Sometimes I find myself
wondering if the honeyed, aurous caramel note is something of a kitch holy
grail in fragrance. I know it gets dissed as a rather frivolous effect; a note
for neon scents, Starbucks lattes and Angel
clones. But increasingly, more and more niche houses are picking up this warm
enveloping gourmand note and weaving it into sophisticated, adult fragrances
that enhance and sensualise the skin whilst avoiding the more traditional
garish glow and heady residues associated with mainstream foodie fragrances.
Toffee, caramel, cocoa, milk
chocolate, popcorn, coconut, candyfloss, brown sugar, milk, coffee, loukhoum,
marshmallow, dulce de leche, nougat,
praline, marzipan, vanilla, crème caramel and honey – all of these things
sweeten our lives and delight our palates. Just reading that list makes me
weak. I rarely indulge in desserts and apart from chocolate and (very good)
Turkish delight I rarely go on sugar rampages, but when these things are woven
into scent for me to lavish on my skin… oh lordy.. then I become wild and
sweetly out of control.
My collection of fragrances
is ambrosial, with a largish amount
of candied, toothsome gourmands. I have a HUGE weakness for them. I’m not really
sure why. One rather slutty friend once suggested it was a desire to reek of
sugared skin, inviting sexual consumption… sniffing, licking and nuzzling. In
retrospect this was just a little wishful thinking on his part. All I really
know is how much I adore the effect these strange and contentious notes smell
on my body and how people react to my aura and sillage when I wear them. I say contentious
as many people loathe gourmand fragrances, arguing that foodie notes are not natural perfume smells and lack subtlety
or profundity in application and creation.
But as much as you can’t
control who you fall in love with, the same applies to perfume; we love what
our skin desires. We are slaves to molecules and our primal cerebral reactions.
I can’t remember not liking this family of moreish dainties and delectable
addictions.
I have been a huge fan of
Shay & Blue since they launched in January 2013. I have all of their scents
expect the Sicilian Limes and that is
due to my citrus aversion more than anything else. It does however use salt
rather beautifully, a dry cocktaily foreshadowing of the saline rush in Salt Caramel. I have previously blogged
on the house, so please feel free to follow the links below and read my
thoughts on Atropa Belladonna, Blood Orange,
Amber Rose, Suffolk Lavender and
Almond Cucumber.
&
Everything artistic director Dom
de Vetta and in-house perfumer Julie Massé conjure up for this most immaculate
and elegant of brands is studiously seductive. Last year’s Oud Alif was just sensational and restored my much eroded faith in
an overused and ubiquitous ingredient. Julie Massé wrapped the oud in the most
delicious embrace of dark chocolate, saffron, leather, vanilla and patchouli.
These more tenebrous gourmand notes softened the intensity of the oud, while a
really ballsy coffee-toned patchouli augmented the woody cocoa facet. Oud Alif smells narcotic on flesh,
profound and reeking of seared, mellow spice.
Blacks Club Leather appeared earlier this year, a partnership with
Blacks Club in Soho, London. Now I am a sucker for well-heeled leather in any
form and this haunting juice was billed as the distillation of old English
leather, aged books, crackling fires, brandy, smoke, wingbacks, ottomans, tweed
etc. The essence of secretive clubs, the impregnated exhalations of all seeing,
all absorbing walls. It has gravitas and a growling sex appeal that belies its
quiescent opening salvo of leather and cognac. The animalic charms of sweet,
malleable beeswax give BCL a plush sense of privacy and safety. There is just
enough woods and incense to blow a little mystery through the composition, but
not enough to obfuscate the sensuality.
The key to Shay & Blue’s
success is pretty obvious actually; their fragrances smell bloody gorgeous on
skin. Simple really. But I am still amazed by how much mediocre scent appears
each year. I understand the need to make money and safely invest in slick and failsafe advertising. However in this
age of immersive social media and olfactive awareness the success of a brand
can be measured by its willingness to engage sincerely and stylishly with its
adherents. Shay & Blue have done this from the beginnings of the brand, from
pantone and font choices to flower harvests, product development and
beautifully managed (and colour co-ordinated!) social media. By the time Shay
& Blue actually starting selling online and then opened its first boutique,
we had become quite familiar with perfumer Julie Massé and creative director
Dom de Vetta. Each new release is joyfully diffused in a way that feels organic
and entirely convincing. They are one of the few brands whose releases I
genuinely anticipate with glee.
