Showing posts with label aboutthisblog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aboutthisblog. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28

Fragrance 101: The Fragrance Pyramid (Part 3)




In the previous Fragrance 101 post, the different ingredients used in fragrance design and creation were discussed.  These ingredients will have different evaporation rates that are crucial in creating a perfectly performing fragrance.

The evaporation rate is also key in creating the olfactive pyramid or a fragrance triangle. The fragrance pyramid is the structure of the fragrance very much similar to a house’s structure – walls, roof, foundation and pillars. Fragrance structure progresses into three parts – the top, the middle or heart and the base or bottom notes.  Fragrance ingredients are placed from the top to bottom in descending order of evaporation rates.

Fragrance Pyramid

The TOP NOTE gives the initial impression of the fragrance. Top note ingredients are volatile and diffuse quickly. This part of a fragrance provides the impact and appeal. The hedonics hook is very important at this stage as it promotes product trial.

Citrus considered as part of top note (image from Pinterest)

However, you have to sample the fragrance first before making any final decision. There are instances that the fragrance changes in direction as the less volatile compounds become more pronounced. This brings us to the next part.

The BODY or MIDDLE of a fragrance is a complex blend of less volatile ingredients. This is normally when you and the people around you enjoy the fragrance the most. It establishes what the fragrance really smells like. It more or less represents the entire fragrance and helps consumer loyalty to the product.

Versace Yellow Diamond Pyramid from sunshinekelly.com


However, we want our fragrances to last long. And this is when the next part of the pyramid is important. The DRY DOWN or BASE notes of a fragrance include fixatives and other notes that diffuse very slowly. These notes support the more volatile notes of the body and top, and balance the fragrance.

Cedarwood, an ingredient in base note

You can rebalance the fragrance to contain more of the top and less of the base in order to create more impact and freshness. But it will not last long. This type of fragrance is perfect for tropical countries, like the Philippines, where we want our fragrance to be strong in terms of appeal and impact.

On the other hand, you can also create a heavier base and make it last very long, but it will not be as fresh and strong. This type of fragrance perfectly addresses the preferences of the Middle Eastern market.


What's Next in Fragrance 101...
In the next Fragrance 101 post, we will be tackling fragrance description and families.


Previous Post


_________________________________________________________________________________
Fragrance 101 is a series of posts that will introduce the readers and fragrance fans into the magical world of fragrances. The author will impart his knowledge on what a fragrance is, how to understand fragrance descriptions and the different fragrance families used in describing the fragrances in this blog.



Fragrance 101: Ingredients Used In Making Fragrances (Part 2)




Image from prevention.com

Continuing with our Fragrance 101 series, fragrance is made up of different ingredients much like a lotion or a shampoo.  These ingredients are categorized according to sources and these are naturals – from plants and animals, and aroma chemicals.

Animal sourced ingredients are ingredients that come from specialized glands of animals. You had to kill animals just to get those ingredients and make into perfume. Samples of ingredients sourced from animals are musks (from an abdominal gland of a male deer), civet (from civet cats), castoreum (from beavers) and amber gris (from whales).

Musk Deer (image from wikipedia)

Today, due to ethical and pricing reasons, animal products are a rarity in modern perfumery as they have been replaced by synthetic versions. But their history, usage and contribution to the industry have been very valuable. Originally they were used as fixatives in fragrances, bringing warmth, depth and complexity to a fragrance.

Plants, the most common source of fragrance ingredients, are extracted for their natural aroma oils. Flowers, fruits and even barks and roots are just some of the plants that we use to get our aroma oils from. So, imagine the palette of ingredients we can already use for fragrance designs.  Not to mention, that for any alteration in the extraction process – temperature, solvent, time to name a few – you get different essential oils. 

Image from mnh20.wordpress.com

For example, 4 different extraction of bitter orange blossom yields 4 different types of essential oils – orange flower concrete, orange flower water, neroli oils and orange blossom absolute.

