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Playboy, November 1988 |
Nance Mitchell |
Scents and sensibility
hypertext variant
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Since the down of time,
the spices of life - myrrh
and cinnamon,
sandalwood and
patchouli,
musk and
bay leaf, to name
but a few - have been linked to power, wealth, intrigue and sexual
allure. Exactly why
scent lights up our
lives so pervasively remains a mystery. What is certain is that scent is
no longer just a casual Christmas gift of
after-shave, but a key
ingredient to a man's personality. Sleek packaging, aggressive ads,
promises of virile conquests and - lest we forget - a persuasive scent are
all employed to entice the potential buyer. Above all, scent is marketed
to appeal to our aspirations and our images of ourselves.
Drakkar Noir
suggests fast cars and a jet-set lifestyle;
Tuscany invokes romance,
cool Italian nights and art.
Lagerfeld promises fantasy, while
Polo
suggests wealth, leisure and power. (For a complete rundown of men's fragrances, see Playboy's Guide to
Colognes
Our loyalty to a
particular scent often has deep roots. If you gave your high school
sweetheart a simple lavender
cologne that fabulous Christmas you spent
in Aspen, then you are likely to experience a resurgence of pleasure
whenever you get a whiff of
lavender. Years or cities later, it still
transports you back to feeling young and invulnerable. Even though you
can afford more expensive
colognes, all the snappy packaging and
artful perfumery won't hit your emotional target with as much precision
and quiver as that humble
lavender.
"When I smell Liz Claiborne
perfume, I remember my daughter's delight,
when I gave her a bottle. I think of her in France", says Craig Warren,
a vice-president and director of organoleptic research for New York's
International Flavors and Fragrances. "Knowledge enters in to decipher
the sensory input in a way that's called top-down thinking, or
cognition. When I smell something that doesn't strike an immediate
flash, that's bottom-up thinking. I'm curious; I keep sniffing to figure
out what it is. The job of packaging is to build an expectation that
will trigger top-down thinking and immediate appeal in consumers."
Success, ultimately, is a matter of teaming a memorable scent with
distinctive packaging and instant-appeal advertising.
Calvin Klein's
Obsession for Men has been a leader this season, thanks to a heavy
presell campaign and dramatic counter presentation. And its rich
spice
scent can be smelled once and remembered. (In
industry lingo, it has
"memory")
The nose knows
Colognes are a combination of water,
alcohol and
fragrance oils. Individual scents may generally be broken into three
categories:
Top notes: The first and most distinguishable aroma upon smelling a
fragrance. This original big blast usually places a scent in its proper
fragrance family - and remains the key to how a scent is identified. Top
notes are the most volatile, meaning the quickest to evaporate when the
solvent (alcohol) dries on the skin.
Middle notes: A richer, subtler smell that lasts perhaps ten to 30
minutes after the first rush.
Base notes: The least volatile ingredients in the formula. Base notes
have a residual smell hours after application. The skill and magic of
fragrance formulating is to keep middle and base notes in harmony with
top notes. A scent that screams great outdoors upon first sniff, for
example, should mature into a firm, robust, multifaceted assertion of
the outdoors by the time you reach that conference room or restaurant.
Fragrances families
Fragrances is generally divided into basic smell categories or families.
The most popular divisions for men include:
Chypre: A blend of woody and mossy fragrances. It can be subdivided into
three distinctive categories:
- sweet (examples include
Chaps,
Royal
Copenhagen and Stetson);
- regular (Paco Rabanne, Pour Lui by
Oscar de la
Renta, Armani, Boss by
Hugo Boss and
Aramis); and
-
chypre with
green
(Drakkar Noir,
Tuscany,
Metropolis,
Adidas,
Quorum and
Polo products).
Citrus: A
bergamot or
lemon scent used more in European
colognes. Top
citrus scents:
Bowling Green, Programme Homme by
Lancome, Bleu Marine
de Cardin by Pierre Cardin and
Terra Nova.
Fougere: An old-fashioned
lavender family more popular in Europe than in
America. Some top fougeres:
Brut, Iron by
Coty,
British Sterling and
Clinique's Tailoring for Men.
Green: A leafy fragrance that's a bit on the wild side. Although most
men's fragrances use some
green notes in their for mulas, there are very
few true-green
colognes. One example: Grey Flannel.
Musk: A heavy, sensually
suggestive fragrance. Some top
musks:
Jovan and
Royal
Copenhagen Musk.
Oriental: An
exotic, intriguing blend of
spice (such as
clover) and
sweet (vanilla or
amber) note, along with incense smells (myrrh,
for example). Some top Orientals:
Obsession, Pierre
Cardin,
Lagerfeld,
Mennen Skin Bracer,
Santa Fe by
Shulton and
Colors de Benetton.
Spice: Your kitchen cupboard predominates in this category, with scents
such as nutmeg, cinnamon
and cloves.
Some top
spices:
Old Spice,
Night Spice,
Halston Ltd., Sport
Continental Splash and Perry
Ellis
Cologne for Men.
Woody: As the name implies, a fullbodied woodsy scent, as in
sandalwood,
cedar
or patchouli.
