Jo Malone has launched Vetiver & Golden Vanilla, a new fragrance in the Cologne Intense Collection…
Happy Holidays!
Happy Holidays! We’ll be back on Thursday.
In the meantime, feel free to talk about whatever you like: what perfume you’re wearing today, what you’re cooking (or eating) over the holidays, anything at all.
Or, ask a question about fragrance, then see if anyone else has asked a question that you can answer…
Lazy weekend poll ~ five questions for December 2019
Quick PSAs: our Arielle Shoshana Weekenders Set giveaway is still open! And the next freebiemeet will be on Saturday, January 18. There are 10 days to go in 2019, and Hanukkah starts on Sunday night.
Meanwhile, five questions for a December weekend. As always, answer as few or as many as you like, or just talk about something else.
1. What fragrance are you wearing today?
2. What’s your favorite holiday (any holiday) food? (Feel free to share or link to a recipe!)
3. Did you make any perfume-related resolutions for 2019, and if so, did you stick to them?
4. Possibly related to #3, what’s the next fragrance you are itching to buy?
5. Share something wonderful with us! It can be anything — something delicious you ate, a great movie you saw recently, the last good book you read, any fabulous news you recently received — really, anything…
The (almost) daily lemming
From Guerlain for Chinese New Year: Rosa Rossa in red. "Rosa Rossa belongs to the Aqua Allegoria collection, the first collection in perfumery of intensely-fresh fragrances, created in 1999. [...] The guiding thread of the collection is bergamot, a precious citrus fruit that’s sometimes called "Calabrian green gold," and the key ingredient in the Guerlinade. Rosa Rossa is an eau de toilette which embodies the unexpected encounter between a delicate rose and a duo of lychee and blackcurrant notes." $132 CAD at Shoppers Drug Mart. (At Neiman Marcus, you can find a red bottle of Eau de Cologne Impériale, $105 for 100 ml.)
As if I were entering a cathedral
And so I marched into the department store to try on dresses. Like a growing number of global consumers, I couldn’t remember the last time I’d done so—I even bought my wedding dress online. De Bijenkorf was quiet. Blissfully so. After the double onslaught of rain and the crowds lining Amsterdam’s streets, it was as if I were entering a cathedral, albeit one consecrated to a retro kind of consumerism. Like all the best cathedrals, it even had its own fragrance. The ladies’ department (my status as a “lady” being a question for another time) was curated by someone with an actual design sensibility, rather than an algorithm trained to offer me Instagram’s fake news in fashion form. A limited selection of items makes for fast shopping. Instead of sifting through an infinite number of items online, I quickly spotted, tried on, and purchased a dress...that I’ve worn multiple times since.
— Read more in The Forgotten Glories of Department Stores at The Atlantic.