Tuesday, March 15, 2011
LABDANUM
Some people think it smells like goat. Others think it smells like ambergris, or leather, or pine rosin, or musk. Yet others think it smells like strange, rotten fruit. Some people think it must be the smell of heaven, and others think it's the smell from hell. Everyone seems to have a different reaction to rock rose, otherwise known as Cistus ladaniferus (also spelled ladanifer), but it’s all of these perceptions and more. It’s one of my favorite perfumery materials, which I’ve used in several different forms, most liberally in my amber base.
Cistus shrubs are native to the Mediterranean, and secrete a sticky resin that’s been used in perfumery for millennia. It’s one of those archetypal scents that many people dislike because they conjure up visions of our remote human history, our animal instincts, and all of the well-repressed scents and associated emotions that our modern, well-scrubbed, quasi-puritanical Western society tries to avoid, preferring instead light, “safe”, synthetic scents that have little association with raw nature.
Back in the old days, labdanum resin used to be harvested from the hair of goats that foraged among the Cistus bushes, unwittingly performing a service to perfumers as they dined, so the goat association has some basis in fact. Of course, it’s not done that way any more, but the plant’s own animalic notes are still there in the pungent resin. The raw resin is a dark greenish-brown, and has a very earthy, plant-like scent. I use the least refined, green absolute in compositions where I want a dark, earthy note without too much of the strong, resinous, perfumey aspect. An extra step of refining produces a clear absolute that I love to wear as a perfume just on its own when I’m in need of a special treat. It is a powerfully resinous scent that’s like dried pine rosin, but with fruity, musky, leathery notes that pop out more clearly than they do in the green version.
Steam distillation of the resin produces a powerfully fragrant, orange-colored essential oil, generally sold under the name Cistus, that has less of the resinous aspect and more of the fruity, “perfumey”, musky, animalic notes. I have found considerable variation in the oil from different sources, with each having its own use.
If you have not smelled labdanum or cistus, the scent is impossible to describe adequately since it is unlike anything else, a common theme with variations. None of the Cistus absolutes or oils come cheap, but fortunately a little goes a long way, and the effect in a perfume is worth the expense.
I will give away a sample of one version of Cistus to two people who comment here. Just leave a comment saying which version you think would be most appealing to you - the absolute or the essential oil. If your name is drawn you will receive a 1-ml sample of that version diluted to perfume strength. If you have not smelled Cistus by itself, this is your opportunity. You may love it, you may hate it, but at least you will have experienced it, and it may help you recognize it in perfumes.
I've just done the drawing, and the winners of the labdanum samples are Laurie Brown and Diana. You can claim yours by going to my profile, clicking on "e-mail" and sending me a message with your full mailing address.
I think I'd like to try the absolute, because I like earthy and resinous. And I have a question: I read an interview with Andy Tauer, where he said he often uses a labdanum extract called Ambrein. How does that smell compare to these two labdanum versions?
ReplyDeleteHi Ellen. I would also like to try the absolute. I have a number of perfumes that use labdanum, but I have no idea what it smells like alone.
ReplyDeleteGail in Issaquah.
Kjanicki, As far as I know ambrein is the synthetic form of a molecule found in ambergris. One method of manufacturing it is to modify a molecule isolated from labdanum, but ambrein is not the same as labdanum. I have not used ambrein myself, but assume that it has an ambergris-like scent, probably similar to ambroxan. It's interesting to note that it is rumored to have aphrodisiac effects.
ReplyDeleteI'll put you down for the drawing!
Gail, you're in the drawing, too! The absolute is wonderful.
ReplyDeleteEllen, sweetheart, I would like to try the essential oil. I never tried it,I have no idea how it smells like. :-s
ReplyDeleteDiana, You're in the drawing, too!
ReplyDeleteI think I would prefer the absolue but then again, I know I love the smell of labdanum. It was instant love for me and I couldn't believe how rich it smelled and you're right, it's hard to describe it, it needs to be smelled. :)
ReplyDeleteI think I'd like the clear absolute best. I love resins!
ReplyDeleteInes and Laurie, you're both in the drawing!
ReplyDeleteEllen, please don't put me in the draw for obvious reasons! ;) But I have to say it - labdanum in almost any form is one of my absolute favorite materials, and has been since I came across an unknown Italian line of organic fragrances that were all sorts of products on a single note - and one of them was labdanum. It has many facets and many personalities, which is why it's never boring. Not long after I bought one of everything labdanum, I came across rock rose in Arcadia in Greece - the real, unadulterated deal, and it blew my mind. All Pan! (et in Arcadia ego!) All goat!
ReplyDeleteAll told - not exactly love at first sniff, but the kind that has never died, and that's a good thing! Thank you for this education in labdanum - and the other one, too!;)
Thanks Ellen for amazing info. I would like to try this in the absolute format.
ReplyDelete