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You’re
walking down the street, minding your own business, when a
beautiful stranger walks by and the faintest whiff transports
you back in time…to your first girlfriend or boyfriend on
a summer evening…to a vision of your mother dressed to the
nines, about to go out on Saturday night…to that magical spring
afternoon in Paris when you were so young and the air was
so rich with the fragrance of rose or linden that you just
wanted to disappear in its embrace forever. Whew…
Our
namesake Baudelaire put it best, of course:
“My
soul travels on the smell of perfume like the souls of other
men on music.”
Fragrance
can certainly inspire transcendent writing. But if you really
want to be overwhelmed by the sheer effort and incredible
nuance that are expressed in each drop of a real essential
oil, track down a copy of Perfume and Flavor Materials
of Natural Origin by Stefan Arctander. During the 1950s,
Dr. Arctander assembled an amazing collection of natural perfume
and flavor materials—and information on their production—from
growers, distillers, and exporters all over the world.
In
the process, he cleared away centuries of misinformation and
tall tales, while somehow simultaneously enhancing the timeless
mystery of fragrance. He explained, for example, that the
“lavender oil” in your soap could come from true lavender
( Lavandula Officianalis) or the newer lavandin
(a hybrid of true and “spike” lavender, whose essential
qualities vary widely)…and that it may have been obtained
through any number of a bewildering combinations of distillation
and/or solvent extraction methods, passing through brief incarnations
as lavender concrète , absolute , and/or
flower water along the way.
To
further complicate things, single note fragrances don’t really
stand the test of time very well, For example, if our “vervain”
fragrance is to smell true immediately , and linger
true for hours, the vervain heart note may need the support
of head notes of lemon and orange and a bottom note of mint
(and, depending on the harvest, not always in the exact same
ratio).
Our
company started as a quest for the real thing. But our culture
is so “loud” that people have come to believe that the stronger
the taste or more overwhelming the fragrance, the more “real”
or “natural” it is. Fortunately there are many—and we’re happy
to include our customers among them—who still treasure the
seductive subtlety of simple, natural fragrances, used in
just the right proportion.
As
our friends Stephane and Natacha Lecaille of Provence Santé
explain it: “A fragrance seems right when it has perfect harmony—moving
seamlessly from the head notes to the heart notes to the bottom
notes. It is derived, of course, from the natural elements
that surround us—but, ultimately, depends on the sensitivity
of its originator.” And, we might had, the sensitivity of
the person who uses it…thanks for helping us keep the tradition
alive!
And,
we might add, the sensitivity of the person who uses it…thanks
for helping us keep the tradition alive. |