Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Food, Glorious Food

Hello Fellow Perfume Aficionados,

The other day I was watching an episode of a cable television series in which one of the characters confessed to dabbing vanilla extract behind his ears every day. The other characters kept remarking on the scent of chocolate chip cookies whenever he was around, so he had no choice but to sheepishly admit to this activity. I had a flashback to a Saturday I spent years ago with a co-worker who came up with the idea to bake homemade cookies, package them in tins, and give them as holiday gifts to all our friends. During that day, I accidentally spilled some vanilla extract on myself. Later on, my boyfriend and his best friend picked me up from her apartment and were both enthralled with how I smelled.

Vanilla notes in fragrances are nothing new, but there are countless variations of them, smelling like everything from cotton candy to meringue, and almondy marzipan, and everything in-between. I think that cookie-baking day was what got me started on the vanilla trail, and over the years, it has turned into so much more. My love for vanilla has expanded to include "gourmand" scents of all kinds, including fruits, booze, spices, honey, coconut, pumpkin, you name it. I'm not saying I always want to smell like freshly baked cookies, or a fancy dessert, but on some days, it's just what the doctor ordered.

In the spirit of food, I thought I'd share some of my favorites in that category, in no particular order:

Lostmarc'h Lan-Ael: As God is my witness, this smells like a bowl of oatmeal topped with milk and apples. Before you laugh at me for wanting to smell like breakfast, I, and many others look to this scent as one of the most comforting, cozy scents ever made.

Serge Lutens Rahat Loukhoum: This is the one Serge Lutens fragrance I would replace tomorrow if I could. Anyone heading to Paris any time soon?

Rahat Loukoum is Turkish Delight candy, redolent of almonds, vanilla, cherries and rosewater. If given a choice between this and chocolate, I'd choose chocolate, but as a scent, this is nothing short of sublime.

Comptoir Sud Pacifique Vanille Abricot: When vanilla fragrances became trendy about 20 years ago, this one was at the top of the pile. There have been many imitators, but no other fragrance house has ever come close. CSP Vanille Abricot is one of those scents that manages to be both sexy and innocent at the same time.

Aftelier Perfumes Cacao: Natural perfumer Mandy Aftel has created the most perfect chocolate scent ever. Notes of blood orange, grapefruit and vanilla mesh beautifully, but the inclusion of two types of jasmine give the scent an almost dirty quality that spawned reams of both positive and negative comments all over the Internet. I'm in the positive camp; I've used up three 1/4 oz. bottles.

A Lab on Fire What We Do in Paris is Secret: This is a new discovery of mine, that is very similar to Rahat Loukoum, but with the addition of honey, sandalwood and a smidge of ambergris. When you want your Turkish Delight with a side of sophistication, this is what you reach for.

Yosh Ginger Ciao: Yosh Han is a ridiculously talented niche perfumer who has created a small line of scents that are akin to boutique wines or one-of-a-kind couture creations. My favorite scent in her line, Ginger Ciao, is a breathtaking amalgamation of black coconut, orange blossom, ginger, night queen, and lily. It is available in both eau de parfum and perfume oil. I'd go for the oil, because it lasts for days, and when you smell this good, you want it to last as long as possible.

This six are just a smattering of gourmand scents I love. What are some of your favorites?

Nava

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Scented Memoir


 Hello Fellow Fragrance Aficionados,

This essay first appeared on another fragrance blog a few years ago, and it was originally titled, The Evolution of Scent.

 If Luca Turin can boast he knows The Secret of Scent, I figure what the hell; I may as well take a crack at its evolution. And, I don´t care if the term "evolution" is a dirty word in some parts of the United States. This is global. This is about fragrance: why we gravitate towards certain scents and how the many things we smell over the course of our lives can have a profound effect on us.

