A 2020 spot for Donna Karan Cashmere Mist.
Louis Vuitton Etoile Filante ~ new fragrance
Louis Vuitton will launch Étoile Filante, a new fragrance, in January…
The daily lemming
A lemming for fans of Viktor & Rolf Flowerbomb? The Haute Couture edition: "To celebrate Flowerbomb's 15th Anniversary, Viktor&Rolf designed a sumptuous rose gold dress for the iconic Flowerbomb bottle made of thorny branches and flowers. Created with state of the art 3d printing techniques, this limited edition is one of only 15 pieces in the world. The bottle is contained in a luxurious calligraphied case hand numbered in rose gold. An object of pure desire for the most precious and explosive fragrance." $2500 for 50 ml Eau de Parfum, at Viktor & Rolf.
Friday scent of the day 12/18
Happy Friday! It’s also World Arabic Language Day and International Migrants Day, plus Ugly Christmas Sweater Day. And a few birthdays: Paul Klee, Fletcher Henderson, Ossie Davis, Jacques Pépin. Our community project for today: we’re doing Best of 2020…wear one of your favorite fragrance releases of 2020.
I got nothing for the community project: I paid pretty much zero attention to new releases this year. I’m wearing a new release though, Dawn Spencer Hurwitz Sweet Pine Tar.
Reminder: 12/25 is Christmas…
Rose-saturated vapor
When the flowery broth begins to simmer, steam flows from the still, via a bamboo reed, into a copper pot holding sandalwood oil, which readily imbibes the rose-saturated vapor.
It takes about five to six hours for Tegh Singh’s roses to become rose attar. Throughout this process, Ram Singh stays on his toes, hopping between the still and pot, testing the water temperature with his hands, and listening to the hiss of steam to intuit whether to feed more wood into the fire. “I’ve been doing this since I was a boy,” says the 50-year-old Ram Singh, who apprenticed with an attar guru for a decade.
— Read more in This ancient town is the perfume capital of India: For centuries, perfumers in Kannauj have worked their alchemy to create “liquid gold.” at National Geographic.