If you were a perfumer reading Fifty
Shades of Grey, of course you’d start wondering what the apparently
aphrodisiac combination of “Christian and shower gel” smells like. From then
on, of course you’d set about jotting down a formula.
That’s exactly what Sophie Labbé did. The author of Bulgari Jasmin Noir,
Guerlain Cologne du 68, Givenchy Organza and Very Irrésistible couldn’t resist
distilling the essence of Christian Grey as part of the annual, free-style
exercise IFF affords its perfumers.
IFF’s Speed-Smelling presentation and lunch is one of the few events
beauty editors actually arrive ahead of
time to attend. We’ve got one hour to
flit from one table to another. At each stop, perfumers present a fragrance
they’ve drawn from their personal inspiration, with no limitations on style or
budget. A great opportunity for them to
play with IFF’s luxury ingredients (mostly naturals produced by Laboratoires
Monique Rémy), and to have a chat with specialized journalists they normally
meet at launches, where they might not be able to discuss their work as openly.
And then there’s the food… the session is followed by lunch at Alain
Ducasse’s Plaza Athénée restaurant. It’s so memorable you find yourself
reminiscing about the previous year’s menu. And what better companions than
perfumers to indulge in the quintessentially French ritual of discussing food
and wine while you’re enjoying them? And since I was sitting at the same table
as Sophie Labbé, we had quite a few laughs discussing a book I'd translated into French, and she'd translated into a scent... So I’ll start my account with her presentation…
Sophie Labbé: The Scent of Christian Grey
Sophie Labbé conceives the smell of Christian Grey as an ultra-niche
shower gel. Aldehydes for the bubbles, musks for the white linen shirt, jasmine,
cumin and nutmeg for a subtle human touch. Karanal, which spans from “clean
laundry” (it is used in detergents) to animalic (it is an ambergris note),
gives the scent the slight abrasiveness of crisp linen. Oddly enough, this
scent really is somewhat in shades of
gray: though it has quite a powerful sillage, it doesn’t quite register as
perfume but rather as a stealthy aura.
I carried the vial with me the next evening at the party of the French
publishers of Fifty Shades, where of
course it was greeted with squeals of glee. I’ve even had to promise a
best-selling author – one of the stars of the French Elle – I’d get some made up for her. She was ready to buy it
immediately! I’d wager even people who’d turn their noses up at the book could
embrace this scent.
Dominique Ropion: Pineapple, champagne and
oud
Ropion is renowned for studying the analyses carried out by IFF’s
scientists so he can tease out and highlight molecules present in natural
materials. He tells us, surprisingly, that oud shares some components with
pineapple and white wines. And since his idea is to work on oud as though it
were a normal ingredient in the perfumer’s palette rather than a cornerstone of
French-Oriental compositions, he’s boosted those notes into an improbable
oud-champagne accord topped with an extravagantly realistic, tchika-boom-ay-ay-ay
pineapple. It’s got a boozy edge, as though it were starting to ferment (I’ve
once had a pineapple literally explode in my kitchen because of fermentation,
and that’s pretty much the effect here). Its tartness runs gives way to a
powdery, subtly animalic floral heart (cassie, mimosa and iris) resting on a
leather-oud base, which contains 2% oud and 1% castoreum (my unerring
“spiky-woods” detector reads an ambery-woody synthetic).
With its exploding pineapple, “Champagne oud” is as wacky in its way as Géranium pour Monsieur, and the
proof that alongside his high-precision approach, Dominique Ropion also has an
off-beat sense of humor.
Aliénor Massenet: Rehabilitating lilac
A flower… white, but not what perfumery labels as a “white flower”.
Familiar. Yes, you’ve always known it… Aliénor Massenet nods. White lilac, she
says. She composed the scent for a group of outpatients of the Garches
hospital, TBI sufferers she meets every month, equipped with a set of scents,
as a volunteer of a program initiated by Cosmetic Executive Women France in
thirteen French hospitals. Lilac is what is called a “mute” flower since its
essence can’t be extracted; it is also a flower condemned to the limbo of functional
fragrance. Somehow, it seems like poetic justice that Aliénor’s lush, tender
reconstitution of its scent would nudge patients with impaired memories into
recovering whiffs of their personal history… Her lilac is also, in and of
itself, a lovely perfume that could well rehabilitate this well-loved flower.