Sample extraction processes for bitter orange

The aroma chemicals or synthetic chemicals are molecules that were created in the laboratory for fragrance purposes. This is the most commonly used ingredient as they are relatively more economical, sustainable, and quality assured as compared to plant extraction. Due to advances in technologies, aroma chemicals not only represent the synthetic counterpart of natural-sourced fragrances but also advances in molecules allowing more complex and consumer-preferred fragrances.

Benzaldehyde was the first aroma molecule created in the mid 19th century. This was naturally present in bitter almond oils. Then coumarin (tonka bean) came in 1868 and vanillin appeared in 1874 among others.

Vanillin Molecuke

As highlighted in the previous post, fragrance ingredients MUST evaporate in order for you to smell it. Without the molecules converted into gas, then the olfactive bulb (epithelium) in your nose will not be able to smell anything, as highlighted in this post. Different ingredients have different evaporation rates. Perfumers know all these in order to create a perfectly performing fragrance.




What's Next in Fragrance 101...
In the next Fragrance 101 post, the fragrance pyramid will be introduced.


Previous Post


_________________________________________________________________________________
Fragrance 101 is a series of posts that will introduce the readers and fragrance fans into the magical world of fragrances. The author will impart his knowledge on what a fragrance is, how to understand fragrance descriptions and the different fragrance families used in describing the fragrances in this blog.


Sunday, January 25

Fragrance 101: What Is A Fragrance (Part 1)


What is a fragrance?

Photo from caramellafashionbg.wordpress.com

FRAGRANCE AS AN ART

I would always compare fragrance to a painting or a sculpture - an art. Whilst paintings and sculptures are described based on what you see and feel - colours, strokes, angles that evoke certain emotions, a fragrance is something that you feel and remember based on what your nose smells.

Image from kalundinha.com

In my earlier entry regarding the olfactive sense, fragrance evokes certain memories and emotions linked to that memory. And this is where fragrance becomes an art, similar to paintings, sculptures and architectures. The only caveat is that you have to see and be with it for you to smell it, as opposed to visual arts, wherein a simple Google search will give you an image to cherish.

FRAGRANCE AS A SCIENCE

Fragrance is also a science. It involves a lot of chemistry and physics, and recently, also involves biotechnology and botany. A fragrance consists of different organic volatile ingredients. And these ingredients need to evaporate in order for you to smell it. These ingredients (more on these in a separate post) when mixed together must create a harmonious balance for that hedonically pleasant scent. Without the understanding of science, it will be difficult to create a stable mixture that will smell good and will perform according to specifications.

Image from rbnainfo.com

Therefore, a fragrance is a harmonious combination of different ingredients that results in a hedonically pleasant smell evoking different emotions and memories. It is both art and science.


What's Next in Fragrance 101...
In the next Fragrance 101 post, different ingredients used in fragrance design will be discussed.


_________________________________________________________________________________
Fragrance 101 is a series of posts that will introduce the readers and fragrance fans into the magical world of fragrances. The author will impart his knowledge on what a fragrance is, how to understand fragrance descriptions and the different fragrance families used in describing the fragrances in this blog.



Saturday, January 3

#THEWORLDINOSE2014


This year The World I Nose will be reviewing a lot of fragrances and going to different places in the Philippines and in Asia.  Who knows, a trip in the US and EU may also be in the works. Watch out for them!

But before we head on to my plans for 2015, here is a video of my 2014. Enjoy!



Exciting 2015 for The World I Nose!!!

PS. I do not own copyrights to some of the pictures and the two audio files used. I acknowledged the true owners in the video.  Thanks and peace!

Thursday, December 25

Merry Christmas

From our family to yours, I wish you great holidays and cheers to a wonderful year!

Nick Nick Boo Boo

The Ryans

Monday, November 17

Scent of Smell and Scent of Taste



When we were kids, oftentimes, moms would pinch our noses when we are forced to drink our medicines - be it antibiotic, vitamin supplements or even for diarrhea. There is logic behind this.

Do you remember this?
Photo from: http://earlyyearschildcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/bad-tasting-kids-medicine.jpg

Try this out. Pinch your nose then chew on a mint gum. After several seconds, release your fingers and observe what happens.

