This post is for D. an Aussie lass with bite,
wit & a passion for scent & jewellery. She bought me Diorling as a
gift; the kindness of the gesture overwhelmed me.
I am dank
with Diorling this evening. It is
spiky, vintage and weird, aristocratic and leathered. It smells ancient and
cosmic, of powdered aircraft fuel and Miss Haversham’s bridal bouquet. I can
never remember if I love it or loathe it; all I know is that it smells damn
sexy on me and I am fast becoming besotted with its wanton Belle de Jour atmospherics.
The original
tweed and riding boots feel has been unstitched and restructured by Dior’s in-house
perfumer François Demachy. He has avoided facsimile and pastiche, instead producing
a scent of vintage reference and enormous modern wearability. I imagine him cracking
the notes apart with an old, heirloom crop and then carefully reassembling the
pieces, layering and varnishing, burnishing the notes with the olfactory
equivalent of worn chamois cloths. Every time I wear it I feel the air around
me thick with sepia desire. One of the reasons I am rather partial to this new Diorling is Demachy’s perverse and reverential translation of the
sixties clash of tradition and modernity into a modern perfume idiom. I would
rather this than the continued and blatant (&
often denied) reformulation of beloved classics until barely a shadow of the
original remains.
Controversy
swirls in the air when it comes to the reformulation of classic perfumes. Bloggers,
reviewers and critics bemoan the death of olfactory creation, the demise of
beauty. I am not sure it is quite so cut and dried. Extinction is part of the
way we live. Time moves on. I personally like the idea of imagining how
beautiful things once were, it allows me the chance to dream, to speculate
scent into a historical context with fashion, manners and language. All of
these are constantly reinterpreted, reinvented and thrown out into the world.
Fragrance
is no different, themes come and go, dipping in and out of lifetimes. I know
purists will always argue the case for retaining original formulae or leaving
well alone. I can understand this, perfume is deeply personal but re-interpretation,
done with reverence and intelligence by talented perfumers can yield
interesting and illuminating results.