mardi 28 janvier 2014

News from the fragrance front...

Yesterday, Mathilde Laurent presented her new feminine fragrance for Cartier, a silky gardenia chypre in a musky, animalic halo. A tribute to the jeweler’s iconic panther, the only animal to give off a suave scent naturally according to the legend reported by the ancient Greek philosopher Theophrastus. “La Panthère” was also the nickname of Jeanne Toussaint, Louis Cartier’s muse in the Interwar years. I’ll soon be getting back to La Panthère, due out on March 15th, but my initial impression is leaving me purring.

Meanwhile, Lancôme just announced that La Vie est Belle was the N°1 seller in France over the second semester of 2013, with 3000 bottles sold every day. An eau de toilette version with a magnolia note will come out in March. Don’t shoot the messenger.

And lastly, the figures are out in Michael Edwards’ indispensable Fragrances of the World, celebrating its 30th anniversary this year:

2013 saw the launch of an unprecedented 1432 fragrances, up from 1330 in 2012. This figure includes 232 limited editions, 229 flankers, 53 celebrity scents and 395 niche launches (up from 331 last year).

My nose has just officially asked for a raise.



Nouvelles du front parfumé...




Mathilde Laurent présentait hier son nouveau féminin pour Cartier, un chypre gardénia soyeux nimbé d’un halo de musc animalisé. Hommage à l’animal fétiche du joaillier, le seul à exhaler une odeur suave naturelle d’après la légende rapportée par le philosophe grec Théophraste. Mais aussi à Jeanne Toussaint, muse de Louis Cartier dans l’entre-deux-guerres, surnommée « La Panthère ». Je reviendrai bientôt gratter l’échine de ce fauve, lancé le 15 mars, mais ma première impression – celle d’une relecture moderne du chypre fruité – me fait déjà ronronner.

Entretemps, Lancôme vient d’annoncer que La Vie est Belle a dominé le marché du second semestre 2013, avec 3000 flacons vendus tous les jours. Une version eau de toilette, agrémentée d’une note magnolia, sera lancée en mars. Legatus non caeditur.

Enfin, l’indispensable Michael Edwards vient de faire paraître, à l’occasion de la publication de Parfums du Monde qui célèbre cette année son 30ème anniversaire, un recensement des lancements 2013 :

En tout, 1432 parfums ont été lancés l’an dernier (1330 en 2012). Ce chiffre comprend 232 éditions limitées, 229 flankers, 53 parfums de célébrités et 395 parfums de niche (contre 331 l’an dernier).

Mon nez vient de me demander officiellement une augmentation.

 Illustration: ancienne publicité pour Cartier

lundi 20 janvier 2014

Magnolia Grandiflora by Sandrine Videault and Michel Roudnitska: two flowers, straight from the heart

Unless you just reproduce templates conceived for « perfumery flowers » -- the tuberose in Fracas, the gardenia in Ma Griffe, etc. – translating the true scent of a flower into a fragrance isn’t as easy a proposition as it seems. Most are seasonal: perfumers just have a few weeks, if that, to poke their noses into the blossoms to find a novel way of expressing them. In big labs, they can rely on scientific teams to present them with an array of analyses: headspace captures of the flower at different moments of the day, of its life cycle, or in different locations; spectrographic or chromatographic dissections of the essential oil or absolute. This is what Dominique Ropion studied to cut tuberose loose from its Fracas model in Carnal Flower. He also faced the problem of turning a smell into a “skin” fragrance:  the photorealistic reproduction of tuberose, now available as a candle, had to be tweaked while remaining faithful to its olfactory form.


