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Master Perfumers Nose Ahead With Made-To-Measure Scents

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  • Master Perfumers Nose Ahead With Made-To-Measure Scents

    MASTER PERFUMERS NOSE AHEAD WITH MADE-TO-MEASURE SCENTS
    by Audrey Stuart

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 27, 2006 Wednesday 5:29 AM GMT

    Unique perfumes offering a scent of exclusivity are now within the
    reach of many pockets thanks to a new generation of young master
    "noses" trying to buck a trend towards bland mass production.

    Until recently, perfumers concocted such luxury only for the likes
    of Arab princesses, millionaires and film stars.

    Annick Le Guerer, perfume expert and author, said that perfume
    companies today intentionally created their fragrances "by consensus",
    and not according to the taste of one perfumer, in order to widely
    appeal to customers regardless of nationality and local taste.

    But the industry's shift away from bold scents with personality to
    blends designed to please all has triggered a backlash, prompting a
    growing number of perfumers to set up their own "boutique" businesses.

    "Demand for a personalized product has grown in the last few years
    among a certain clientele," said Han Paul Bodifee, who heads up
    France's perfume industry body PRODAROM.

    "We've seen new businesses emerge that use the skills of a master
    perfumer to create very high quality fragrances that are exclusive
    and made-to-measure," he said in an interview with AFP in the world's
    perfume capital, Grasse, in the hills above the Riviera coast.

    This new clientele is strangely eclectic -- both men and women from
    worlds as diverse as business, politics, the stage and screen and, of
    course, the very rich. But all are connoisseurs in search of quality.

    Their ages also range widely, from babies up to the over-eighties,
    said Isabelle Burdel. She was the first perfumer to launch her own chic
    label, "Salon Prive", on the Riviera two years ago in the exclusive
    seaside resort of Cannes.

    Her youngest client to date was a three-year-old Arab princess.

    The clientele for these "new" perfumes also tends to be very
    international.

    While the main customer base is in Europe and North America, perfumers
    said the Gulf Arabs are becoming increasingly interested, along with
    Eastern Europeans, North Africans and Latin Americans and more recently
    customers in India and Asia.

    These made-to-measure scents still carry a hefty price tag compared
    with over-the-counter scents, thanks to the costly, rare, top quality
    ingredients -- and the time and skill to blend them -- used instead
    of today's cheaper synthetic components.

    The former includes pure flower essences, such as the highly-prized
    Bulgarian rose that sells for around 7,000 euros per kilo (9,000
    dollars per 2.2 pounds), or rarities like centuries-old amber, often
    used to add spicy, earthy undertones, which is now extremely difficult
    to find.

    "The high price of natural ingredients today is why synthetics are
    used in mass market perfumes and why 'bespoke' fragrances cost so
    much," said Burdel.

    "Noses" themselves, who number just 500 worldwide, are also somewhat
    rare, as it takes many years of training as well as talent.

    "'Bespoke' perfume is very close to the world of haute couture in that
    there are no limitations in price or in time," said Francis Kurkdjian,
    one of today's foremost young master perfumers.

    Paris-based Kurkdjian, who is French of Armenian descent, said the
    idea to set up a one-of-a-kind perfume business came to him six years
    ago while he was working in Manhattan.

    Asked to create scents for a charity auction, Kurkdjian thought it
    would raise more money if he offered his nose to the highest bidder.

    "People went crazy about the idea of having a perfumer create a unique
    perfume for them and that was how my business was born," he said.

    One of his strangest requests was to create a perfume that "smelt
    of money".

    Kurkdjian charges around 8,000 euros for a unique fragrance -- which
    can take anything up to six months to create for a client.

    This cost can still be considered good value compared with the world's
    top perfume, couture and luxury goods houses, such as Guerlain,
    Patou and Cartier.

    These firms can command as much as 50,000 euros for a 'bespoke'
    service, Annick Le Guerer, expert and author of a recently published
    book "Parfum: des origines à aujourd'hui" ("Perfume: from early times
    to the present crisis"), told AFP in a telephone interview.

    A less expensive option is a limited edition, offered by many of the
    independent perfumers who work mainly in Paris, London, New York and
    Los Angeles, Le Guerer said. Kurkdjian's run for about 4,000 euros.

    Two other names, Frederic Malle's "Editions de parfums" in Paris and
    leading British perfumer Lynn Harris's "Miller Harris", have already
    won a cult following with their hip limited-edition scents.

    And inevitably, some of these limited editions end up becoming more
    exclusive than others, such as two eaux de parfum created by Burdel at
    the Cannes-based Salon Prive: "Imagine" with subtle hints of precious
    Bulgarian rose and musk for women, and a fresh sea breeze fragrance,
    "So Sensual", for men.

    Between 30 and 50 different essences were used to create each fragrance
    and only 20 bottles will be available, sold on a first-come basis for
    600 euros per elegant cube-shaped vial -- a bargain compared to her
    one-of-a-kind service that, like Kurkdjian's, starts at 8,000 euros.

    Perfume lovers who want to smell like a queen also have the opportunity
    of a lifetime this year -- to buy a fragrance that might have been
    worn by the pleasure-loving French queen, Marie Antoinette.

    This fragrance was recently brought back to life through the patient
    efforts of Francis Kurkdjian based on the 18th-century writings of
    a royal perfumer.

    But they will have to be quick -- only 10 crystal flasks priced at
    8,000 euros apiece and 1,000 tiny phials that cost 350 euros each
    have been put up for sale by the Chateau de Versailles.

    --Boundary_(ID_hKAbTU1XUqcssNr0BGaC8w )--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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