Michael Edwards of Fragrances of the World will be holding a series of fragrance master classes this summer in Australia:
The workshop is a hands-on fragrance evaluation session based on The Fragrance Wheel developed by Michael Edwards…
Posted by Robin on 10 Comments
Michael Edwards of Fragrances of the World will be holding a series of fragrance master classes this summer in Australia:
The workshop is a hands-on fragrance evaluation session based on The Fragrance Wheel developed by Michael Edwards…
Posted by Robin on 26 Comments
Michael Edwards will release the 27th edition of his “fragrance bible”, Fragrances of the World 2011, in January. The new guide lists approximately 8000 fragrances (with over 900 new additions) classified by fragrance family, and includes over 900 niche fragrances from 60 perfume houses…
Posted by Robin on 4 Comments
Scientists are announcing development and successful testing of the first "perfumery radar (PR)." It's not a new electronic gadget for homing in on the source of that Eau de Givenchy or Jungle Tiger in a crowded room. Rather, PR is a long-awaited new tool for bringing scientific order to the often arbitrary process of classifying the hundreds of odors that make-up perfumes.
— Read more at 'Perfumery Radar' Brings Order to Odors at Science Daily. Many thanks to Ruth for the link!
Posted by Robin on 102 Comments
Fragrance families cause a good deal of confusion, even among seasoned perfumistas. Two experiences, both involving the fruity floral category, illustrate the problem.
I once got a rather unpleasant email from a reader who was angry that I called a fragrance a “fruity floral” in a new fragrance announcement: she assumed that I was making an arbitrary assignment based on the notes listed in the press release, and that I was trying to make a critical statement about this particular fragrance.1 This nicely introduces the first point I’d like to make about fragrance families: you cannot determine the fragrance family by reading a list of notes. If you see a fragrance family listed in a new fragrance announcement, it came from the press materials or some other primary source.
Some time later I held a poll asking readers to name their favorite fruity floral perfumes. While most of the suggestions were, in fact, fruity, a rather large percentage of them were not, in fact, fruity florals. And that introduces the second point I’d like to make: you cannot determine the fragrance family just by the noticeable presence of certain notes, either…
Posted by Robin on 19 Comments
Author Michael Edwards will release the 2010 edition of his yearly Fragrances of the World, known as “the fragrance bible”, in January.
The 26th edition lists over 7000 fragrances (around 800 more than the 2009 edition) classified by fragrance family. It is used by numerous retailers to help customers find fragrances they might like…