Then there is the price
point. I’ve talked about this before, but Dom has managed to create a luxurious
brand with everything worked out to the last detail and still retail 30ml
bottles of eau de parfum for £30, 100mls for £55 and his black label series
which include the Oud Alif and Blacks Club Leather at £85 for 100ml.
These prices seem insane considering the incredibly high build quality of the
scents. Other niche brands such as Editions Frédéric Malle charge upwards of
£150 for a 50ml of the Dries van Noten scent and Penhaligon’s recently pushed
their price limit way up, asking £150 for the gaudy and divisive Tralala collaboration with Meadham Kirchhoff.
Even the black-bottled Cologne Intense series at Jo Malone (Dom de Vetta’s
previous olfactive employer) retail at £100. But we are well over a year into
the life of Shay & Blue and prices have remained as they were when the
brand launched.
I often use Shay & Blue
as an example to friends, clients and Foxy followers of a brand that had
managed to successfully combine a super-stylish niche profile with innovative
colour-drenched social media and of course exceptional scent making. They feel
small, familiar and intimately assembled as a company. Yet the undoubted cult
status of the brand and the absolute wearability
of their scents (the Oud Alif and Blood Oranges have been particularly
lauded…) make them one of the most fascinating houses in recent years.
Now we have a full-blown
swooning gourmand from Dom and Julie in the golden, salt-dusted boldness of Salt Caramel, a scent inspired by Charbonnel et Walker’s Sea Salt Caramel Truffles, perhaps one
of the most ridiculously moreish bonbons ever. (Damn these sugared orbs…they are the Devil’s work I tell you…!). Charbonnel et Walker has been around
since 1875 and holds a royal warrant to the Queen as purveyors of chocolates to
the royal household. Based in the Royal Arcade on Old Bond Street, the brand’s
silky dark chocolate is shockingly addictive. I confess to a terrible weakness
for their English Rose & Violet
Creams. They taste of heritage rooms and sweeping thirties diaphanous
couture. The distinctive round boxes and elegant ribboning with the trademark
font make the brand one of the most identifiable on the market.
The Sea Salt Caramel Truffles are sexy little chocolates, a smooth
ganache of caramel-enriched airy truffle encased in an oddly saline-tinted
shell. When you pop them in your mouth, the sugared exterior explodes with
sweetness but is immediately hurled against a really beautiful mouthlick of sea
salt. I love salt.. probably a little too much to be honest.. I tend to lavish
it on food; my palate adores it, much more so than sugar. As a scent note, it’s
a little trickier to locate and appreciate.
Lynn Harris’ Fleur de Sel for Miller Harris is a
fabulous aromatic portrait of Batz sur Mer in Brittany where she spent
childhood holidays, reeds and grasses whispering by windswept beaches under
saline drenched skies. Maurice Roucel’s L
for Lolita Lempicka is a delicious (and quite weird) blend of salt, sugar,
cinnamon, musk and vanilla. An immortelle note lends a burnt driftwood tone to what
is essentially an erotic portrait of skin drenched in tanning cream emerging
from the sea…
I was incredibly excited when
Shay & Blue tweeted about the Salt
Caramel; Julie Massé had already used a melting dulce de leche note in Amber
Rose, layering a silken milkiness over the May Rose and musks. It lends the
scent an overall creamy lushness that is rare in floral gourmands. Sicilian Limes demonstrated how to twist
salt through a composition, albeit a razor sharp and oddly Indian spiced one! I
get huge whiffs of either immortelle or fenugreek off my skin whenever I have
sampled this strange citrus. I do love the rosemary though and as it settles
down I am reminded of Italian flat breads spiked with oily burnt shards of
rosemary, tumbled with crystals of sea salt. Oud Alif also worked a gourmand note of dark chocolate into its
smooth mix to partner the simmering shadows cast by the complexities of oud.