Nicolas Beaulieu: Chocolate iris
Few fragrances actually focus on the scent of the iris flower (I can only think of Iris Ukiyoé), though some varieties are fragrant. Inspired both by the blossom’s
fragrance and Georgia O’Keefe’s Jack in
the Pulpit n°IV, Nicolas Beaulieu (no relation) based his rendition of a
purple iris,on a particular type of iris resinoid that gives off a distinct
dark chocolate facet. Since the flower he studied also gives off a tender
orange blossom scent along with a touch of aqueous green, he wrapped his accord
with orange blossom and violet leaf. His purple iris is as velvety-moist as a
purple iris petal, strikingly vegetal and subtle.
Domitille Bertier: Nuts for nuts
“I’ve worked on addiction”, Domitille states with a sly smile before
adding that actually, what she’s hooked on are nuts. Hazelnuts, walnuts, chestnuts,
almonds… The result is a grown-up, resolutely non-sweet gourmand drizzled with sesame
absolute, maté and patchouli. Smoky, roasted, warm, this scent feels addictive
of its own accord, rather than because it conjures a bowl of mixed nuts.
Véronique Nyberg: Swedish Christmas
Coffee. Cocoa. Cinnamon and vanilla. The bracing aromatic flavor of
aquavit conjured through sage, lavandin and anise… Véronique, who spends her
winter holidays in the south of Sweden, wanted to render the warm aromas of a
wooden house tucked under a blanket of snow, with the foods and drinks served
around Christmas. The myrrh, anise and roasted notes provide a licorice effect
that strengthens the woody base notes. With its aromatic accents and resinous
undertones, this would make a great masculine.
To be continued with Jean-Christophe Hérault’s Princess and the Pea,
Olivier Polge’s sandalwood, Anne Flipo’s fruity tuberose, Loc Dong’s ink and
Juliette Karagueuzoglou’s orange blossom… and a thrilling surprise!
If you missed the
posts on last’s year edition of IFF’s Speed-Smelling lunch, please click here,
and again here.
The nutty one and the Swedish Christmas sound fabulous! Thanks- and a good amount of envy for the Ducasse lunch!
RépondreSupprimerIodine, all the scents were really interesting... and, yes, I didn't go into too many details about the Ducasse lunch. Let's just say it involved truffles!
RépondreSupprimerThe whole experience sounds fascinating!!!!
RépondreSupprimerIt would be great, though I understand impossible, if these personal essays of top perfumers were sold in a coffret, in sample size, by IFF.
I join iodine in envying your lunch.
Oud and pineapple? Intriguing!
(though I would probably dislike it)
Zazie, I was kind of keeping the news for part 2 of this post, but actually... it *will* be possible to experience these scents. They will be sold to the public in a limited-edition coffret next spring!
RépondreSupprimerWhile I'd love to try nearly all of those (I'll pass on Christian Grey, thank you) I must say that Ropion's formula sounds amazing.
RépondreSupprimerPatuxxa, whatever you think of the book, Sophie Labbé's composition is very good... Dominique Ropion's "champagne oud" is really surprising indeed. I think the pineapple is a bit too much in the first couple of minutes, but after that it's a much smoother ride.
RépondreSupprimerOh! *making a reservation in my spring budget* I hope they'll have the coffret sold online (and shipped outside of France), and not in just some single location...
RépondreSupprimerMikael, by the time they'd made the announcement, champagne had been consumed, but I'm certain I heard it would be sold online though no details were given about export policies. There will be only 250 though, that I remember for sure.
RépondreSupprimerWhat a dream event! I love the story of Aliénor Massenet's white lilac composition and her work with TBI sufferers, and it's so cool is that the Cosmetic Executive Women France have a volunteer program with hospitals. ~~nozknoz
RépondreSupprimerNozknoz, yes, it's really lovely and generous of her to share her time and talent rhat way. She says her sessions generate a lot of talk, memories, emotions...
RépondreSupprimerThe white lilac and swedish Christmas are the most intriguing to me. Thank you for posting this! You have the most incredible life!
RépondreSupprimeri ddn't really like 50 Shades. It irritated me. I wanted the girl (can't eben remember her name-that's not good) to just pursue her education. God, I am lame!
Merry Christmas,
Carole
They all sound very interesting! I'm willing to bet the coffret will be beyond my budget though...
RépondreSupprimerTara, no price was mentioned... I'm sure there will be splits though.
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