Ultimately, our introduction to scent begins with our mothers, fathers and siblings. My dad used an electric razor and never indulged in any sort of after-shave or cologne. My older brother went through the typical men´s fragrance phases of every male who dated during the Studio 54 era: Aramis, Halston Z-14, and finally Lagerfeld, which I found to be the most noxious, offensive concoction.  My sister-in-law gifted him with a bottle of this horrid potion; we´ve never gotten along since the day I met her. Now that he´s a married 50-something, my bro mercifully wafts through life scent-free. I´ll explore my sister-n-law when I can actually write about her without the need for copious numbers of expletives.

That leaves one person: my mother. Mom was a Canadian who lived for twirling through the duty-free shops at New York´s JFK and Toronto´s Pearson International airports; the high point of our many trips to visit her family. She would inevitably emerge clutching a receipt for the purchase of one bottle of scent and one bottle of liquor. In those days you were not allowed to carry your purchases out of the store yourself. You gave the cashier your flight information and your purchases were presented to you after you boarded the plane. The countless bottles of Canadian Club and Seagram´s V.O. never got drunk, but those bottles of scent were as much a part of my mom as her wash-and-wear hairdo and her Act III polyester pantsuits: the Chanels, Nos. 5, 19, and 22, Emeraude, Tabu, Norell and Ombre Rose were her favorites. My mom never bought scent at a drug or department store. If it didn´t come from the duty-free shop, she wanted no part of it. To this day, I´m not sure if she thought she was getting a bargain, or if she took pride in the fact that she was the only one of the women in her circle of friends who got on an airplane with any regularity. For her, buying at the airport was more exotic and sophisticated than strolling up to the fragrance counter in Macy´s.

Six months before her death in 1999, my mom moved from our house in Brooklyn to a condo overlooking the Hudson River in Fort Lee, New Jersey. She was not in great shape physically, and it was always my job to buy her the requisite toiletries she used. One day, while purchasing a jar of Kiehl´s moisturizer at Neiman Marcus, I befriended a saleslady who just happened to live in the same building as my mom. Of course, I told her which apartment my mom lived in, and she showed up one night with a bag full of samples. Some days, I´d walk into my mom´s apartment and there´d be a cloud of No. 5 greeting me. On others, there would be open vials of various Creed scents sitting on the dining room table, and my mom would be in a quandary about which one she wanted. "How come I never saw these in the airport?" she wondered. "So-and-so told me that Grace Kelly wore that one!" she exclaimed, pointing toward the open vial of Fleurissimo. "Go get me a bottle!" And it was the scent of Fleurissimo that was on her skin when she died.

Given my mom´s relationship with these classic scents, you would think that I would wear them to honor her memory. Honestly, none of them have ever appealed to me, and I can´t stomach any heady florals at all. Chanel No. 5? Repellant. Instant headache; I would refuse to wear it even if threatened at gunpoint. Maybe I do need to consider therapy...

My own fragrance choices were influenced by the three sisters who grew up in the house next door to mine, rather than by my own mother. I was closest to the youngest one, L, who used to steal her older sisters´ bottles of Charlie and Shalimar and we´d huddle together under a blanket tent between J´s and M´s twin beds spritzing each other. Talk about a cloud. The first scent I remember seriously wearing was Love´s Baby Soft. I think I was subliminally brainwashed by all the ads for it in Co-ed magazine. Then, it was on to Chantilly. From there, Halston. By the time I hit high school, I was wearing Pavlova. This was quite a contradiction: a soft, romantic, powdery floral scent to go with my rock n roll-patched and buttoned denim jacket, concert t-shirts, jeans and sneakers. In that attire, the only two things I should have smelled of were Parliament cigarettes and Freshen-Up spearmint gum. And it confused the hell out of all the boys in my group; more than once I overheard them wondering, "Where the @$&* is that flower smell coming from?" I guess I was as offensive back then as today´s teens are when they fumigate themselves with Axe body spray. No wonder I didn´t snag my first real boyfriend until I was a freshman in college. Oddly enough, that was a time in my life when I wore no scent at all.

