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Other notes include Bergamot, Neroli, Orange, Coriander, Narcissus, Clover, Rose, Ylang Ylang, Jasmine, Cedar, Sandalwood, Vetiver, Civet, Amber, Musk. Supposedly Dana told Carles to "make a perfume a prostitute would wear". It was one of the first "oriental" scents created in the perfume world and one of the heaviest.
Mitsouko was created by perfumer Jacques Guerlain in 1919. The perfume has remained continuously available ever since. [2]Mitsouko is preserved in its original 1919 formulation in the archives of the Osmothèque, donated to the collection by Guerlain in-house perfumer Thierry Wasser. [4]
Citrus-forward top notes include neroli (of course), bergamot, red mandarin, and galbanum, opening to a floral heart of cumin, jasmine, orange flower, and orris, and an earthy base of vetiver ...
Proximity sub-label: Amber, Bergamot, and Vetiver: Three scents under the Proximity name. Lighter, more sophisticated fragrances targeted at less juvenile men. Sold at a higher price than regular Axe range. Comes in body spray only. [citation needed] 2010 2009 Summer: Is a light variant, light and sweet lime fragrance.
[6] [11] The fragrance is bergamot, jasmine, sandalwood, orange blossom, white musk and amber. [11] [12] In 2006, Dior released Pure Poison Elixir, an updated version of the fragrance, in a spray bulb mother of pearl bottle. [13] The scent became more nuanced with the addition of cocoa bean absolute. [13] The spokesmodel was Letícia Birkheuer.
The perfume was launched a year before she died. The scent was created by Henri Robert. [1] Coco Chanel. No. 19 is a balsamic-green scent, compared to the aldehydic Chanel No. 5, the floral Chanel No. 22 and ambrette-green Chanel No. 18. The pure perfume and eau de parfum have a slight greenish tint, and the eau de toilette is pale green.
The fragrance is an aromatic fougère, with top notes of bergamot, rosemary, lavender, middle notes of cardamom and geranium, and a dry down of vetiver, cedar, and fir balsam. [9] The top note includes prominent dihydromyrcenol, a synthetic odorant with a metallic citric-floral character, typical of the fougère family fragrances.
Shalimar was created by perfumer Jacques Guerlain in 1921, but after another company claimed to already have a fragrance by the same name, Guerlain was forced to rename the fragrance "No. 90" until a legal dispute over the name was settled. [2] Shalimar was re-released in 1925 at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial ...