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mercredi 14 octobre 2009

The Thirteenth Hour: Through the Looking Glass with Mathilde Laurent (Part 3)



XIII – La Treizième Heure is both Mathilde Laurent's favorite and mine, and the question it sets out to solve could be this one: how do you translate the very essence of perfume, its historical and etymological origin, smoke, without resorting to “archeological” materials (as, say, Serge Lutens did with incense in Serge Noire)?

Several materials express smokiness and/or “burnt-ness”: vanilla has a smoky facet; so do black tea, eugenol (clove buds, lilies) and licorice; in fact, anything that smells phenolic (coal tar) or cresylic (birch tar, whiskey).

In La Treizième Heure, Mathilde Laurent has bridged the gap between vanilla-smokiness and leather-smokiness with yerba maté, itself a smoky/phenolic note; the black tea effect is topped off by bergamot (familiarly associated with Earl Grey tea).

Bergamot, vanilla and leather? Add hay and balsamic notes, and you’ve got Shalimar, a scent Mathilde Laurent knows inside out since she authored Shalimar Eau Légère (and weighed the materials of vats and vats of the original).

Like Annick Menardo’s Bulgari Black, La Treizième Heure could well be a post-modern spawn of Guerlain’s iconic perfume. But instead of filling out the heart with coumarin and sweetening the base with balsam, Mathilde has pinned her carrousel of smoky-burnt notes onto the dazzlingly complex scent of Monique Rémy’s narcissus absolute. Like coumarin, narcissus absolute presents tobacco-hay facets, along with a “horsy” aroma; but it also gives off an aqueous green smell that gives the smoky Treizième Heure an oddly icy heart (at that point, the combination of coldness and leather conjures the smell of a watch: the wristband and the metallic timepiece— of course, this is Cartier).

As the scent wears on, though, a lactonic jasmine-gardenia effect pierces through the smoke screen. Apparently, it isn’t intentional, though Mathilde confirmed she smelled it on my arm. She suggested it might be my moisturizer: but when I wore La Treizième Heure the next day on un-moisturized skin, the lovely though uninvited gardenia popped up again...

This unexpected shape-shifting somehow suits a scent named after an unlucky number and a non-existent hour, built around a flower intimately tied to the netherworld in Greek mythology… After all, narcissus was born of the metamorphosis of a beautiful youth so in love with his own reflection that he drowned in it. And it was lured by its sweet smell that the goddess Korê fell into Hades’ trap, and was swept by the enamored god into the abode of the dead… La Treizième Heure’s secret name could be Persephone.

I’ll wear it on Fridays.

Mathilde’s comments: “Narcissus fascinates me with its green, aqueous freshness, like the dew on a field at dawn. Yet at the same time, it smells of cut hay and leather. It is a perfume in and of itself. But there isn’t any deliberate floral effect here: it is a work on the “fire spices”, on everything that summons the idea of smoke and combustion, all the derivatives of eugenol. I’ve always been fascinated by smoke: the very origin of perfume is smoke, isn’t it?”


Mathilde Laurent will answer readers' questions on Elisabeth de Feydeau's blog. This is a great initiative and I can't encourage you enough to take advantage of it! Just click on the link.



Image drawn from Andy Julia's "Carmilla" series.

21 commentaires:

  1. Beautiful picture and review!
    I noticed you made your preference clear, right away!
    The notes sound intriguing, but any reference to Shalimar makes me cautious... Do you know when les heures will be distributed?

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  2. I would love to try this... your description of this was beautifully written.. thank you

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  3. This almost sounds like the scent we discussed during the competition for the Parfums 137 set only with a smokey facet... I may just be in love!

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  4. Denyse, You make me so curious about this perfume. I hope it wont take so long before I´ve got the possibility to try them all...

    Thank you for an excellent review. :)

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  5. Zazie, it's nowhere near Shalimar, it's just a faraway, twisted reminiscence...
    Les Heures are coming out worldwide in November in Cartier shops (they're already out in NY).

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  6. Alexander, you're right, it does, doesn't it? I'm sure it'll interest you...

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  7. Rebella, it is very intriguing and unusual. But you *do* have to be near a Cartier shop...

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  8. Denyse: this one was my favourite too, and I'm kicking myself for not getting it in New York last weekend (as if I could have afforded it). I love the touch of maté in it, which gives a slightly bitter tea-like effect for me (reminding me a little of Annick Goutal's Duel). But it's the phenolic smokiness of La Treizième Heure that really does it for me...

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  9. Jarvis, why am I not surprised? Another thing that's interesting about it is that "cold leather" effect. It's amazingly subtle and deep.

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  10. I'm a big fan of Ms. Laurent's creations and this sounds gorgeous. Lovely review as well. How great to interview such talented artists in a medium we love so much.

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  11. Rappleyea, it *is* really great, and I hope to do more of it in the future.

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  12. This sounds just A-M-A-Z-I-N-G, and what a superb review. Can't wait to smell it, in the meantime will experiment layering Patchouli 24, Vanille 44 and Le Temps d'une Fete. I am sure it'll be a big mess and nothing close to this but still fun to try ;-)

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  13. Silvia, I'd put a hold on the Temps d'une fête if I were you, but steal a spritz of L'Artisan Fleurs de Narcisse and you'll be closer...

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  14. Lyrical review of what sounds like a fascinating scent. It ticks all boxes for me. Funny but I was thinking Bulgari Black when you started with the tea, bergamot vanilla and leather and then up it popped, one of my darlings. Can't wait to sniff this (and the others). Um, any idea how expensive these are to be?
    Thanks Nicola

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  15. Nicola, it's extremely different from Black in that it doesn't have that rubber-opoponax thing going, but if you love one the other could seduce you. Prices, though, I don't know, about $250 for 75 ml...? Exclusive, definitely.

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  16. I love the I'll wear it on Fridays- it sounds like a Friday scent. Perhaps I will start categorizing scents by days of the week. Bvlgari The Vert Mondays and so on.

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  17. Rose: well, you know, that way every Friday can be the 13th!

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  18. Denyse, thank you for this intriguing group of reviews. La Treizième Heure has me anxiously awaiting the arrival of the entire line. Or maybe I will need to visit New York soon. I think you did me in with the idea of cold leather too.

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  19. Melissa, on elisabeth de feydeau's blog, Mathilde said that XIII was, with Guet-Apens, the only fragrance of hers that she wore for pleasure... That's an endorsement!

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  20. Natalie, I'm glad you weren't disappointed. But, yeah, that's a lot of $$$... Still don't know when I'll be able to afford more than a sample myself.

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