Pour D & B, Merci.
I
received the most wonderful gift in the post from two new friends in Lyon
recently. Fellow fragrance lovers, on holiday in Edinburgh earlier this year, we
met and bonded over olfactory passions, practiced our languages and now talk in
the electronic ether about all things fragrance related. They both have
exquisite emotional taste in perfume and are adventurous in their desires to
search out the new and unusual while remaining faithful to fragrances that
anchor them to memories of their travels, home and each other.
I sent
them some samples of fragrance, Penhaligon’s Peoneve and a spare bottle of my touchtone leather, Tom of Finland by Etat Libre D’Orange
for B to try. My gift arrived wrapped in lovely vintage Laura Ashley wallpaper,
and slightly knocked from its journey and there was a faint scent of caramelised
sugar rising from the paper. Inside the box was a bottle of L’Être Aimé by Parfums Divine, a bijou
niche house based in Dinard on the north coast of Brittany and founded by Yvon
Mouchel in 1986.
Mouchel’s
elegant and classically constructed fragrances have become quietly successful
with perfume cognoscenti and lovers of scented difference. As an independant,
Mouchel has control over his own business, releasing a limited number of
bottles a year. Instead of following trends he is free to explore his love and
passion for the drama and classicism of fine fragrance. His first creation, the
eponymous Divine, released in 1986 is
a sophisticated and truly elegant portrayal of woman as art. TO me she is
swathed in pearls and a subtle cigarette haze with the music of Mahler playing
softly around her as she stands at a window looking out in the night. It was Divine that created the scented buzz
that started Mouchel’s cult following.
Originally
from a cosmetics background, Mouchel was pretty much fragrance self taught, obsessed
with the artistic aspects of olfactory experiences. He works with renowned
noses, fellow Breton Yann Vasnier (Givaudan)and Richard Ibanez (Robertet)to
create a line of fragrances that have clarity, intent and tremendous beauty.
They seem to echo luminous creations of the past, while somehow remaining
totally unique to themselves. This is very difficult to achieve in today’s
crowded and cloned fragrance world.
‘Creating
a perfume is an artform…. A great perfume is a work of art’.
This is
how Mouchel views his world. Perhaps other perfumers should listen (and take
notes….!) and we might be spared the avalanche of tedious smelling releases
that crowd around us with the monotony of elevator jazz.
The attention
to detail and commitment to quality in Divine frgrances is superb. Each of the
fragrances has soul, personality and oozes distinctive style. I have sampled
the original Divine and L’Homme de Coeur before. Then someone
passed on a decant of L’Inspiratrice,
dismissing it as too sweet for their skin. I on the other hand loved its
sweetness, it translated into chocolate fire on my skin, laced with ylang,
peony, white musks and tonka, all things I like in my fragrances. Also the rose
note floating through was rather mournful, like a cloud passing overhead on an
otherwise sunny day. Most beguiling.
My friends
D & B holiday in Brittany each year and B has been wearing the masculine Divine
fragrances for a while. They know my obsessive floral tastes and so took a risk
buying me L’Être Aimé, but this pervasive
scent showcases immortelle (helichrysum), also known as the everlasting flower,
which is one of my fetish notes in fragrance. I know many people loathe its
fenugreeky aroma, but to me it marries this anisic, curry aspect with a caramelized,
powdered sugar aspect that just smells beautiful on my skin. It is a very polarising
note but can impart a range of amazing tonal variations to fragrances, from a
bitter aromatic curry scent, to damp straw, licqorice, smoked tea, sweet hot slept-in
skin and the echo of Camargue holidays. I have a friend though who really
dislikes the scent, she claims it smells of salted bacon!
The name
immortelle refers to the fact the distinctive yellow flowers retain their
colour, even when dried. I love its ambitious tenacity on my skin. It imparts
heat and drama, a particular French southern sexuality that blows like the
mistral across the body, dry and all pervasive. At once disturbing yet hypnotic
and oddly corrosive.
I first
came across it as a note in my beloved Eau
Noire, created by Francis Kurkdjian for Hedi Slimane at Dior. Released as
part of trio with Bois D’Argent and Cologne Blanche, Eau Noire was the stand out scent of the three. Inky dark and thick
with stormy Parisian skies, I have loved it forever. I wrote about my passion
for it in one of my earlier blog pieces: Liquorice and Tweed: The Scented
Wardrobe. (A two part blog piece, starting with….)
