Is there a
single perfume press release these days that doesn’t boast of the finest
ingredients, sourced all over the world, showering such a slew of epithets on
each you’d think there’s been a fire sale in the adjectives department at
Harrap’s? Of course, no one’s going to say “we settled for second-rate ylang
because the good stuff costs a kidney” or “our rose is entirely lab-grown and
we’re proud we pulled it off”. Besides, how do you tell the public what a perfume smells
of if you don’t reference things that lived off photosynthesis at some point?
It’s gotten
so this type of claim no longer means anything, even if it’s true, since
everyone is making it. But apart from this, it has another pernicious side effect.
The issue was raised by Jean-Claude Ellena in a Nov. 2013 article for the
venerable Annales des Mines,
a French science journal founded in 1794:
“Using a product that is difficult to obtain
in a fragrance aimed at mass distribution is using this product above all for
the image it conveys, for the publicity claim it offers, rather than for its
smell. Using it shows poor knowledge of the trade, since it not only jeopardizes
world supplies of the raw material in question, but also the production of the
fragrance itself and, ultimately, it deceives clients.”
In other
words, waving a thimbleful of osmanthus absolute over a one-ton vat of oil has no significant
impact on a mainstream fragrance, but it can dry up the supply for another
product where it is an essential building block, simply because those thimblefuls
add up when you’re producing thousands of tons.
True, the natural ingredients
branches of all the big labs are setting up
sustainable sources to avoid such stock-outs. But that still doesn’t fix the other
problem: using naturals when they have no significant impact on a composition,
just to be able to say you’ve used them. Which seems a lot like a substitute
for having an idea. In that case, since PR departments don’t have much to go
on, they tend to fall back on such claims, especially since they answer current
public demands for transparency and traceability.
Jean-Claude
Ellena, again:
“I
sometimes create a beautiful perfume at a very lost cost. Which goes to show
that the emotional effect is not a function of the cost of the material used. I
also sometimes create a costly perfume, because the materials needed to develop
it were expensive and I couldn’t compose it differently. Therefore, cost is not
the criterion that defines the quality of a fragrance. Nothing counts but the
emotional effect, which is a matter of talent, and is much more than know-how.
The only right question to ask yourself when
you’re done with composing a fragrance is this: ‘Could I have created this
perfume at a lower cost with identical aesthetics?’ If you answer in the
negative, you’ve managed to fit a square peg in a round hole!”
Illustration: Marcel Duchamp, Air de Paris (1919)
Great food for thought, thank you for sharing. The economic impact of unimaginative PR - saddening. Jean-Caude Ellena's perception does show his intelligence and is very decent, to say the least.
RépondreSupprimerBest, Angelika
Angelika, the whole thing has been annoying me for quite a while so it was interesting to see that JCE has spoken out against it (which he is in a position to do publicly, unlike most of his colleagues).
RépondreSupprimerI was thinking the same thing. Almost all PR is starting to sound exactly the same to the point where you glaze over the words sustainable, ethically sourced, local community initiatives etc. These have become PR important concepts. A thimbleful of Oud anyone to mark up your 10760E soup?
RépondreSupprimerWell, at least when materials are sustainable and ethically sourced, that means that the companies are taking responsibility, and of course it's a legitimate argument to put forward since there is actually a story. I'm more annoyed when "noble naturals" claims replace any other sort of idea...
RépondreSupprimerYup, not everyone can use "the finest" everything. Besides it's not always the effect you want. Three cheers to JCE for telling the truth and blowing the lid off the whole business. (There are some PR perfumers I'd like to slap for the outrageous lies they tell.)
RépondreSupprimerPlus you can use great naturals and come up with something less than stellar, right?
Supprimer