Why We Like Perfume So Much

Friday, February 27, 2009

Think of perfume and pleasant thoughts float to your mind. The mention of perfume brings a different smell and memory to each person. Just about everyone wears or owns perfume or cologne of some kind. In the United States, many children are introduced to perfume by the time they are three or four years old.

Perfume is like an olfactory photograph. The fragrance of perfume attaches itself to you and your memories. When you smell the perfume of a close friend or relative, you automatically think of the person. Although you can’t see their features, their essence is captured in the lingering fragrance of their perfume.

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Perfume Base Components


Natural Perfume Scents:

Many plants exude a natural fragrance, which comes from the part of the plant that has been broken down to its essential oils and compounds. Several parts of a plant may be used to extract the scent for a perfume. Flowers and blossoms are obvious plant parts used in making perfume, but leaves, twigs, roots, bulbs, seeds, fruit, bark, wood, resin, and even lichens can be used as well. Other organic fragrances, such as musk, civet, castoreum, ambergris, and honeycomb, come from animals.


Synthetic Perfume Fragrances:

Creating perfumes from organic substances, such as plant and animal scents, is an expensive process that results in very pricey perfume. The use of chemical compounds to create perfumes allows designers to develop similar scents for a fraction of the cost, making perfumes affordable and favorite fragrances readily available to everyone in the world.

Synthetic aromas in perfumes normally aren't found in the environment, but are common in many of today’s perfumes. Synthetics come from combinations of some of the chemicals found in petroleum and pine. One such example is the pale yellow liquid ionone, with its woody, dry, fruity, raspberry, and violet aromas. Another is linalool, a naturally occurring terpene alcohol chemical with a floral scent with pleasant hints of spice.

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What is perfume made from?


Perfume is usually made of a mixture of fragrances, either man-made (synthetic) or organic which, when combined, creates a pleasant scent or aroma. As well as on our persons, perfume fragrances are used in air fresheners for homes and cars, and many other everyday commodities.

Perfume fragrances are the ways we identify with our surroundings, people, and memories. Perfumes and perfume scents surround us, but perfume is more than just a pretty scent. Perfume design is a science.

When we first smell a perfume, our brain tries to identify the origin of the aroma. Perfume developers have categorized perfume scents into seven different categories, used to create both synthetic and natural perfumes. The perfume categories include Chypre, Citrus, Floral, Fougère, Leather, Oriental (Amber), and Woody. In addition, perfume designers sub-categorize these scents even further by whether the perfume is designed for men or women.

  • Chypre has a base of bergamot, jasmine, or oak moss with a scent similar to apricot or custard.
  • Citrus is based on the distinctive smells of citrus fruits like oranges, limes, and lemons.
  • Floral perfumes are the scents of a single flower variety or a group of flowers.
  • Fougère (aromatic) is usually men’s cologne and tends to have a woody smell mixed with herbs.
  • Leather is another usually masculine scent with a focus on honey, aromatic wood, or tobacco smells.
  • Orientals are based in camphorous oils and incense resins.
  • Woody fragrances come from natural woods and other aromas you’d find in the forest such as patchouli and sandalwood.

Although you may be familiar with the distinct aromas of each of these categories, what many people don’t know is the perfume note classifications of their perfumes.

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Introduction

Friday, February 20, 2009


Perfume is made from about 78% to 95% of specially denatured ethyl alcohol and a remainder of essential oils. Perfume is the costliest form of fragrance with 22% of essential oils. Eau de Parfum (EDP), comes next with between 15 and 22% essential oils. That's followed by Eau de Toilette (EDT) with 8 to 15% oils.

The weaker Eau de Cologne has just 4% essential oils. For those who crave super subtlety Eau Fraiche with 1 to 3% essential oils, is the lightest dilution of fragrance. Many new
perfumes are promoted as EDPs and an EDT is not always produced as there has been a vogue for Eau de Parfum as individuals want a more lasting signature.

There are major fragrance categories - Floral, Oriental, Floriental, Chypre, Green Marine and Fruit. Typical plant products include anise, bay leaf, bergamot, cardamom, cedar wood, eucalyptus, frankincense, gardenia, geranium, iris, jasmine, lavender, lemon, lilac, lily, lily of the valley, magnolia, moss, neroli, orange, orris, patchouli, pine, raspberry, rose, sage, sandalwood, tuberose, vanilla, violet and ylang-ylang.

Typical animal products used in
perfume include musk from the male musk deer, ambergris from sperm whales, castoreum a secretion of the beaver and civet from the civet cat. All are used as fixatives and add an indefinable mystery to the smell at the same time.

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The Definition

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Perfume is a liquid with a pleasant smell, usually made from oils taken from flowers or spices, which is often used on the skin.

A
hoax is a misleading trick to con naive individuals and groups into believing something that is not true or a ruse. Hoaxes can be anything between a good-hearted practical joke out and out right scandalous swindle.

The
perfume hoax comes by various ways, such as online emails that make the rounds from time to time telling about some poor soul who is exiting some type of business, such as department stores and gas stations. You will find that these types of hoaxes seem to change the location and the name of the place where the so-called perfume hoax takes place. These usually involve a story about a person being approached by an individual or a group who ask them what perfume they are wearing and try to sell them bogus perfumes. Alternatively, they may have them sniff a perfume and then the target person becoming unconscious by smelling what is in the perfume bottle or sample, only to awaken to find them robbed or raped.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jessica_Bradbury

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