Sandrine's Magnolia

 

Sandrine Videault faced all of those issues when she created Magnolia Grandiflora, without the backup of a team of scientists. Her magnolia was originally, if I recall our first conversations about it correctly, intended as a home fragrance. Grandiflora’s owner Saskia Havekes fell in love with it so much she was inspired to create her own fine fragrance brand. The scent of the flower seems fairly straightforward: lemony, rosy, with a white floral soapiness. How do you transpose it into something that evolves over the hours while saying “magnolia” at every stage? This is what she wrote for the press kit:

The first steps were to write the base of the flower. Its interpretation forms the body of the scent’s construction. Gradually, by wearing this olfactory body, I played with the different olfactive facets that make up the specificity of the Magnolia Grandiflora. For instance, it’s probably the first time I detect a chypre accord in the flower. I didn’t know it existed in nature. For me, it was the most important thing to say about this Magnolia. Of course, this flower smells of lemon, and also conjures a certain moistness, but there are also fruity notes of melon, watermelon, earthy notes. I consulted Saskia to remind me of the form of this flower’s fragrance, it was easy to follow the tangents and to let myself be mesmerized by its nuances.

Sandrine worked on this floral portrait for two years and a half. In what were to be her last months, she perfected the formula relying purely on her memory, to achieve a perfectly limpid view of her concept rather than lose herself in countless mods – for her, as for her mentor Edmond Roudnitska, perfumery was a cosa mentale, to reprise Da Vinci’s expression.

The result is all the more precious because it is the last offering of this fiercely independent artist. Her uncompromising Manoumalia has as many admirers as detractors. Magnolia Grandiflora Sandrine is the polar opposite: a shimmering, delicate, meditative fragrance with none of the growling skankiness of her creation for LesNez. Indeed, at times, it is almost too quiet, a teasing ghost of a scent you catch out of the corner of your nose, as it were, in a movement or a breeze.

 An exhilarating squirt of peppery grapefruit overlays a dewy, silky floral with sweet hints of melon and watermelon – though it is in no way an aquatic --, kept in check by the bitterness of the grapefruit note. Though its sillage is mainly rosy, or so I’ve been told, up close it gives off an arrestingly natural feel: not only the flower, but the hazy-moist early summer air that carries its scent, and the sun-heated earth the tree grows in. In short, the portrait of the flower is also a landscape: this is Sandrine Videault’s Diorissimo.

Michel's Magnolia

 

Michel Roudnitska’s interpretation couldn’t be more different. As I’ve written earlier, he met Saskia Havekes when she traveled from Australia to launch Magnolia Grandiflora in Paris. She took the opportunity to visit Cabris, near Grasse, where the oil of the scent was put together by Accords et Parfums, the offshoot of the company founded by Edmond Roudnitska, Art et Parfum. The facility is located on the grounds of the Roudnitska estate, Sainte-Blanche, next to the villa where Michel lives. It was then that Michel pulled a newspaper-wrapped bottle out of a closet to show Saskia his own interpretation of the magnolia planted by his father, a scent he’s known since childhood and that has long fascinated him. 

The temptation of offering this second version, so different yet so intimately related to the first because of its roots in the history of Sainte-Blanche – where both perfumers took their first steps in their art – proved irresistible.

Michel Roudnitska’s style as a composer could be described as somewhat maximalist: without playing armchair shrink, it’s likely he wasn’t keen to reproduce his father’s exquisitely balanced aesthetics. His years living in Tahiti must have strongly influenced him as well: it is especially perceptible in the florals he did for Parfums DelRae, like the grandly sensuous Amoureuse with its tropical vibe. Émotionnelle, his interpretation of his mother’s scent, which went on to become Le Parfum de Thérèse, is just as extravagantly vivid and rich.

It’s no surprise, then, that Magnolia Grandiflora Michel is a portrait of the flower at its lushest, its waxy thick petals just bursting with juice. Michel’s version is headier, but also earthier and woodier than Sandrine’s, with vetiver and patchouli subtly enhancing the base notes. Vanilla is also detectable: this is crème de magnolia, an almost edible delicacy.

Both fragrances are utterly beautiful, and, for want of a better term, I’d call them sincere. The work of two exceptional people whose poetic conception of their art leaves no room for the compromises of commercialism. Saskia Havekes is a lucky woman to have the privilege of debuting in the world of fragrance with such compositions. And perfume lovers should thank her – along with the irreplaceable Michael Edwards, who oversaw the project – for offering them to the world.

Magnolia Grandiflora is available at Luckyscent.

Pictures by Imogen Cunningham and Johan Hagemeyer.