Immortelle
has become increasingly well-known recently due to L’Occitane’s award-winning Crème Divine. This word of mouth
bestseller smells incredible and captures the earthy, hot scent of scrubby
helichrysum. Promoted heavily through QVC, more people have become aware of
this transforming and singular note.
The oil
has been prized since antiquity for its skin healing and reparative properties.
It is said to calm damaged skin and promote the renewal of new dermal cells. I
popped along to smell the L’Occitane cream again, to remind myself of the
smell. The sales consultant kindly gave me a sample in a small pot. I asked her
what she thought of the scent. She paused and said: ‘Curried honey on toast’, which I thought was
wonderful. Applying the cream to the back of my hand I can see what she means
by the breaded facet, it rises trough a tangle of green to sit softly on the
skin like toasted brioche rubbed with newly budded lavender.
Immortelle
is often described as an illuminating note, sunny, uplifting and warm. In Eau Noire though I found it intensely
dark and melancholy, lit by fields of burning lavender and smeared with smoky licquorice
tones.
Annick
Goutal’s magisterial Sables (1985) is
another beautiful interpretation of immortelle, this time more salty and spicy
sprinkled through with cumin, black tea, cinnamon, sandalwood and amber,
creating an atmospheric outdoor, rustic ambience compared to the almost
malevolent claustrophobia of Eau Noire.
One can almost hear the tremble of branches, dry summer winds in the leaves,
tumbling dust trails along deserted roads. It is a strong odour, verging on
skanky, but pulling back at the edge, easing into a greener, sweeter drydown
than might at first be imagined.
There is
also the bizarre and confrontational Immortelle
Marilyn (2011) by Nez à Nez, the niche French house founded by Christa
Patout and Stéphane Humbert Lucas in 2005. I have to admit to loving their
wacky scents, but the website is pretty rubbish. The prose they use to describe
their fragrances is pompous and does the brand no real favours at all. However
the perfumes themselves are beautiful and strange, created with passion, drama and
a healthy dose of humour.
Immortelle Marilyn is the witty supposing of what Monroe might
have scented her skin with. Despite the eternal connection of Marilyn and
Chanel No 5, it has always seemed to me she might have smelt a little more
daring, dirty, sweeter and downright minky.
The helichrysum sits in the top of the scent and so floods the senses as soon as
you inhale it off the skin. The note reeks of illicit sex, ravished by
raspberry, hazelnut and a gorgeous creamy ylang note. There is helichrysum
absolute in the base too, wrapped in musks. I love it on my skin, it smells
both joyous and filthy, something I find very amusing. Great sillage too,
floating an ambiguous hot fruitiness across my skin for hours.
The
other two immortelle-touched scents I would mention are 1740 (Marquis de Sade) by Histoires des Parfums, which plays out a
more creamy korma like interpretation of the immortelle over woods, leather and
a wicked vanilla and elemi accord.
Like This by Etat Libre D’Orange, created by Mathilde
Bijaoui for Tilda Swinton is my other recommendation, a complex and contrasting
portrayal of private spaces. Gardens, greenhouses, woodsmoke, whisky, peat, the
Scottish Highlands, baking etc. Elements that reflect the extremely complex
personality of the actress herself. Living in Scotland, I recognise echoes of
immortelle in smoke and rain, in trips to the West Coast in thunderstorms and
sniffing whiskies at the Whisky Society. Married to ginger, rose, neroli,
vetiver and a new pumpkin aroma-molecule, Like
This uses immortelle in a transcendent way, mixing its earthiness with
sweetness and a piercing intelligence. Watching Tilda’s moving and sensual
performance in I am Love, I imagine the
elements of Like This rushing around
her in waves of olfactory delirium.
So when
D & B chose L’Etre Aimé for me on their holiday in St Malo, they had
unwittingly gravitated toward one of my most obsessive and quite private notes.
It’s strange, I can lavish words of love and passion on tonka, vanilla, Veltol,
salicylates, lilies, chocolate, fructones, beeswax and ethyl maltol but somehow
my passion for immortelle seems off kilter, dirty, like a vampire’s craving for
blood. It is a very unsettling note, dry and needing the blood-beat of skin to
ignite its latent beauty.
For more information on Divine fragrances, please click below:
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