Passage d’Enfer was the first L’Artisan fragrance I fell in love with and purchased, and as the line eventually came to be a great favorite of mine, it would hold a special place in my affections even if only for that. As things go, quite a few of the fragrances I purchased in the early days of my perfume obsession now sit lonely and ignored in the back of my cabinet, but Passage d’Enfer, along with a few other old favorites (Diptyque Philosykos, Carthusia Mediterraneo) can count on regular wearings…
L’Artisan Safran Troublant fragrance review
I’m sure many of you have had this experience. You find a new perfume. You love it. You wear it a few times, and the love fades. You decide it isn’t you at all, and you give it away to a more deserving home. Then….it keeps popping into the back of your mind — perhaps it really was all that after all? You get another sample or bottle, decide your original doubts were on target, it just isn’t right for you, so you give it away again. And then…
L’Artisan Drole de Rose fragrance review
L’Artisan Parfumeur, like Serge Lutens, is a Paris-based niche fragrance house, and I would guess that if you were to rank niche perfume brands by the status accorded to them at the various online fragrance blogs and forums, Serge Lutens would easily take the top spot and L’Artisan would comfortably take the second (do comment if you think my estimation is way off base).
The two brands make an interesting study in contrasts, especially if you will allow for any number of sweeping generalizations (and if you won’t, do please skip the rest of this post). Yesterday in my review of Sa Majesté la Rose, I said that the Serge Lutens fragrances can be characterized as…
…personal artistic statements; to smell them is akin to entering someone else’s dream world. At the same time, as perfumes, they are satisfyingly rich and complex…
As with the classic perfumes of the first half of the 20th century, the Serge Lutens scents unfold slowly over the course of hours, and it is this complexity, I think, that allows for the intense, dream-like quality of the line…
An open letter to Olivia Giacobetti
Dear Olivia:
First, let me say that I am a huge fan of your work. When the first fall clouds start to roll in, I arm myself with Tea for Two and let the rain fall. When I’m on another iffy blind date, I show my personality and strength (and just plain feel good) with a dose of Dzing!. Premier Figuier was the first fragrance that really opened my eyes to the possibilities of scent, how a fragrance’s first breath can even tell the dirt on the fig tree’s roots. Thé pour un Eté, Passage d’Enfer, En Passant, Safran Troublant….your oeuvre boggles the mind.
But every artist has the occasional dry spell — especially one working as hard as you do, and I want to make sure that you are always fixed with ideas. So, with my compliments, please file these away…
L’Artisan Fou d’Absinthe ~ fragrance review
L’Artisan launched Fou d’Absinthe earlier this year. It is said to be the first fragrance from L’Artisan to be marketed specifically to men, although there are certainly other “masculine” fragrances in the line; it also introduces a new bottle design that will eventually be used for all of the L’Artisan fragrances. Fou d’Absinthe was created by perfumer Olivia Giacobetti and features notes of frozen alcohol, absinthe, blackcurrant buds, angelica, star anise, four spices cocktail (pepper, clove, nutmeg, and ginger), patchouli, pine needles, cistus and fir balsam.
L’Artisan describes the opening of Fou d’Absinthe as…