrines from South America, South Africa and many islands. It was the special incense note, revealed by MNA aldehyde and other clever combinations, and not the name or design, that made this creation almost a sacred scent in places where olibanum is not available. People did not know what Pompeia contained, the composition was never explained, but those using the Piver (cheap) lotion in their ceremonies were lead by the nose as I have explained in the previous article about the archetype of olibanum scent.
The main accord of Pompeia (Piver) is a simple numeric combination between Olibanum and MNA aldehyde, and this accord was "mystikal" with a K from "Kabala" because it was chosen having in mind the power of numbers. This cannot be understood by the user because only those who can read the formula (or posses it) are able to see the intention of the perfumer. It's like the Chartres Cathedral - the symbols are there no matter if you can "read" them or not.
MNA aldehyde was used a lot after 1915 in the new floral aldehydic perfumes, but rarely in a powerful combination with olibanum, sometimes the effects are too addictive. There is a lost perfume from Ernest Beaux, containing a massive blend of aldehydes, all the members from C9 to C12 L and C12 MNA. Well aware of the importance and unusual effects of MNA aldehyde and similar molecules, Jacques Guerlain used them in 2 major perfumes, very mysterious creations with a highly addictive power and a symbolic "mystikal" structure of the perfume (maybe I will present the relation between Guerlain and Goethe one day).
But about one year ago, Givaudan made the impressive discovery with Mystikal, their new captive molecule. In fact, Mystikal is the corresponded acid of the MNA aldehyde, 2-Methyl Undecanoic acid, something highly unusual because there are not many acids in the perfumer's palette.
The aldehydes we use today (from C6 to C12L) correspond to the common fatty acids found everywhere in nature, from the plant oils to your skin. In fact, that's how they were first prepared, except MNA.
While the reaction aldehyde vs. its corresponding fatty acid is basic in chemistry, Mystikal was for about a century the "ingredient under your nose nobody speaks about". I was very surprised because this simple quintessential molecule is missing from all the major works since 1904. For about 2 weeks I made a research in my fragrance chemistry papers pre WWII and mainly in the glorious era of aldehydes. There was not a single mention about this highly unusual and secret molecule, an alpha branched alkanoic acid. Was it intentional?
Is it possible that a Pompeia perfume or soap with a massive dose of MNA aldehyde would produce some Mystikal over the years in a slow reaction? Is it possible that Mystikal belongs to that category of those very secret molecules developed before WWII, used by some great perfumers, and then completely forgotten by the next generation? These are secret stories that make chemistry one of the most fascinating disciplines.
Though recently launched by Givaudan and available only to some perfumers, this molecule (2-Methyl Undecanoic acid) belongs to a very different era and acts like a time machine. I have in mind another forgotten and mysterious perfume called Mystikum, created by the German company Scherck. It is a very rare and special fragrance with an unusual symbol on the bottle, created in a time when German architects like Erich Mendelsohn were conceiving expressionist buildings rich in symbols, theosophical elements and biomorphic forms.
Pompeia, Mystikum and the molecule Mystikal belong to this highly unusual aesthetic based on the distortion of form for a strong emotional effect and inner experience with a highly symbolic stylistic expression. Translating biomorphic principles into fragrance design is the essence of the 8th art.
The scent of Mystikal is close to MNA aldehyde but at least 10 times stronger. It is powerful with a strong woody-incense facet and the unusual contrast between deep opulence and coldness. It has both the incense scent of a gothic church and the cold stones with traces of decay as found in the early primitive Christian dwellings. Mystikal is the Underground of Vatican. It is strange and human, with something that suggests blood, liver, wax, under the very strong burning incense element. It possess the very powerful and diffusive note of natural resins like olibanum and myrrh, with an unusual elemi facet. The waxy deep background suggests also orris concrete (and its rich "human" dimension, not brought by ionones/irones) and ambrette seed. Mystikal offers the burning incense note, different from the olibanum oil/resinoid.
Mystikal is not alone at Givaudan because other alpha branched alkanoic and alkenoic acids were developed by the Swiss chemists. Mystikal can be used in many types of products, where a subliminal level is required for an unusual addictive effect and though I consider it a fine fragrance ingredient, I wouldn't be surprised to find it in detergents.
One of the very first fragrances to use this captive ingredient is the perfume conceived by Yann Vasnier for Ricardo Tisci, the Givenchy artistic director who authored Visionaire Sixty Religion, the 60th edition of the famous magazine. In the unusual wooden box like an antique altar-piece, the perfume represents the theme of this edition, "Religion". 
Ricardo Tisci said in the interview for Independent: "I wanted the perfume to be something very fresh and innocent. The first impression is strong and sharp and then it becomes delicate, romantic and soft." But the perfume conceived by Yann Vasnier, with a short and rich formula, is something much profound!
The perfumer brought the unusual power of Mystikal inside a blend of sacred ingredients used as I explained in the previous article - olibanum, myrrh, ciste labdanum. Because the religious experience means burning, and thus other molecules, he completed the missing link with ingredients that capture the various facets of the ritual. Both as a resinoid and as an oil, the sacred materials are combined to offer a full sensation during the evaporation. The use of the aldehydic element gives wings to the deep notes and Yann Vasnier captures with grace the air, the spirit, the explosion, the light. It is not the beautiful strangeness of CDG, but the ray of light sparkling inside the blend of notes that cannot fly because they are too heavy. One should notice that resins, despite their spiritual connotation, are deeply anchored and "material" for the perfumer, they cannot fly in the air unless you give them wings. And that's precisely what Yann Vasnier does in this unusual creation with the sparkling Mystikal.
Spray in the air the recent rose Yann Vasnier did for DelRae and the spirit of Pompeia will appear by magic in the room. Maybe with one drop of Mystikal you will feel the invisible perfume of "Le Spectre de la Rose", the beautiful 1911 ballet with Nijinsky and Karsavina. Some very rare roses have a delicate incense note. It is not magic but the chemistry of life when the most mysterious Science becomes the most mysterious Art - the perfume.
Photo: my Pompeia box on my desk

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Fragrance is the 8th Art - Octavian Coifan - Le Parfum est le 8ème Art
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