Bertrand
Duchaufour’s new installment for The Different Company’s “La Collection
Excessive” could be seen as the last panel in an iris/violet/leather triptych
comprising La Traversée du Bosphore (L’Artisan
Parfumeur) and Cuir de Nacre (Ann
Gérard). Duchaufour conceived it both as a modern take on violet and as a
vegetal leather.
In
this respect, I Miss Violet springs
from the same intention as Jean-Claude Ellena’s Cuir d’Ange for Hermès: fashioning leather from flowers, and more
significantly, breaking free from “perfumer’s leather”, i.e. the traditional
ways of achieving the note as a cuir de Russie, or Bandit-style with isobutyl quinoline. Predictably, given the two
men’s respective styles, the same endeavor has yielded radically divergent
results. While Ellena’s angel leather is ethereal, radiant and powdery in scent
and texture, Duchaufour’s leather violet is a dark, fatty flower grown in damp
spring earth.
This
cuir de violette manages to be tough
without smelling like biker leather: its toughness springs from its strong
olfactory options. It is propped up by the “classic” leather base its author
initially composed for La Traversée du
Bosphore and tweaked for the new scent. But it is what fleshes out the
leather base that gives I Miss Violet
its distinctiveness: that trademark Duchaufour stance of working off the less
appealing facets of his materials, in this case flowers with a leather facet,
rather than trying to cover them up.
If
you’ve ever smelled violet leaf, osmanthus, cassie or mimosa absolutes, you’ll
have noticed that beyond their shared powder and leather effects, they also
give off whiffs of waterlogged plants – somewhere between snapped pea pods, old
flower vase water and cucumber. To him, cucumber skin smells like eel leather,
Duchaufour explained at the launch: so he bolstered the cucumber-y facets of
his floral absolutes with even more green aqueous aldehydic notes. Osmanthus, a
member of the Oleaceae family like the olive tree (or jasmine, for that
matter), also contributes a black olive note it shares with castoreum.
As
a result, though it is smoothed out by a musk, vanilla and ambergris base, Violet smells like the uncanny hybrid flesh
of plant and beast. The watery facets last little on my skin, but the vegetal
effect persists well into the drydown, as does the apricot jam facet of
osmanthus after the powdery sweetness of violet melts away. The scent has great
naturality and though I wouldn’t call it sheer or “frothy” (as per the press
release), it isn’t hemmed in by the dense dark tarriness of classic “perfumer”
leathers.
I Miss Violet is a beautiful weirdo, and with it,
Duchaufour pulls off what he set out to achieve. Its trappings, however, are
less convincing. “Violet” being both a perfume note and a woman’s name, Luc
Gabriel, the co-founder and owner of The Different Company, explains that “the
name called for embodiment, and embodiment called for images”, he adds. So that
Duchaufour’s purely olfactory project was saddled with a series of pictures
featuring a feline redhead in violet eye-shadow, and with a story that reads
like the synopsis of an advertising movie, that of the jet-setting “Violet”,
who flits from Venice to Hong Kong by way of Paris before sailing off to an
island near Java… and leaving her fragrance with a man who says he “misses her
already”. The picture below is meant to be used in points of sale.
Giving
a fragrance a face, and giving that face a glamorous story? That’s what the
mainstream does. And it’s bound to do it better than any niche brand, because
mainstream brands have more money and more experience in the field. In moving
into this territory, I feel that The Different Company is straying from the
core values of auteur perfumery. The
very values it contributed to shape when it was co-founded in 2000 by
Jean-Claude Ellena, the designer Thierry de Bachmakov and Luc Gabriel. It was
thanks to pioneers like TDF that perfumers went back to signing their work
after being eclipsed by fashion designers for several decades. That they could
disclose their actual sources of inspiration, and some of their work process,
rather than have to answer questions like “what kind of woman did you make this
fragrance for?” That they became the
faces of fragrance.
