Wandering
through Harvey Nichols on a work break, tired and vaguely peeved as I am
usually am in department stores by the miasma of scent and the slapdash approach
to perfume promotion, I was not really expecting to see or at least smell
anything interesting. I had already been utterly deflated by the latest Tom
Ford floral releases, hyped as usual and massively underwhelming. As a man
obsessed with all things lilium related
I had been looking forward to trying his Lys
Fumé, the lily soliflore from the Jardin Noir quartet. I realised after
spraying it on, there is a facet to all of the TF fragrances that I actively dislike;
that in fact rather irritates me. Despite all the talk of high-level naturals
and absolutes etc, they all have an off-putting malaise, a breath of deoderised car, lighter fuel and smoked bug
spray that sits under the notes like a latent curse. The Lys Fumé was no exception; in fact I recoiled from my own skin. Now
if you follow my writing you will now how much I adore lily soliflores, I have
at least six or seven tremulous variations in my collection at home, but this
smelt like burnt bathroom freshener, not a good effect in a fragrance.
Revisiting
my wrist in a vain hope the drydown might unlock a twist in the formula and I
would perhaps marvel at the sudden majesty of lily-form lines and curves, I
noticed the new Balenciaga fragrance was being merchandised. Obviously just in,
the striking carnivorous botanical packaging caught my eye and lured me over. The
Lys Fumé at this point had withered
to a flat and unimaginative campheraceous echo of the original indolic floral
flourish. The smoked note was drawn in the air like cheap cigarette smoke in a bus
shelter. I am really beginning to wonder whether the immaculately hirsute Mr
Ford has anything to do with his scents any more, they are becoming increasingly
dull and formulaic. Pricy and glossy Dynasty concoctions for scousewives and
Beverly Hills princesses.
Florabotanica is the third fragrance from Balenciaga under
the mighty creative sweep of Nicholas Ghesquière, one of the few true
visionaries working in fashion today. The first two fragrances used the
enigmatic note of violet to create similar yet reflectively different
interpretations. I will admit to being
rather underwhelmed by the first Balenciaga
Paris, which I found bloodless and wan. It expired far too quickly on my
skin and made me shudder as if shaking the hand of someone I knew was going to
die. It was too safe, despite a coldly beautiful campaign fronted by the
mercurial and inscrutable Charlotte Gainsbourg. However the second version, Balenciaga Paris L’Essence, was divine,
poetic and fairytale-like in its dreamy interpretation of the way through the
woods. The violets glowing amethyst in hazy pockets of sunshine dappled with
glinting metallic musk tones like coins in the sunlight counterpointing the
floral elements with elegance and grace; lending an air of toughness I found
lacking in the original.