Home fragrance: Red Flower Chinese Marigold Fragrance
Reviewing candles and home fragrance products is difficult (violins, commence!) It is almost impossible to obtain samples of home fragrance (room sprays, diffuser oils, candles), and even if sample candles were available, how could I gauge their full-size effects? The reason most of my home fragrance product reviews are positive is not because I am eager to please or easily pleased, it's because I smell candles, room sprays, diffuser products and incense in a store before buying them and I buy what I like — and then review the products.
But every now and then I can’t resist the urge to buy something unsniffed (and unavailable locally) simply because of gorgeous packaging or ad copy that references exotic locales and cultures, rare or unusual ingredients, beloved flowers. Red Flower tempted me with a magical word: marigold…
Sunday perfume news round-up
If you insist on following the Jade Goody debacle, you can find most of the back story in today's UK Times Online article Beauty and the Bigot. Basenotes has an article about The Perfume Shop in the UK pulling Goody's Shh... perfume from their shelves, and apparently Debenham's have followed suit. Her bottle manufacturer, ironically enough located in India, has ceased production.
The Edmonton Journal has an interesting article about the short life cycle of modern fragrances.
PETA was apparently planning to disrupt a promotional event for Jennifer Lopez's new J Lo Glow After Dark fragrance yesterday, but I can't find any follow-up stories so I don't know if they did or not.
Not really perfume-related, but Luca Turin fans will want to read his op-ed piece in today's New York Times: What You Can't Smell Will Kill You.
Yves Saint Laurent Love Sprays
For Valentine's Day, Yves Saint Laurent has launched the YSL Love Sprays, limited edition 25 ml bottles of the Paris, Cinéma and Opium fragrances, each in a heart shaped bottle at the end of a silk ribbon. Paris and Opium are both in Eau de Toilette concentration; Cinéma is in Eau de Parfum. (via cosmoty.de)
Perfume Legends by Michael Edwards ~ perfume book review
Michael Edwards is a household name in perfumery. He is the man behind Fragrances of the World (formerly known as The Fragrance Adviser, and now available in book form and online), a critically acclaimed guide for retailers, and the author of Perfume Legends, a standard work on the history of modern perfumery. While there’s some controversy among perfume fans regarding the reliability of the (online) suggestions provided by the Fragrance Adviser, Perfume Legends is universally hailed as a must-have. Of course, good things come at a price, and at $130 US this book is no bargain. I’ve postponed my purchase for a long time, and ended up buying the (much cheaper) French soft cover edition, translated by Guy Robert. My review is based on the latter, but there’s no real difference between the two.
What we have here is a reference book on fragrances that made a mark in 20th century perfumery. The selection is restricted to French feminine fragrances, but that hardly narrows it down (although the wonderful Youth Dew would have fitted perfectly in Edwards’ list). The book features forty-five influential perfumes…