The next step... What is Perfume, anyway?

I have to confess: I've been stuck here for a few days. This next step is maybe the hardest: Where to go from here?

I could start talking about the classics. I could share with you my favorite fragrances and find out about yours. We could learn some more vocabulary/jargon. I think, though, the right next step is to make sure we're on the same page with some perfume basics. There are tons of resources "out there", some of which I'll quote or refer to, since they are written by folks much more qualified to explain them than I. But I do feel like I need to provide some sort of starting place; a common ground.

After this, I'll build some resource lists and pages for this site before taking the next, next step. If you have resources and links to share, please do!

xoxo,
*jen



Silly question, right? But maybe not so silly, because how can we really talk about something, become knowledgeable about it, without learning the details? Or at least that's the way I look at it.


perfume is...
Fragrance is made up of perfume oils and... stuff. Usually, that stuff is either ethanol (alcohol) or a solution of water and ethanol. One can also dilute pure perfume oils in other oils that don't add to the scent. You're familiar with the concept of mixing, right? Well, just as when mixing a color of paint, a cocktail, or ingredients for a recipe, the amounts of this and that used directly impact the end result. That's where some of the names used to describe concentrations of fragrance come in.

Here are the most commonly used names for fragrance concentrations, from lightest (least amount of perfume oils) to strongest:
  • Splash / Aftershave / Eau Fraiche : between 1-3% perfume oils
  • Eau de Cologne (EdC): 3-8% (usually about 5%)
  • Eau de Toilette (EdT): 5-15% (usually about 10%)
  • Eau de Parfum (EdP) / Parfum de Toilette / Eau de Perfume / Millésime: 10-20% (usually about 15%)
  • Espirit de Parfum: 15-30% [this is rarely seen]
  • Perfume Oil: 15-30% in a base of oil rather than in alcohol
  • Perfume Extract / Extrait / Perfume: 15-40% (usually about 20%)
So what's the deal? Why so many ways to brew fragrance? That answer is easy: each concentration results in a different intensity of scent. Also, usually one can expect the stronger concentrations to last longer on the skin.

Of course, you've likely noticed that there's overlap with the descriptions and concentrations. One EdT is not the same as the next, just like your spaghetti sauce isn't the same as mine. EdT A may have 8% perfume oils while EdT B may have 12%.  Oh, and to make matters worse, some companies put different ingredients in the various concentrations of the same scent! So just because you want "more oomph" from a fragrance you adore in EdP form doesn't mean you'll love the extrait.

By the way, since "perfume" is really the name of a type of fragrance product; a term to signify a concentration of scent, to keep things simple I'll usually refer to fragrance products as "fragrance". When I say "perfume" going forward, it will mean The Good Stuff: extrait.


so where do the perfume oils come from?

This is super complex, and while I may go more in-depth with it at a later date, I want to touch on it now, a tiny little bit. Luckily, I'm no chemist, so this shouldn't get too hairy.

Two sources of scent...
Basically, there are two types of "odorants" that go into fragrances: natural and synthetic. Neither is better or worse, and most fragrances have some of each inside.

Synthetic scents are manufactured in a lab, as you may have guessed. Why? Well, some ingredients are so expensive or hard-to-find as natural ingredients, so a more affordable synthetic version is created. In other cases, there is no real way to capture and bottle a scent, like the crackling ozone of a lightening storm or the scent of beach air. Still other synthetics replace naturals that are not terribly earth- or animal-friendly, for example ambergris, which is a natural by product of sperm whale digestion (humanely harvested...usually, but hard-to-find), or various musks (which must be extracted from animals).

Synthetics get a bit of a bad rap. While many synthetic replacements are widely considered by fragrance fanatics to lessen a vintage scent after reformulation  (a whole can of worms I'll open at another time), they do have their place elsewhere, in my opinion.

image via essentialoilsaromatherapyinfo.com
Natural ingredients come from the source material...somehow. Heat, solvents, and other processes are used to extract oils ("essential oils"), absolutes, concretes or butters from the source. Solvents can be used in a process called "maceration" to create concretes. The source, usually a wood or dry plant fiber, is submerged in a solvent for a length of time (which varies). The solvent then leaches the scent out of the source and can be used or further processed. Other raw materials, like soft flowers, are heated (directly, with steam, or with machinery) until condensation is created, then collected. Still other raw materials get a big squeeze!!! By compressing or squeezing materials like citrus peels, their oils can be obtained. Then there's enfleurage. A fancy name for letting fat or wax suck up the scent of the raw materials, though this method isn't used so much nowadays. (um...good?)

