Guerlain's Eau de Lit is a new bedding spray created by perfumer Francis Kurkdjian.
The fragrance notes include bergamot, star anise, coriander leaves, sage, neroli, vanilla and musk.
(via aufeminin, absolufeminin)
Posted by Robin on 4 Comments
Guerlain's Eau de Lit is a new bedding spray created by perfumer Francis Kurkdjian.
The fragrance notes include bergamot, star anise, coriander leaves, sage, neroli, vanilla and musk.
(via aufeminin, absolufeminin)
Posted by Kevin on Leave a Comment
Plumeria, pikake, gardenia — these fragrant tropical flowers seem to make people either swoon with joy or retreat to a cool, dark room with some extra-strength aspirin. The scents of these flowers are extravagant and are often described as: sultry, intoxicating, enticing, suffocating. I enjoy these flowers’ fragrances on the air, outdoors; in a greenhouse or in a bouquet, they can overwhelm me and even, up close, smell unpleasant.
Since I would never wear a perfume that features these flowers (too feminine), I enjoy their opulent, creamy floral aromas in room sprays, candles and soaps.
Mālie Kaua’i is a new company based on the “Garden Isle” of Kauai, Hawaii. ‘Mālie’ means “beautiful, calm water”. The flowers and fruits used in Mālie Kaua’i’s products are water rich, and do not possess much essential oil. The company uses a high-tech distillation process (a patented vacuum technique using high pressure but low temperature) that preserves the “integrity” of the plant aromas it gathers. The end result of this process is called a hydrosol…
Posted by Kevin on 6 Comments
Is there a room in your house with “bad breath” — a stuffy attic or closet, a damp basement, or maybe a hallway where the dogs sleep, or the nook where the litter box is kept? Even an entire house can suffer from architectural halitosis: a mountain cabin or beach house that’s been closed for months has a stale, musty smell. We’ve all entered a hotel room, inhaled too deeply, and smelled yesterday’s cigarettes and coffee, the previous guests’ hairspray or perfume that’s permeated the carpets, curtains, upholstery.
I have found the perfect “breath freshener” for such malodorous spaces and odeurs — Diptyque’s Feuille de Lavande (Lavender Leaf) Room Spray. It is bracing, astringent and energizing; it zaps the air of staleness…
Posted by Victoria on 7 Comments
Jacques Garcia’s home fragrance is a rainfall of orange blossom petals delicately underscored by a smoky vanilla note. A honeyed breeze embraces gentle floral accords, accentuating their sweetness and radiance. A melody of orange blossom usually fades rather quickly, however in this case, smooth resinous cedar grounds the ethereal opulence of the flowers.
Although using the fragrance as a room spray would transform any confined space into a celestial garden, it would be unfair to reserve it exclusively for this purpose. In fact, I have been using it solely as a personal fragrance upon discovering that it is a wonderful rendition of orange blossom, with a remarkable tenacity…
Posted by Victoria on 11 Comments
My olfactory gallery of autumnal scents cannot be imagined without quince. According to a Georgian tale, quince took all summer to decide whether it was a pear or an apple, when suddenly the chills of autumn arrived, and there it was—neither pear nor apple, neither sweet nor pretty. Yet, the scent of this fruit is unlike any other—sweet, with a honeyed undercurrent, as well as fresh with a spicy exotic note. The fragrance of quince would pervade my house when I was growing up, as my mother made her quince preserves, boiling hard pieces of fruit in sugar syrup till they released their unique fragrance and turned into rose coloured jewels. The aroma would rise up like a breeze from the exotic gardens of a faraway land…