Actor Richard E Grant has launched Jack Richmond, his fourth fragrance…
Cerruti 1881 Silver & 1881 Riviera ~ new fragrances
Cerruti has launched Cerruti 1881 Silver, a new fragrance for men. 1881 Silver is a flanker to (and celebrates the 30th anniversary of) 1990’s Cerruti 1881. Last year, the brand introduced 1881 Riviera…
Floraiku Part I ~ fragrance reviews
Floraïku came to my attention not because I smelled one of its fragrances but because I saw one of its bottles; beware beautiful packaging. Floraïku is an offshoot of the niche line Memo Paris and its perfumes are inspired by Japan. At present, Floraïku has 19 perfumes (two of which are “ShadowingTM” fragrances — more on those later). According to the Floraïku website, the perfumes were developed by Aliénor Massenet or Sophie Labbé and each perfume supposedly contains more than 50% naturals (not sure any agency monitors such claims).
Floraïku fragrances are arranged in groupings: Forbidden Incense | Kodo — Sound of a Ricochet, My Shadow on the Wall, My Love Has the Color of the Night; Enigmatic Flowers | Ikebana — I See the Clouds Go By, Cricket Song, First Dream of the Year; Secret Teas and Spices | O Cha — The Moon and I, I Am Coming Home, One Umbrella for Two; Light Shadow — Sleeping on the Roof; Dark Shadow — Between Two Trees. Each scent has a poem attached to the perfume and comes in a gorgeous bottle/10 ml travel spray combo (presented in a bento box). Eight of Floraïku’s perfumes are missing from my two posts this week: Just A Rose, Ao, The Mountain Standing Still, Flowers Turn Purple, In the Rain, Wind in my Hand ($755!), In the Dark and Surprise…
L’Artisan Parfumeur Couleur Vanille ~ new fragrance
L’Artisan Parfumeur will launch Couleur Vanille, a new ‘savory vanilla inspired by the sweetness of the tradewinds’, in March. Couleur Vanille is based on fair trade Vanilla planifolia from Madagascar…
Leave it for a month and then go back
I have boxes where I put my different projects, but I have thousands of different fragrances either nearly finished or at the starting point. It’s like when you’re solving a puzzle or when you’re making a dress or even a painting. I’m quite inspired by painting. A painter can start his painting,leave it for a month and then go back.
— Perfumer Aliénor Massenet on the creation process. Read more in Q&A With Aliénor Massenet, Senior Perfumer Of Symrise at Forbes.