Playboy’s Guide to colones
As a rule of thumb,
colognes and
after-shaves are
of heavier fragrance and last
longer than eaux de toilette or natural sprays.
Leading lights
Antaeus: By
Chanel, A sleek combination of
spice, leather, tobacco and
wood notes.
Aramis: By
Aramis. The long-running classic is joined by
Devin,
Aramis
900 and JHL scents
Armani: By Giorgio Armani. This goes with the rest of
Armani's line.
Drakkar Noir: By Guy
Laroche. A refreshing blend of
citrus, herbs and
woods.
Grey Flannel: By Geoffrey
Beene.
Herbaceous notes set this apart: One of
the rare men's fragrances that belong strictly to the
green family.
Obsession
for men: By
Calvin Klein. Elegant,
Oriental,
exotic.
Paul Sebastian: By Paul Sebastian, Inc. (Also
V.S.O.P. and Brownstone)
Refined, no-nonsense packaging and a subtle, virile scent.
Polo: By
Ralph Lauren. A crisp, sporting bouquet with leather and
tobacco middle notes.
Tuscany: By
Aramis. A Mediterranean bouquet of geranium,
patchouli and
bergamot.
Vintage: By Gruene, producers of a top-notch skin-care line for men.
And don't forget
Bowling Green and
Xeryus.
Other
elegant entries
Kouros and
YSL Pour Homme: By
Yves Saint Laurent. The former features a
warming tone from honey and base notes of
musk and incense; the
latter was designed by
Saint Laurent himself for himself in 1971.
Lagerfeld and KL Homme:
By Parfums Lagerfeld. Look for solid, masculine scents in
eau de
toilette, natural spray,
after-shave and soap.
Paco Rabanne: By Compar. Those famous "about last night" ads, combined
with a scent that has "memory", make this a continuing favorite.
Santos de Cartier: By
Cartier. In
eau de toilette spray or
after-shave.
Tailoring for Men: By
Clinique. In
cologne or
cologne spray,
citrus top notes mark this
complement to Clinique's skin-care line.
And don't forget Stetson,
Quorum, Pierre
Cardin,
Lauder for Men and
Estee Lauder's
Metropolis.
Continuing splashes
Adidas: By
Beecham. Bold, athletic packaging and scent.
Chaps: By
Ralph
Lauren. Masculine and rugged.
Jovan Musk: By
Beecham. A longtime best-selling
musk; other
Jovan
offerings include
Gambler, Grass Oil for Men and Oleg
Cassini for Men.
Mñ
Gregor cologne: By
Faberge, Joins Faberges
Brut, one of the bestknown and most popular
names in men's toiletries.
Members only: By Mem, producers of
English Leather. A good-smelling
moisturizing after-shave with aloe to be massaged into the skin. Try
also: English Leather
Musk.
Night Spice: By
Shulton Fragrances. The prime of the
spice rack: warm
notes of clove and
nutmeg.
Sportsman: By Houbigant. Inexpensive; a pleasant outdoors scent.
Some top woodies:
Halston Z-14,
Astor of the
Trumper Collection,
Floris of London 89,
Lauder for Men,
Patou Pour Homme
and Woods of Windsor for Gentlemen.
Keep in mind that the above families and classifications are open to
debate, Also, since many fragrances involve a blend of several families,
some formulas are tough to
pigeonhole.
Scent collection
Here are some tips to follow when shopping for a new scent:
•
Sniff around. Avoid grabbing the same
cologne/after-shave you've used
since college - which is probably the one your dad used, right?
•
Remember that women buy as much as 75 percent of all men's fragrances
sold, Many scents are directly formulated to be comfortable to
women.
One buying strategy may be to ask the salesperson which fragrance
women
find most appealing.
•
Don't buy a fragrance according to your first-whiff-from-the-flacon
reaction, You're reacting only to the top notes, Put some sample
fragrance on the back of your hand or the inside of your elbow, a drop
at a time, and then walk around the store for a while to let it "bloom
on the skin", A half hour after application, see how the subtler middle
and bottom notes appeal to you and react to your chemistry.
•
Judge a fragrance by the distinctiveness of its top notes (is it
memorable?) and then by such intangibles as a connoisseur might use to
weigh the difference between a cheap and a fine wine: quality, balance
and character.
•
Try to keep all fragranced products that you use - deodorant,
after-shave
and cologne - within the same family.
•
Apply cologne and
after-shave to pulse points - behind ears, inside wrists
and elbows, on neck and chest.
•
If you're dining out, don't make the common mistake of overdoing it with
cologne or you'll overpower the wine and food.
•
Tired of your fragrance? Switch to another brand within the same family,
Examples: Trade Paco
Rabanne for
Tuscany (chypre),
Obsession for
Lagerfeld (Oriental),
Finally, don't be afraid to make a splash.
Men and
women have anointed
themselves with fragrance since Adam and Eve discovered the
Elysian
headiness of laurel, berry and bower.
Whether for love, power or just to
enjoy another sensuous dimension, scents make nothing but perfect sense.
Index
www.pseudology.org
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