Chew this.
Photo from http://mentalfloss.com/sites/default/files/iStock_000003107516-mint_6.jpg

Suddenly, you feel that burst of flavor rushing through your mouth. And that is why the nose pinching, so that we taste nothing to easily swallow the meds. Yes, the both senses are important for us to enjoy our food.

Remember in elementary science courses, our tongue can only distinguish 4 kinds of taste - sweet, salty, sour, and bitter. (There are some ideas behind umami as the fifth kind of taste but I cannot validate.)

TheTongue
Photo from: http://puertoviejowines.com/wp-content/uploads/tongue.jpg


The sense of smell is important for us to "taste" other things - vanilla, milk, coffee, mint, chocolate, etc.  That's why when we are sick or have colds, we seem to think that all things we eat are just bitter or sour or sweet and nothing else in between. This demonstrates that our sense of taste is dependent to our sense of smell.

Hence, sometimes, when we describe the food we eat, we normally use the sense of smell to describe them - tastes like pepper, like herbs and spices or, worse, like fart.

Remember this? Harry Potter's Bertie Bott's Every Flavor Beans
Photo from: http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20100908161406/harrypotter/images/a/ac/Jelly_belly_bertie_botts.jpg




Olfactive Meter / Rating



Throughout this blog, I will be using the following Olfactive Meter:

5 - Sensorial Overload
  • wonderful, awesome, must-try, must-eat, must-do
4 - Scentsational
  • Interesting, for your consideration, great but not quite

3 - Scent Neutral
  • neither here nor there, can't say, not interesting but not annoying
2 - Scent Bleh
  • Boring, not interesting, don't even bother
1- Scent Agnostic
  • Pass, move-on, totally not worth your time


Thursday, November 13

The New Logo

Here is the new logo for The World I Nose!


Wednesday, November 12

The Olfactive Sense Explained

Basically, we have olfactive nerves inside our nose that triggers the brain. Series of biochemical processes signals the brain to associate it with something we have smiled before. Hence, our sense of smell is directly connected to our memories.

The Olfactory System
Photo Grabbed from http://www.neurosurgerypa.com/anatomy/anat_br_nerv_olfactory.jpg


Example. Remember that scent when your mom bakes your favourite cookie - sweet, vanilla, dough, flour like. And when you smell that in a candle, automatically you are reminded of that event in your past.

Photo grabbed from Getty Images


The power of our olfactive sense will not work if you cannot associate it with something that you have smelled before.  On the other hand, your memory will only be half-full if you have not exposed yourself to the scent.

This blog will try to persuade you to go there and experience yourself to fill that memory bank.

To recap:

  • the scent molecules triggers your olfactory nerves to send signals to your brain
  • your brain processes these signals and connect to your memory bank
  • Our scent of smell is connected to our memories

The World I Nose, An Introduction

Finally, it is running.  Combining the two things I like - fragrances and travelling, let me share with you my life as a traveler and as a professional in the fragrance industry. Through the sense of smell, I will leave behind scent trails that you will hopefully enjoy.

By the way, this might be the first and last to post a blog that is not bulleted or itemised.  I personally do not like reading long blog entries. I want something straight to the point, less sentences and very readable.  I have attended a 2-day seminar in SG about action writing and how things should be very easy to read. Hence, from this day forward, you'll see bullets.

Also, as I manage to improve the blog, an olfactive meter will be setup very, very soon - graphics, details and ratings will be explained in a separate blog. Watch out for that!

As starter, may here are some of the things you'll expect here:

Objectives of The World I Nose

  1. Follow my scent trails - scent description of my destinations, food I ate, and activities I did.
  2. Connect the audience to the things I like and will discover through the olfactive sense.
  3. Provide useful information about the world of fragrances
  4. Travel and change the world one scent at a time (LOL)
I have been in the fragrance industry for 8 years. I do know more than most people. I am not a scent designer, fragrance evaluator or perfumer. Hence, please bear in mind that I may not use the right words or even molecule names to describe the scent I smell. But I know how to connect the scent to common consumer knowledge on fragrances.

This is The World I Nose.


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