What is the Perfume Project?

This blog is a constantly evolving forum for thoughts on perfume, perfume-making, plants (especially orchids and flora of the Pacific Northwest) and life in general. It started out chronicling the adventures of Olympic Orchids Perfumes, established in July 2010, and has expanded in other directions. A big part of the blog is thinking about the ongoing process of learning and experimentation that leads to new perfumes, the exploration of perfumery materials, the theory and practice of perfume making, the challenges of marketing perfumes and other fragrance products, and random observations on philosophy and society. Spam comments will be marked as such and deleted; any comments that go beyond the boundaries of civil discourse will also be deleted. I am grateful to all of you, the readers, who contribute to the blog by commenting and making this a truly interactive perfume project.

Sunday, May 14, 2017

TO NOTE OR NOT TO NOTE?

Sometimes social media can be incredibly frustrating. Today I was reading Gail’s post on Çafleurebon about whether it’s useful for perfume brands to list notes, or whether it’s better just to provide story-like descriptions. I wrote a long comment, tried to post it, and got a message saying that the “captcha code” was incorrect. :-( I tried again, and got the same message. Then everything I had written disappeared. Time down the tubes.

I’m not sure why I persevered, but I closed my browser, went back to the page, and tried again, more or less recreating the post. Surely it was not verbatim, but when I tried to post it, I got a message saying that it was a “duplicate” of something that was already posted. Posted, maybe, but not displayed. Algorithms can act so stupid sometimes. Fortunately this time I copied my comment before trying to post it, so didn’t lose it. After a couple more ineffective attempts, I gave up and decided to elaborate a little and turn it into a blog post.

The inspiration for Gail’s post was the fact that an increasing number of perfume brands don’t list notes, either because they condescendingly imply that to do so is beneath their elite status and/or their artistic sensibilities, or because listing notes is not useful to the consumer, who would rather get an overall impression through a piece of creative writing. Others think that, in the interest of full disclosure, it is best to list raw materials rather than notes, so we are now seeing things like “ambroxan” appear in lists of notes, even though I have yet to see cis-3-hexenol, methyl anthranilate, or anything else reminiscent of organic chemistry class.

Listing materials vs listing notes is something of a false dichotomy because many of the single aroma chemicals used to build "notes" are also found in nature. In fact, if one were to list all of the materials that the plant puts into synthesizing the fragrance that ends up in a rose absolute, it would read like the typical allergen list and would be incomprehensible to the average consumer at best, and frightening at worst. The term "rose" immediately evokes a clear general concept regardless of how it is constructed and despite the fact that it comprises multiple exemplars, each of which is perceived differently depending on context. As a general guideline for consumers and reviewers, I think a list of notes has a real function.

I'm not a big fan of "stories" as perfume descriptions in the same way that I'm not a big fan of music videos that impose a single vision on an artistic work that can evoke many different "stories" depending on each listener's tendencies.


Something that I intensely dislike is the pseudo-artistic gibberish "descriptions" of perfumes that make absolutely no sense, even as a piece of abstract/poetic “creative writing”. However, as one of the comments on Çafleurebon said, there's no right or wrong way. Some people like to read randomly strung together words that sound vaguely intellectual or sexy but make no sense, others like to have prefabricated stories to go with their olfactory experience, and others like to have lists of notes. As a perfumer, I try to supply a narrative general description for those who don’t just want a dry list, as well as a list of the main notes for those who want an idea of what went into making the perfume. Sorry, no gibberish.

[Notes header from Chapbook 1894; travel poster and romance novel image adapted from random online searches; other images from Wikimedia]

5 comments:

  1. I'm with you; I need to have notes in a perfume description. Stories to go with them are nice, but stories- unless grounded in very specific times & places- mean nothing to me.

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  2. The creative writing trend spawned the Prix Eau Faux contest at the Now Smell This blog!

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  3. I agree re: stories. I don't care for flowery essay descriptions, but I do like when perfumers share their inspiration behind a fragrance.

    Oh and if you register with Çafleurebon you don't have to enter a captcha. Makes commenting much easier :)

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  4. I don't like "top secret " notes list idea :(. For example if I'm loking for rosy scent, than I would like to test more or less (there are a lot of variations) rosy scents and not test everything that is for the moment available. The same is when I would like to buy ticket for a concert I would like to know who and which music plays.

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  5. "pseudo-artistic gibberish "descriptions" of perfumes that make absolutely no sense"

    Ahem not naming names here, but I'm looking at certain indie oil companies! I love their stuff, but I have notes that I flat-out can't wear and notes that I want to collect more of... and if I can't tell what's in there, I'm just not going to bite. A little story here or description there is okay, and so is a novel so long as I can skip it to get the notes.

    Though, knowing notes does affect how you perceive them, so perhaps if the creator was specifically going for a bias-less, holistic perception of the scent it may be okay... maybe. But they would have to be much more tactful than the way they normally are.

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