Tamara Mellon, co-founder of Jimmy Choo, in a "making of" for the print campaign for the new Jimmy Choo perfume.
The music is Empty Streets by Late Night Alumni.
Posted by Robin on 11 Comments
Tamara Mellon, co-founder of Jimmy Choo, in a "making of" for the print campaign for the new Jimmy Choo perfume.
The music is Empty Streets by Late Night Alumni.
Posted by Robin on 6 Comments
Marc Ecko has launched Marc Ecko Unlimited (Unltd), the designer’s second fragrance:
Unlimited by Marc Ecko was born on the streets…
Posted by Angela on 200 Comments
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…
Posted by Robin on 66 Comments
Today we’re helping Ruby, who says that if money were no object…
…I would have [perfumer] Olivia Giacobetti make me a fragrance that evokes the following: A night with a huge golden moon. A library in a very old British castle. Crumbling paper, leather bound reference tomes, wood polish, parchment and ink, a fireplace, hot tea and pear almond tart, a bit of mineral from the stones on the hearth, fresh flowers just harvested from the garden, a bit of damp earth and rain still clinging to their stems. Martin Gore is sitting in an ancient leather wing chair by the fire. (I’m guessing headspace technology will have to come into play on that one)
In real life, she can spend up to $150. Ruby is a makeup artist and photography student in her mid-30s. Here are some other details about her…
Posted by Robin on 14 Comments
Avon has launched Imari Mystique, a new flanker to 1985’s Imari perfume for women. Imari Mystique is fronted by singer Keri Hilson…