Somewhere
in the perfume industry, someone’s dog must have eaten the Pantone memo about
“Radiant Orchid” being the color of 2014. After last year’s pink wave, the“eau” concept is still going strong, but the chromatic scheme has switched to barely-there
pastel hues of green, from almond to aqua.
Carven L’Eau de Toilette
Green has
been the house of Carven’s signature since it was founded in 1946. Under its
new Jacques Bogart license, the brand hasn’t revived the spectacular green and
white-striped folded-paper boxes treasured by vintage collectors. But it did
relaunch the gardenia-centered green chypre Ma
Griffe, whose original formula was restored by Francis Kurkdjian, who also
authors the brand’s contemporary offerings.
After last
year’s Carven L’Eau de Parfum, L’Eau de Toilette is coming out in
mid-April (with a premiere in late February in the Parisian concept store
Colette). The juice is linden-tea green, but Francis K. says he worked on the
idea of “whiteness”. This translates into a moist-petals, neo-aquatic floral,
with a melon-y note gradually blending into a faintly spicy, abstract bouquet.
Elie Saab
L’Eau Couture
Francis K. also signs Elie Saab’s second fragrance. This time, the green theme is given
a delicately gourmand twist, based on the faint whiff of fresh almond given off
by budding orange blossoms – Saab’s signature note. There is, again, a minute
drop of the aquatic in the rosy-lemony magnolia accord; the gourmand base is
very elegantly executed, with a fresh, radiant vanilla bolstering the raw
almond, and a lovely cosmetic vibe throughout.
Balenciaga Rosabotanica
This year’s
variation on Balenciaga’s Florabotanica
by Oliver Polge and Jean-Christophe Hérault, isn’t actually green (though the
background to the floral pattern on the box is a fetching shade of aqua). But
its deconstructed sci-fi rose, laced with aromatic, almost medicinal effects –
from the mint and rosemary facets of cardamom – seems to have been plucked from
an herbalist’s off-world garden. Those green notes, which Hérault explains are
actually present in roses, tie in with the woody vetiver base through another
vibe of green, fig leaf. This is the most engagingly weird, modernistic roses
in the mainstream – or even in niche, for that matter. And one that very
intelligently solves the mainstream budget vs. “natural notes claim” conundrum
by not actually aiming at something that’s recognizably a rose.
Bottega Veneta Essence Aromatique
Out in
early March, Michel Almairac’s new fragrance for the Italian house
(Coty-produced like the Balenciaga) also straddles the fragrant/herbal/medicinal
boundary. Since it is pitched as a modern interpretation of eau de Cologne,
which was sold as a cure and a tonic in the 18th century, the option
makes some sort of historical sense. Like Rosabotanica,
it associates rose with a terpenic, citrusy-aromatic spice – this time,
coriander – so that the two scents have a similar vibe.
In Essence Aromatique, the accord is set
between bergamot and a whiff of airy « driftwood » amber, in keeping
with the “lounging on the Adriatic coast in a $600 swimsuit” inspiration (not necessarily
a bad investment: I bought two Tomas Maier swimsuits on sale ten years ago and
I’m still treasuring them). I’m also
reminded, though I don’t have it at hand to compare, of Clarins’ cult Eau Dynamisante, itself a reinvention of
cologne with a “good for your body and mind” claim.
It’s
interesting to note that all of these brands have taken the Prada route of
working with an “appointed” perfumer: Francis Kurkdjian for both Carven and
Elie Saab, Oliver Polge and Jean-Christophe Hérault for Balenciaga (though the
former’s new position at Chanel and Nicolas Ghesquières’s ousting may change
that), and Michel Almairac for Bottega Veneta (he is also attached to the Chloé
rose franchise, another Coty license).
Top picture by Sonia Delaunay, 1924, sourced from a lovely decoration blog I've just discovered, Painting Box.
How I love that picture! I would like a proper waisted pleated full skirt in material printed with that picture. And I would wear either the Elie Saab or the Bottega Veneta. Spring is the next season, right? It's hard to tell right now......Thanks for these mini reviews Denyse though what I am most longing for (apart from Spring) is Panthere........Nicola
RépondreSupprimerIsn't it lovely? Would make a nice Prada-ish coat too, I bet.
RépondreSupprimerGreen is the new green again, can not wait to use my MMM Untitled again! Btw, smelled new Prada Candy Florale at the duty free, it supossed to come to normal shops soon as well!
RépondreSupprimerEla, there's just a craving in late winter for those green notes, isn't there? I love Untitled as well, it's a pity its lasting power is so poor on me... My decant is getting low!
RépondreSupprimerYou know, Denyse, some days you can be so cruel. The windchill in Montreal is - 22 deg C. There is snow and ice everywhere and here you are talking about lovely green, spring scents. A great big "thank you!". P.S. Kurkdjian's restoration of Ma Griffe is making my mouth water! But you know me.. I've always been a sucker for green chypres.
RépondreSupprimerNormand, isn't that just the moment when you'd need a whiff of green for therapy?
RépondreSupprimerThe new Ma Griffe is, as was to be expected, a little "slimmed down" and less mossy. They swear it's the same formula though.