Discussion, Fragrance News, French Fragrance

Let’s talk about Diptyque’s new Do Son ad campaign

The imagery of pagodas, junk boats, lotuses, and cranes being used to sell Do Son seems like unmistakable Orientalism. This film and ad campaign are presenting a fantasy of Vietnam to sell a French perfume. The Vietnamese people won their freedom from French colonial rule in 1954, at the end of the eight-year French Indochina war. Diptyque was founded a few years later in Paris in 1961. The company started as a “bazaar” where the three owners sold textiles and objets d’art collected during their travels of the world.

Orientalism and Primitivism peaked in the 1960’s. Fashion and trends were based on inspiration from cultures and locations that designers perceived as “exotic.” Often these ideas are presented as the Western “discovery” of non-Western cultural phenomena. Orientalism and Primitivism are inextricably linked to cultural hegemony and European imperialism. Cultural appropriation without considering the context of the appropriated design and Western exploitation of other cultures to sell goods was always wrong. Fifty years later we all should know better, and it’s reasonable and ethical to expect people and companies to do better.

Discussion

Bittersweet: How loss connected me to the Monell Center’s fight against anosmia

Most people learn of the Monell Center when they (or a loved one) have suffered a sensory loss. The Monell Center, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is the world’s only independent, non-profit scientific institute dedicated to interdisciplinary basic research on the senses of taste and smell.

I became personally connected to Monell in quite a different way, through the loss of a friend. This week would have been his birthday, so I am taking time to remember him in a number of ways, and this is one. Here is a little part of our story.

Canadian Fragrance, Discussion, Fragrance Quick Sniff

Etat Libre d’Orange Experimentum Crucis, and thoughts on writing “negative reviews”

The topic of negative perfume reviews is pertinent to me today, as I think about my liberties, because I tried a perfume, and I didn’t like it, and usually that would be the end of it. But some people think that my hesitation to then go out and bash the fragrance publicly is a major problem in “the fragcomm,” a giant smear on the credibility and reputations of just about everyone.

Discussion

The Enemy of Good is Perfect (perfectionism, procrastination, and making excuses for not writing)

Do you struggle with writing, because you are demanding perfection instead of striving for excellence? Are you always waiting for the perfect time, perfect conditions, or perfect opportunity? Are you saving your best ideas for that “perfect” situation (that might never present itself)? If so, maybe you can relate to my latest post, in which I am committing to letting go and writing more.