2013 was
the year…
Most
mainstream feminines were still
flowers stuck onto wood with caramel and/or jam.
Every
second flanker was called “Eau”.
Niche broke
down and made its first ad film (L’Artisan, for Explosions d’émotions).
Chanel and
Hermès announced the appointments of their future in-house perfumers (Olivier
Polge and Christine Nagel, respectively).
One
fragrance was named after a medieval torture instrument and another after aninsulating material (Serge Lutens, because of course he would).
Another required pee to be added as an
ingredient (O’Driu Peety).
A group of
young French bloggers/aficionados manned up and instead of whining about the
Fifis, they set up awards of their own, “Olfactorama” (attended by Mathilde
Laurent and Thierry Wasser, no less).
And in
Coty’s old château, now an otherwise impeccable, beautiful hotel, some bug
stung my tush (probably Coty’s ghost).
2013 was
also the year Sandrine Videault left us at a scandalously young age. I will
soon be writing about what will have been her last commercialized fragrance, Grandiflora Magnolia Sandrine, and the Magnolia Michel composed by Michel
Roudnitska.
Meanwhile,
here’s my contribution to our annual best-of roundup…
Guerlain: the renovated flagship store and the restored
extraits
The
Guerlain flagship store on the Champs-Élysées reopened last month. From the
downstairs restaurant helmed by chef Guy Martin to the top-floor spa, now as
softly white as feathers plucked from a cherub’s wings, you could just spend a
day there feeling you’d died and gone to sweet-smelling heaven. But the
fragrance consultation room is where I found the French perfume bloggers
hunkered down, assessing the current state of the classics in the extrait.
Our
verdict: we are very happy indeed with Thierry Wasser’s restorations,
especially Mitsouko (no need to hoard
the vintage stuff anymore) and Chamade.
It’s been years since I’ve smelled it so good – apparently it’s to do with the
new grade of galbanum. The top notes crackle like Pop Rocks caught in a
spring-green resin, alive as though it were 1969 all over again.
Hermès Bel Ami Vétiver
Leather. Vetiver.
What’s not to love? I’ve only just reviewed Jean-Claude Ellena’s variation on
this classic. To read it, just click here.
Hermès Eau de Narcisse Bleu
I fell in
love with its tannic raspiness at first spray. A breeze of tea, hay and
blossoms, with a distant whiff of horsiness: it just feels right. Review is right here.
Le Labo Ylang 49
Monsieur
loved it so much on me he went and bought me a bottle – the first time I’ve
received perfume from a man, as opposed to a company, in the past five years.
When I reviewed it first, I got a stripped-down 70s-style green chypre with an
interesting saline vibe. Then one evening as I was wearing it, I started
thinking of roses before realizing that the scent wasn’t just inside my head,
but on my skin: I’d managed to completely miss the note… There is indeed a
massive rose bush planted in that vetiver underbrush.
Aedes de Venustas Iris Nazarena
Like
leather and vetiver, somehow one can’t ever get enough iris and incense. Aedes
de Venustas is shaping up as one of the most interesting new niche houses, with
a very deft handling of visuals – the Nazareth iris that served as a muse looks
good enough to be framed on a wall, and the gray velvet box is beautiful enough
to display.
Thierry Mugler Alien Liqueur de Parfum
Aged in a toasted oak cask like rum,
Alien takes on deeper, woody ambery
tones with an added almondy aroma. Of its three building blocks – jasmine
sambac, ambroxan and cashmeran, all in overdose --, the latter is pushed
forward. Its unique musky-ambery-woody, velvety texture, slightly dusted with
the musty part of patchouli, takes the hysterically oversized floral note down
a notch. If you thought Alien was
over-the-top, this limited edition might be the one for you.
Lolita Lempicka Elle l’aime
Along with Angel,
the original Lolita Lempicka kickstarted the gourmand trend. Will Elle l’aime’s white-flower/coconut
chimera trigger a rush for tropical? Kudos to LL, Christine Nagel and Serge
Majoullier for introducing an original, yet easy-to-embrace note. If I’ve got
to pick a 2013 mainstream in a year full of flankers, that’s got to be the one.
Fragrance Republic
If you’ve ever wondered what
perfumers can come up with when they’re given a free rein – and of course you
have --, Fragrance Republic has the answer. This nose-to-nose initiative is
more of a club than a brand: the idea is to enable fragrance lovers to receive
a 15ml bottle of a non-commercialized fragrance perfumers worked on for their
own pleasure. Right now, I’m enjoying Nathalie Feisthauer’s FR! 01 N°01 lovely
pear, iris and musk fragrance – the author of Putain des Palaces really knows how to throw some curves into a
fragrance.
The Jean Patou revival
Bruno Cottard and Thomas Fontaine
are busy resurrecting what had become, through no fault of the
previous in-house perfumer – the adorable, gifted Jean-Michel Duriez – a zombie
brand. The value-added core accords are now made in Cabris by Accords &
Parfums (Art & Parfum’s sister company), with beautiful materials. Fontaine has done a fabulous job in restoring the classics: the re-launch “Ma
Collection” is one of the best news of the year.
The N°5 Culture Chanel exhibition at the Palais
de Tokyo, Paris
There’s
probably no other perfume you could do this with – sorry Miss Dior, the
avant-garde aura just doesn’t suit your style. And admittedly, last May’sexhibition didn’t emphasize the olfactory as much as perfume lovers would have
hoped. But in treating N°5 as the crucible of Chanel, curator Jean-Louis
Froment – a man with impeccable credentials in the contemporary art world –
demonstrated Gabrielle Chanel’s stature as an artist funneling and interpreting
aesthetic influences through the filter of her life. Next best thing: get the catalogue,
it’s magnificent.
I wish you all a happy, gorgeously fragrant New Year.
For more
Best of 2013 lists, please visit: