Archive for November, 2009

How To Differentiate Between Perfumes

What is the best fashion style that suit me most?

Wearing a perfume is like mixing and matching your clothes, bags and shoes that requires a little bit of artistic sense in making the right decision. However, before you can put your artistic sense into mixing and matching your clothing, bags and shoes, you definitely need to know a little bit more about fashion styles and what is the best fashion style that suit you best before you can make a good choice or decision. Once you are aware and out your knowledge into use, you will be able to come up with different combination to represent different themes or moods that you would like to portray for different occasions. Selecting the correct perfume to go with your theme of the day is also very critical, if care is not taken to match it, you may be in for a big surprise.

The types of fashion style and color a person wear is very much related to the body shape and facial feature of the person. When care is not taken, having a wrong match is totally disastrous. Wearing perfumes is also the same, each and individual of us have a different body chemistry that reacts differently to different types of perfumes. If we choose the wrong fragrance to wear, the resultant chemistry between the body odor and the perfume may also be disastrous. Therefore, we need to know our own body chemistry and the different types of perfume and cologne in market in order for us to select the perfect scent for our theme.

So how do we differentiate between perfumes and know how they react will our body chemistry. Perfumes are classified under 4 main categories depending on the amount of fragrance oil essence concentration in the perfume. The most concentrated of all is the Parfum, the Parfum normally contains about 40% concentration of oil essence in the mixture. The next in line is the Eau de Parfum that has a concentration level of about 15% to 20% of oil essence in the mixture. The most commonly found perfume on the market id the Eau de Toilette that has a oil essence concentration of about 5% to 15% in the mixture. And the least concentrated of all is the Eau de Cologne that contain about 3% to 8% essence oil content in the perfume mixture. Different body chemistry is suitable for different types of perfume concentration, if you use the wrong perfume on a wrong day or body chemistry, you may turn peoples off from a mile away.

Therefore selecting the types of perfume to use on any day and must be suitable to your body type requires a lot of studies and trial. One good example is the perfume that is tested good on a cold chilly winter day is totally not suitable for use during the hot summer day as it may seem to be overpowering. The second factor that differentiate between perfumes is their Olfactive families. Although we may not be able to correctly classify a perfume base solely from their Olfactive families, however it will be a good starting point to get to know a perfume better. The classification of perfumes under their Olfactive families has been practiced for the past century since 1900.

The traditional classification separate the perfume into several main families and some of them is as follows;

  1. Single Floral – perfume classified under this familiy often is dominated by a single flower scent.
  2. Floral Bouquet – perfume classified under this family contains a mixtures of different types of flower scents.
  3. Amber – is a huge class that contain a sweetness of animalic scents of ambergris or labdanum and is often mixed with vanilla, floral or woods.
  4. Wood – perfumes that are dominated by woody scents such as sandalwood, cedar and agarwood.
  5. Leather – perfumes that smell like leather normally presence in the middle or base notes of a perfume that contains scents of honey, tobacco, wood or wood tar.
  6. Chypre – perfumes that contain fragrance from different family but group under a similar class because of the common scent that represent them.
  7. Fougère – a class commonly found in the base note of a perfume that mainly forms from ferns like oakmoss, coumarin or lavender.

However through the years, the method used in the manufacturing of perfumes has progressed with technology and because of this in 1945 a new Olifactive Families classification of the perfumes is introduced.

  1. Bright Floral – is a combination of the traditional single floral and floral bouquet families.
  2. Green -  is a lighter and more modern represention of the traditional Chypre.
  3. Acquatic, Oceanic or Ozonic – is the newest classification introduced that represent the modern scents of androgynous perfumes.
  4. Citrus – is one fo the oldest classification used till today that often represent the freshness in a perfume through its fresh and non-tenacity citrus scents.
  5. Fruity – used to describe perfumes that contain fruits other than those specified under the citrus family.  Normally fragrance that is fruity in nature is often perceive as a sweet scent.
  6. Gourmand – describes scents like vanilla, tonka beans, etc that portray an edible like scents.

If you want to correctly differentiate a perfume from the different families, I suggest you get hold of a fragrance wheel that will assist you in determining the correct Olfactive families of the perfume and how they work with each other.  The third thing you should look at is the combination of the different Olfactive families within a perfume itself.  The correct description of a perfume is often related to the way a perfume react and linger on your body that often happen in three stages.  The three stages of head, heart and drydown are represent in the fragrance as the top note, middle or heart note and the base note.  How a perfume perform when applied depends greatly on the mixtures contain with each notes.  And it takes a lot of the skill of the perfume designer to come up with a perfect formulae that represent the uniqueness of individual perfumes.

After reading this articles, you should be able to differentiate between perfumes and understand the mechanics that determine the uniqueness of a perfume and will be able to select the perfume that suit you most.  I hope that through this article, I have answered your question on how to differentiate between perfumes and able to provide you with the relevant references for you to continue to advance in your knowledge on perfumes and colognes.

Posted in Introduction to Perfume and Cologne, Perfume and Cologne Tips and Tricks | 1 Comment »

Perfume Review – Vera Wang Princess Perfume

Vera Wang Princess Perfume

Designer: Ilias Ermenidis and Harry Fremont
Olfactive Group: Oriental Floral

Princess Perfume

Princess Perfume

Vera Wang Princess perfume was launched in 2006 as part of Vera Wang oriental-floral feminine fragrances collection. The fragrance is designed to bring out the sweetness and feminine delicate side of its wearer and yet portray the wearer as a modern and lively person. The perfume come in a heart-shape jewel bottle that portray the finest and elegance of the content within. Vera Wang Princess Perfume is available at all retail stores in three different sizes of 1oz, 1.7oz and 3.4oz eau de toilette spray and is selling at a price that ranges from $45 for the 1oz spray bottle to $72 for the 3.4oz spray bottle.

How does it feel like?

The Princess Perfume when applied will meet its wearer with a creamy and subtle sweetness that is skin-soft and silky-smooth to touch. The lasting power of the fragrance is average and can be worn every day, however I would suggest that the fragrance be worn during the bright and sunny day of spring and summer.

How does it smell like?

You will be engulfed by a light citrus smell from the mandarin orange that is wonderfully blended into the fruity apple note that finished off with a floral note from the water lily. This unique combination provides you with an experience that is both refreshing and youthful yet allowing you as the wearer to be cute and beautiful. If you like chocolate in your fragrance, then Princess perfume is definitely the choice. The heart of the fragrance blossom into a creamy chocolate sweetness and sprinkled with the floral scent of the Tiare flower that make the heart feel soft and elegant. The overall sweetness of the fragrance rejoice into a grand finale of vanilla with amber that make the overall experience of the fragrance sweet and fruity.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

Apricot, Mandarin Orange, Apple and Water Lily

Middle Notes

Tuberose, Guava, Dark Chocolate and Tiare Flower

Base Notes

Amber, Vanilla and Woodsy

Photo Gallery


Posted in Ladies Perfume, Perfume Review, Vera Wang Perfume | No Comments »