From the Fragrance Frontlines: It's Not Quite Paris Without a Gerard Depardieu Sighting
Filed under: CELEBRITY STYLE, Fragrance, Beauty, Celebrity, News, Makeup

Senior Fashion Editor Sarah Cristobal is on assignment this week in France to discover what goes into creating the world's top fragrances. Read her daily blogs as she travels to perfumeries in Paris and Grasse, and dutifully observes the ooh la la of French culture.
Mmm...chocolate. AXE Dark Temptations Shower Gel and Deodorant. Photo courtesy of AXE.
Just when we thought life couldn't get any more français, who do we run into but the restaurant's owner and accomplished actor Gerard Depardieu! He was finishing a meal with his family and we all took pleasure in learning that he dines there almost every evening. It took all my restraint not to yell, "I loved you in Green Card!" as he plunked down on his scooter and rode off into the night.
But the Depardieu spotting wasn't our only celebrity run-in of the evening...
A booty-shaking session transpired at Le Baron, and shimmying next to us on the dance floor was none other than Beth Ditto from The Gossip. Dressed in a long white T-shirt and heavy eye make-up, we looked around anxiously for cameos by her new BFF's Kate Moss and Karl Lagerfeld, but alas...
The next morning we were up early and at Givaudan, the oldest and largest producer of flavor and scents in the world. Like IFF, it can lay claim to some of the world's top fragrances starting with Elsa Schiaparelli's Shocking in 1937, all the way up to Calvin Klein's Secret Obsession. A chronological history of men's fragrances was presented (note: Aqua di Gio, which was created in 1996 has been the most successful cologne of the past ten years).
AXE Instinct. Photos courtesy of AXE












Ormonde Jayne Perfumery 5-28-2009 @ 6:23AM
Dear Sarah
Apologies for using the comments section, but I couldn't find an email address for you. I would like to introduce you to Ormonde Jayne Perfumery and send you our new Sample Programme with all eleven fragrances.
Ormonde Jayne is a niche perfume house in Old Bond Street, London created and owned by perfumer Linda Pilkington who has sourced the world for rare and exquisite oils to make this award winning range of Parfum, Scented Candles & the Bathing Colleciton. Oils used include Black Hemlock, Champaca, Sampaquita, Black Iris and Tolu and fans include Will Smith, Bryan Ferry, Goldie Hawn and Ashley Jensen.
The bathing range that Ormonde Jayne recently created will be to your taste too! It is entirely free of parabens, sulphates, petrochemical, GM ingredients, mineral oils and colourings.
Do please let us know if you would like any more information, or send us your address for the Sample Programme.
Best regards
Sarah Ehrlich
PR for Ormonde Jayne
Online boutique with worldwide shipping www.ormondejayne.com
If anyone creates a perfume collection a century from now, it will quite possibly
resemble Ormonde Jayne's. (Ormonde Man EDP Maximum 5 Stars)
Chandler Burr - Perfume Critic of The New York Times
Ormonde Jayne is the small but seductive shop in London's Royal Arcade
and you really should smell these candles. There's Osmanthus, an uplifting
mix of lime, pomelo, mint, galbanum & jasmine. Others feature Casablanca
Lily, Sampaquita, sambac, coriander. All of them not only transport you to
another world, at least emotionally, but they also come in the chic-est orange
box and are hand-made at the brand's candle studio in London.
Edwina Ings Chambers - Beauty & Luxury Editor of The Financial Times
My quest is over. I found it. A perfume that is happy to let you wear it and not
the other way around. Orris Noir is a perfume that is both comforting and sensual,
it's exotic but not overpowering and smells like a classic even though it's new.
What really makes me like Linda Pilkington (Ormonde Jayne's creator & perfumer) is that
she isn’t a perfume bore. She just likes to smell nice, and has enough confidence to create
perfumes that do that, but with a twist of something you won’t find in Duty Free. And although
her packaging is pretty, that is not what you are paying for: the money is going towards top-quality
ingredients. Her formulas (by which I mean the base oils that create the scent itself) cost between
£350-£400 a kilo. A commercial perfume would spend £70-£80 a kilo. Makes you think, no?
Sarah Vine - Beauty Editor of The Times of London
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