Fragrance Review, U.S. Fragrance

Smile & Shine from The Zoo – Fragrance Review

Smile & Shine is not something that I would have ever purchased for myself; my forest witch/eldritch librarian aesthetic doesn’t support much sunny citrus. But it is a bit of technical wizardry, which makes it interesting to me, and remarkable enough to write about. I’m a fangirl of Christophe Laudamiel, precisely because of things like this perfume.

Fragrance Review, Indie Fragrance, U.S. Fragrance

Relief from Chris Rusak Perfume – Fragrance Review

Like Perfume Nostradamus, Chris Rusak has once again delivered the timeliest of remedies. At the end of April, we got After Every Ounce of Joy (Leaves My Body), a reflection on trauma that was deeply introspective and affecting.

Our collective trauma has only intensified in the six months since. Now, when everything else in the world feels so complex and heavy, Rusak gives us Relief, his new studio limited release. A perfume for pure enjoyment, for conjuring moments of beauty and ease.

Fragrance Review, Indie Fragrance, U.S. Fragrance

The Beast Mode Diaries (Beast Mode from Chris Rusak Perfume)

I’ve wrestled with writing about Beast Mode for ten months now, and I still haven’t come up with anything that conveys its simple genius, the way it’s both beautiful and serious, austere and profound, how it feels like a safe embrace and a soft armor against the world. Rather than just continue to flounder, and say nothing at all, I’ve decided to take a collection of various thoughts and feelings that I’ve written down during different wearings of Beast Mode, and simply share them. I hope you find them intriguing.

Ambient Scents, Fragrance Review, Home Fragrance

JURASSIC FLOWER by Carlos Benaïm for Frédéric Malle

“Think of it as Glade air freshener for billionaires.” (Ralph Gardner Jr. – The Wall Street Journal). After writing a review for the new release from Fūm Fragrances titled “Jurassic Flower,” it was brought to my attention that Frédéric Malle has had a scent for many years called Jurassic Flower, and it’s based on a very similar concept — the ancient magnolia tree.

brown leatherbound Book of Shadows with triple moon and pentagram and Alkemia Book of Shadows Perfume spray
Fragrance Review, Indie Fragrance, U.S. Fragrance

Book of Shadows from Alkemia Perfumes – Fragrance Review

Book of Shadows is a very inky scent, but it doesn’t smell like your typical “ink” perfume. It’s not the sludgy, sooty scent of India ink, and it’s not just some murky, mothbally cypriol to suggest inkiness. It’s the crisp, flowy, and purple-black scent of iron gall ink. Bitter and fruity-nutty like gum arabic, with a metallic sheen (that just flirts with being reminiscent of heme), I can imagine thick, dense downstrokes, hairlike upstrokes, and dainty flourishes. The “throw,” when I get a random sniff from arm’s length, sometimes reminds me of the sweet, rubbery-tinged smell of a good print shop ink

Fragrance Review, Limited Release Fragrance, U.S. Fragrance

Jurassic Flower from Fūm Fragrances – Fragrance Review

It’s been a while since I was moved by a fragrance description. But when I saw the photos on Instagram of magnolia flowers with their waxy leaves and curly carpels and a caption that promised “a unique twist on magnolia,” it grabbed me by the heartstrings and I pretty much had to try Jurassic Flower by Fūm Fragrances. Maybe it’s the inability to travel right now, or even be outside really, that filled me with a longing for this magnolia from the sea.