To
be fair, the press material for I Miss
Violet does prominently feature Duchaufour and his olfactory approach to
the fragrance. And of course, TDF is not the only niche brand to produce
images, and the issue of niche perfumery visuals would deserve a much lengthier
development… For the moment, I’ll break off by saying that lovely though she
is, “Violet” might be given a miss while I
Miss Violet smells like a hit…After all it’s the perfumer who puts the “Different”
in the Company.
As soon as I saw the promo picture, which was before I read your accompanying words to it. Those were my thoughts exactly; why are niche brands now moving into mainstream territory... I would think that people most likely to buy their products do not want to be a 19 year old red hair wearing too much make-up. I'm saying brandS because this is not the first time I notice it, and it actually makes me so annoyed that I would actively avoid the brands. But I suppose it's just the supporting the claims that niche is no longer niche. What a shame, you make I miss violet sound like it would have been worth sniffing.
RépondreSupprimerI know, I didn't particularly want to single out TDF since several other niche brands are doing it... And I did tell Luc Gabriel that what attracted me to niche brands initially was, among other things, the fact that the fragrances had no face. It seems the field is moving ever closer to mainstream codes -- though IMV itself is nowhere near them, and is well worth enjoying.
SupprimerHey Lovely!
RépondreSupprimerSo is I Miss Violet wearable in an everyday sense? Could it become a happy spritz and go or is it too unconventional?
Portia xx
Hey! I'd say IMV is fairly easy to wear -- it's no M/Mink. The violet note keeps it within the codes of classic perfumery.
SupprimerI finally figured out that the model reminds me of Gillian Anderson, an actress who is well-known to many Americans as Dana Scully of the X Files. :-)
RépondreSupprimerEvery time I think I must surely have had enough of Duchaufour and won't bother to try the next one, he comes up with five more ideas that I find irresistible. (Or is it your descriptions?) I surrender - just hook me up with a Duchaufour sample subscription service, please. nozknoz
Nozknoz, I was less than convinced by the L'Artisan "Explosion d'émotions" series, so I'm very happy indeed to love (and admire) Bertrand's new compositions. Ostara is another one: I'm rather obsessed with it. And I need to give Pichola (Neela Vermeire) a good wear -- at least to wear the few drops I've got!
SupprimerYou're right, I'd already forgotten about the "Explosion d'émotions" series, which used aromachemicals that I can't smell very well but that feel like blunt objects in my sinuses. Ostara is back on track, for sure. nozknoz
SupprimerThat collection felt like a bunch of good ideas that hadn't been sufficiently developed, or lacked direction from the brand... Even great perfumers need sparring partners sometimes!
SupprimerYou're so right the support marketing material is quite disappointing especially when you deem this fragrance to be a beautiful weirdo.I'd really have expected something more abstract,subtle and intelligent,truly creative not giving us such a mediocre image instead.Quel dommage!
RépondreSupprimerIt's certainly difficult to figure out how to produce images specific to niche -- from what I understand, the owners of TDF just went with what they felt like doing for this one scent.
SupprimerIt is difficult,but not impossible.For example, I admire the images produced by Roberto Greco,photographer and fellow perfume lover.They almost look like oil paintings,and I adore the colors and the moody,mysterious atmosphere.Sensuous,provocative,artistic they really add another layer of temptation to the perfumes featured
SupprimerYes, I met Roberto Greco in Lausanne when we both took part in an exhibition... Byredo, Arquiste and Aedes have given some thought to the matter -- Ben Gorham of Byredo wants go beyond still lives, for now the default setting for the best niche perfume visuals. If anyone can pull it off, it'll be him. Also thinking of Humiecki & Graef who did interesting work on the theme.
SupprimerI ended up buying I miss Violet, and your description of it is spot on. That vegetal fattiness, the powdery, apricot jam aspects, the naturality, the "hybrid flesh of plant and beast". Wonderful! It is hellishly expensive, even if I bought it for less than retail price, but it's fascinating and very alive. It almost glows!
RépondreSupprimerI'm glad my description inspired you -- and that you "read" the same things in the scent. It's actually a semi-finalist for the French Fifis in the niche category, which features no less than 3 Duchaufours out of 12 pre-selections!
Supprimer