Kendall Jenner for Tory Burch Sublime.
Smell contains information
“We’ve known that smell contains information we can use to detect disease,” he says. “But computers can’t speak that language and can’t interpret that data yet.”
While that’s his long-term goal for the company, in the near term he wants Osmo to make safer, more sustainable aroma molecules for fragrances in everyday products like perfume, shampoo, insect repellant and laundry detergent.
— Alex Wiltschko, CEO and co-founder of AI startup Osmo, on why it is important to teach computers to smell. Read more in Led by a former Google researcher, this company wants to give computers a sense of smell—here’s how it works at CNBC.
L’Interdit Absolu
A quick spot for Givenchy L'Interdit Absolu.
The odor of pathogens
The researchers found that C. elegans can sense the odor of pathogens and get its intestinal cells ready to withstand the impending attack.
This discovery raises an intriguing question – Is there actually a smell coming off of pathogens that we can pick up on and help us fight off an infection?
— Read more in Is it possible to smell pathogens and fight them before an infection? at Earth.com.
Both a revenue stream and a marketing tool
These launches speak to fragrance’s growing power as both a revenue stream and a marketing tool. According to data analyst firm Circana, fragrance represents the fastest-growing prestige beauty category this year thus far, with dollar sales up 12% in the first half of 2024 versus the same period in 2023. But they are also a response to an evolving perfume audience that is hungry for more offbeat fragrances — should those launches pass muster with their discerning noses, that is.
— Read more in Why companies from Cirque du Soleil to Esquire are launching perfume at Glossy.