The paper scraps have been shaken up and one was drawn. The winner of the one-of-a-kind bottle of A Midsummer Day's Dream is YUKI.
If you are the winner, please e-mail (olympicorchids@gmail.com) or PM me on Facebook with your shipping information. If the prize is not claimed within 10 days, another name will be drawn.
Showing posts with label A Midsummer Day's Dream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Midsummer Day's Dream. Show all posts
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Friday, January 3, 2014
A DRAWING FOR THE NEW YEAR
The new year has begun. Those of us in Seattle are lucky to have
temperatures above freezing as the rest of the US is buried in snow, the bright red cyclamens are starting to bloom in the garden, I just got two big boxes of
perfume samples and a shipment of aroma chemicals from Vigon in the mail, I don’t start teaching again until Tuesday, I've been able to go running a little every day this week, and my
new website seems to be mostly functional. Life is good!
I just want to remind everyone that if you order from the
new website and use the code INTRO20 at checkout, you will receive 20% off any
purchase. You can use it on the original boutique website, too, for orders
totaling $50.00 or more.
A few days ago I came across a one-of-a-kind oddity that
I’ve decided to give away in a drawing. It’s a new-style bottle from the
original production proof set, with the name “A Midsummer Day’s Dream” instead
of the new one, “Elektra”. It’s the bottle that went to Elements last August,
and it’s the bottle that made me decide to change the name! Of course it’s
filled with juice, and as far as I can tell, it was never sprayed. If you’d
like to be entered in a drawing to win this unique item, just leave a comment
saying what you would do with it if you win it. The drawing will be
random, and limited to US only due to the high cost of international shipping.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
WEARING PERFUME, ABSTAINING FROM ELECTRONIC DEVICES, AND THE JOYS OF RETURNING HOME

We just got back from nearly a week on the road in Oregon, a mix of the city and the wilderness, the upscale and the downscale. I won’t bore you with a travelogue, but suffice it to say that the first two nights we stayed at nice hotels, and the rest of the nights we camped in our car in various parks that ranged from the mountain rainforest to the coastal sand dunes.
When I was packing, one important consideration was what, if any, perfumes to take with me. I decided on four - Frederic Malle’s Musc Ravageur, which both my husband (M) and I love; Teo Cabanel’s Alahine, which I love; a very old mini bottle of L’Occitane Vanille Bourbon, which he loves; and a bottle of my own A Midsummer Day’s Dream, which was more or less untested in a real-life wearing situation. In the rush to leave, I forgot my camera.

The next day I put on some L’Occitane vanilla and we headed for the mountains. Interestingly, M usually raves about how good it smells, but this time he didn’t. I think he’s getting jaded when it comes to perfume, since he has to smell so many different things when I’m sampling. We spent the day on trails in the rainforest and soaked in a rock pool fed by a hot spring that poured out of a steaming cave in the side of the mountain. Then it started to rain. We found a state park area, folded the back seats down, and slept very comfortably in the car, with the rain and occasional hail pattering on the roof. That was the way we “camped” for the rest of the trip. The down side was that my little carry-on suitcase with “non-essential” items got jammed between the car seats under some other stuff, in an inaccessible position for the rest of the trip, leaving me without any perfume. I survived. My nose is probably all the better for having had a vacation.
The other deprivation that I suffered was not having my laptop, but I have to say that I really didn’t miss it. On the third day the battery of my phone ran down, so I didn’t have a phone, either. Technology-free, I survived to enjoy the dunes and the trip up the rocky coast on highway 101, with alternating waves of rain, hail, and sunshine. It was gorgeous.

It’s good to be back home!
[Because I forgot my camera, the flower photos are adapted from Wikimedia]
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)