Natural ingredients can be pretty expensive, which is passed along to the consumer in the final fragrance price. Don't be fooled, though! Some synthetics are mighty pricey, too.

image via commons.wikimedia.org/
so how does it all pull together?
A perfumer usually starts with a concept, and that concept may come from the perfumer or a corporation. He or she will use anywhere from one (rarely) to a bajillion (also rare) ingredients to create a fragrance. The main scent is built, then modified (brightened, made deeper, etc). Other ingredients may be added to make it smoother or "more flowy" (a technical term... not). Fixitives are added to stabilize the scent and give it a base. Then the alcohol and/or alcohol solution gets mixed in.

The array of ingredients in a perfumer's aresnal is usually set up in a semi-circle and referred to as a "perfumer's organ".






building a fragrance
Many consumers have heard of "perfume notes". This is a way of talking about how a scent presents itself. They are often displayed in the form of a pyramid. The notes are top notes, middle or heart notes, and base notes. Essentially, they exist because different molecules evaporate at different rates - and evaporation is how the molecules make it to our noses to be smelled.

  • Top Notes evaporate first, so they are the first scents you smell. They are a fragrance's first impression. Top notes are most often fruity or citrus scents or light florals.
  • Middle Notes show up five to ten minutes after application, just after the top notes start to fade. They also overlap the base notes, smoothing out or hiding any rough start those notes might have. Heart notes are often, but not always, florals.
  • Base notes evaporate last. They appear anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour into the development of a scent. These are the scents that linger. They are often described as "deep" or "rich" and tend to sit closer to the wearer's skin (can't be smelled from as far away as the middle and top notes). Base notes are often woody, resinous, or earthy.

A note on notes: when you see a list of notes for a fragrance, don't focus on them too closely. Listed notes are best thought of as a guide, not a final answer. Some notes might not be listed, might be a generic term (like "lilac" may be an accord of ingredients that mimic the scent of lilac or two lilac ingredients, one natural one synthetic). There's a great article here I encourage you to read that explains more about this.

The middle and base notes are really what makes the bulk of the scent, since the top notes are fleeting.

classifying fragrances
There are more ways to talk about fragrances. Many people refer to fragrance "families". These are broad classifications for scents. To complicate things, there are two or three ways to look at these fragrance types.

Here are most of the commonly used terms:


  • Florals: flower scents
    • Soliflores are scents in which the fragrance is predominantly one flower. 
    • Other florals are based on multiple flowers ("floral bouquet").
      Florals are sometimes additionally classified as "florals", "soft florals" and "floral Orientals" (AKA "floriental").
  • Orientals: tend to have ambergris or other animal scents, and woods, sometimes with vanilla and spices. The modern Fragrance Wheel method of classifying scents breaks down Orientals into "soft Orientals", "Orientals," and "woody Orientals".
  • Woods: shockingly, these have woody notes.
    Woods can be further broken down into "wood", "mosssy woods", and "dry woods".
  • Chypre: follow a bit of a pattern, typically with citrus top notes, floral middle notes, and oakmoss and/or musk base.
  • Fougere: these are herbaceous and woody scents (fougere means "fern").
  • Green: cut grass, cucumber, leafy scents
  • Aquatics, Ozone: a synthetic air + marine scent
  • Gourmand: foody, edible-smelling
  • Animalics: leather perfumes; musks; scents containing civet, castoreum, maybe ambergris depending on whom you ask
  • Citrus: self-explanatory

 Whew. That's a whole lot of info, isn't it? I'm exhausted. Time to go spritz myself with something good-smelling. :)

and the next, next step?
What is that next step (after this one), you may be wondering? Our first review! Suggestions for scents to go up on the block are encouraged. I've got a small aresenal at hand, but it's a good one. :)

4 comments:

  1. I kind of wonder sometimes about the pyramid...I'm not sure I always smell the fragrances the way they are designed. Lots of times I seem to smell them in just two parts: an opening and a dry down. Then, I tried Traversee du Bosphore the other day. First I smelled dirt (what I think Iris smells like to me), I was completely turned off on the fragrance at that point. I resisted the urge to scrub it off...A little while later, I smelled something light and lovely. It smelled like rose, but sweeter (but not cloying) to me. Later still, I smelled a light, soft vanilla. I finally got a pyramid!

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  2. I think the pyramid is pretty much a guideline, and one that many fragrances don't follow. I get a whiff of basenotes during the opening of quite a few scents, then experience them again later, during the drydown. I'm glad your experience with TdB ended happily. Mine did not!


    *Jen

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  3. Hi! Where did you source the fragrance pyramid from - its really simple and cool ;-)

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  4. Hey! Thanks for stopping by. I made it, actually - so thanks! lol :D
    xoxo

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