Julie Massé chose saffron and leather to further enhance the profundity of the often-overworked
oud. The result was a refreshingly elegant and approachable addition to the oud
genre that relied more on mystery and allure than all-out skank.
So Shay & Blue are no
strangers to the subtleties of the gourmand note and it was only a matter of
time before Dom and Julie applied their considerable skills to the seductive
gastronomic charisma of a full-blown gourmand fragrance for the house. For me,
the lure of a successful gourmand fragrance lies in a smooth and accomplished
golden confection, a tawny sense of allure that speaks of honeyed skin and
aurous, blissful pour. Rather this than the sickly jarring augmentation of
sugar and tooth in the neon perfumes of gaudy celebrity. Ultimately, wearing a
gourmand is the act of transforming one’s skin into a gustatory playground.
In an article for Stylist
Magazine Nigella Lawson, surely one of the most sensual and hedonistic cooks of
our time, wrote:
‘I’m in the middle of a love affair with salted
caramel. It’s heady, it’s passionate, it may - like the stalker’s obsessive
focus – not be entirely healthy, but I take the view that few in this world
have the luxury to be blasé about pleasure. There’s simply not enough of it
about for us to gainsay what gifts are offered up for our enjoyment. True, for
many, self-denial has its own exquisite agony, but I am not among their number.
For me, a “more is more” kind of person, I don’t want merely to experience
pleasure, I want to wallow in it – gloriously and gratefully – while it lasts.’
Welcome to Salt Caramel. On the skin it is heaven, sweet
salty heaven. The licky-licky salt effect just bursts through layers of caramel
and musks, beguiling the somewhat startled senses. You are prepared I think for
sweetness and yes it’s gorgeously candied, but the dry, blueness of the saline
rub is just fabulous. It actually dramatically increases one’s craving for the
ultrasugar. This dichotomy swings back and forth as the fragrance spreads like
honey on hot skin. The struggle lies in the skin itself. Do I go salt or sweet? Yet as with food, we often smell them
together and side-by-side. It’s a
very odd sensation; just on the cusp of what Nigella goes on to refer to in her
article as the ‘bliss point’, the moment when the mouth-feel of something is
sheer perfection. The same could be said of Shay & Blue’s Salt Caramel
a bliss point in scented skin when the meld of gourmandise and niche perfumery
is this damn good.
We will all smell different
in this most decadent of caramel kisses. The vanilla, sandalwood and tonka bean
further enhance the ambrosial lacquer the scent lays down on skin. The tonka in
particular has a certain smoky resonance that works beautifully with the
aridity of the salt. In gastronomy, salt has the unusual effect of
counteracting any potential bitterness that caramel can sometimes impart to
flavour.
Sampling, buying and wearing
so many gourmand scents over the years I have realised one of the main problems
is sustaining or maintaining any semblance of a smooth evaporation curve in the
sweeter elements that we often crave in the scents in the first place. What is
often left at the end, whimpering, is a somewhat generic benzoin-suffused
artificial vanillic note. It’s tough to sustain the interest. You don’t want
full-on sweetness for hours on end, but you do want echoes of honey, caramel,
lactones, chocolate to linger and settle with gentle suggestion and style. Like
one truffle too many, the craving can so easily tip into queasiness and
aversion.
Salt Caramel
joins some esteemed company for me. I have other delicious caramel tinted
scents I wear. Prada Candy from 2011
was a huge benchmark for caramel scents in that it presented a truly chic and
desirable reflection of the candied dream. It is pretty good actually, lovely
stylish work by Daniele Andrier, a MASSIVE dose of benzoin, caramel, vanilla
and some casual musks but pretty much just the resin. I went through bottles of
the stuff; I found it so beautiful to layer under other fragrances as a kind of
honeyed balsamic base. If I’m honest I prefer the L’Eau version with added Italian citrus notes and sweet pea. It’s
rare these days that flankers out-dazzle their pro-genitors, but Candy L’Eau uses the caramel to lay more
of a gauzy veil as opposed to the more intense spray tan of the original.
I really liked the melted
waffle-cone quirkiness of Unknown
Pleasures by John Pegg at Kerosene Fragrances. The interesting aspect of
this scent is John’s use of Earl Grey tea and lemon over the honey, tonka and
waffle cone notes. The caramel is drizzled through like a lovely summer cone
craved on a rare British summer’s day. You can almost smell the cheap Mr Whippy
ice cream melting done the sides of the cone and onto your fingers. A cunning and
comforting scent. Every time I wore it, I smiled. That speaks volumes about how
interesting it was on my cynical hide.
Gerard Ghislain is best known
for his luxurious Histoires de Parfums
line. I own 1969, Moulin Rouge and Music Hall. I love his work, its reeks
of originality and a certain French style of insouciance and barely concealed
decadence. But he also has two other very different diffusion lines. One is the
travel/airport themed Scent of Departure,
a line of city named scents with very distinctive packaging inspired by the
abbreviated airport tags tied onto luggage. The other is the delightful Alice & Peter, five fragrances in very
well made cupcake-styled bottles, unashamedly gourmand and frivolously moreish.
My favourite (and currently sitting in my scented study like a joyful toy) is Showy Toffee, a very singular mix of
caramel, ozonics, cut grass, lilac and chocolate. It is surprisingly diaphanous
with the caramel note cleverly concealed behind a transparency of buzzy floral
approximations. Not the most sophisticated of scents but then I’m not always in
the mood for high culture and this giddy cupcake thing is lovely.
Another caramel-tinged
construction worth mentioning is Praline de
Santal by Parfumerie Générale, although strictly speaking it falls down more
on the nuttier, smeared side of things. But Pierre Guillaume uses a really
defined patisserie style of poured, craquelure caramel across a wonderful woody
hazelnut note. It is drier and more aloof than a more obvious foodie gourmand
but no less atmospheric for it. In fact Pierre Guillaume has created some truly
outstanding gourmand fragrances for his line over the years including Felanilla, Musc Maori and Aomassaï. Pierre seems to instinctively
understand how to assemble the effects of golden sweetness and then create
edifices of unexpected light and strangeness around them.
I can’t really talk about
caramel scents without mentioning Parfums Mugler’s sublime Alien flanker from the Le
Gout du Parfum series in 2011. Michelin-starred chef Hélène Darroze was
asked to sublimate the four classic Mugler scents – Alien, Angel, Womanity and A*Men
with key gastronomic notes; thus augmenting the main characteristics of each
cult perfume. A mulchy dark cocoa was plunged through Angel, lending the scent a dark simmering sophistication. Fig
chutney laced Womanity; the sweet and
spicy fruit notes working delicately with the scent’s unusual and much vaunted
caviar glow. A*Men was the least
interesting (are men generally just not considered connoisseur enough?),
sprinkled with pimento in half-hearted attempt to fire up a rather dull
incarnation of their best-selling men’s aroma. But the best of the quartet was Alien, a scent that has travelled far
and wide from Ropion and Bruyère’s radiant, musky classic. Darroze chose
buttered salted caramel to enhance this most solar and expansive of fragrances.
In many ways, it was the most perfect marriage of nuances, the jasmine sambac
dipped in golden sugar and left oozing and glossy in the dark.
So as you can see, the Fox
loves his gourmands. My perfume study is littered with candied luminous
delights. For me though, Shay & Blue’s cultured and stylish Salt Caramel is one of the finest I’ve
worn for a while. Skin smells seriously halcyon and lickable. Yet rather than
the often gimmicky faltering of many foodie scents; in the talented hands of
Julie Massé, the thoughtful positioning and alliance of caramel and salt have
been raised to the olfactive equivalent of classic French haute-patisserie.
It’s still tremendous fun though
and after the fabulous crash of salt and sweet hits the senses it becomes a
truly beautiful scent, naughty, fulgent and quietly sensual. A scent to indulge
in, drown in, over and over again. As ever Shay & Blue have managed to
seduce the senses while creating a fragrance that oozes desirability and
considered sophistication. Do yourselves a scented favour, get some Salt Caramel and get candied this
summer.
For more information on Shay & Blue, please click on the link below:
Ooh this sounds absolutely divine! Do you know when the release date outside of the UK is? I know it's available there, but I really can't justify spending £18.50 in shipping for a £30 fragrance...
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