My scent-free phase lasted for quite a long time. Looking back on it, I cannot explain why I went through life sans fragrance for a good three years. Maybe hormonal fluctuations were to blame, or maybe I just got myself so sick of Pavlova, I needed to give my nose a much needed breather. My boyfriend B (whom I now call my husband), used to beg me to put on perfume; not that I smelled bad: he told me he liked the smell of scent on a woman´s skin, since his mom never wore anything other than eau de Schenley mixed with a splash of ginger ale. I found it ironic that there were so many scents on my mother´s vanity table and so many bottles of liquor gathering dust in the closet, while B´s mom always seemed to have a cocktail in her hand and never smelled of anything I could easily discern. I once snuck into his parents´ bedroom to see if she did own any perfume, but all I found on top of her dresser was a dish of hair clips and bobby pins, a jar of cold cream, and one tube of red Cover Girl lipstick. My house was a satellite duty-free shop compared to my future in-laws´. The best part was I could wear anything I felt like, since there was not one particular scent he would associate with his mother. That was tremendously liberating for me. I have such deeply ingrained scent associations courtesy of my own mother that it is a relief to be with someone whose nose is not triggered by some invisible waft in the air like mine often is. B still manages to negotiate life without the fear of a particular scent assaulting his nose. How I envy him; I live in fear of Chanel No. 5 as if it were a tactical nuclear weapon.

I think there is always one real "a-ha" epiphany every fragrance lover has, and for me, it was when I first read about L´Artisan Parfumeur´s Vanilia fragrance in (I believe) the February 1993 issue of Allure magazine. I was 26 years-old, temporarily unemployed, and mesmerized by the description of it. I remember reading something to the effect of "The vanilla L´Artisan brews is so bewitching...", and about Cher wearing it during an appearance on David Letterman and him swooning. Not that my intention was to make David Letterman swoon (or to smell like Cher), something made me haul my jobless self to Manhattan on a brutally frigid day, trudge to the original L´Artisan Parfumeur shop on Madison Avenue in the 80s, and snap up a bottle of Vanilia. 100 ml was $80 and I didn´t care if I had to starve for weeks to come. It was so beautiful, just inhaling myself was all the sustenance I needed. I had never smelled anything like it, and was totally smitten.

Vanilia is the closest I´ve ever come to having a signature scent, but unfortunately, our relationship turned sour about six months in. One day, quite unexpectedly, Vanilia revolted, and I broke out in the most horrible rash I have ever experienced. I was devastated, not to mention itchy beyond belief. I tried to find ways to continue on with Vanilia - spraying it on different areas of my body that I thought would not react negatively - I spent two weeks using the doorjamb of my office at my new job to scratch my shoulders, much to the amusement of my puzzled co-workers; I desperately started spraying it on my clothing, only to find stains on just about every shirt I owned. It was hopeless.

After using up three tubes of prescription cortisone cream, and replacing most of my work wardrobe, I gave up. Vanilia and I were just not meant to be. I´ve tried valiantly over the years to re-establish our relationship, but for whatever cruel reason, every time I spray this beloved scent on my skin, it turns red and itchy within minutes. Are the perfume gods punishing me because I have no respect for the classics? Am I doomed to go through life in a haze of Fleurissimo and No. 5? Are these my fragrances of destiny? Sorry, but I´d rather smell like Exit 13 of the New Jersey Turnpike.

After my disastrous liaison with Vanilia, I developed a most voracious appetite for all things scented. In the early 90s, there was what I like to call, a "fragrance revolution" going on. The late 80s was the Giorgio era with all these monstrous, cloying Godzilla-like fragrances, which gave way to the grunge-fueled CK One "heroin chic" period. I tried so hard to look like a burn-out in high school (while reeking of Pavlova), that I felt completely abandoned by these new trends in fashion and fragrance. I did not want to wear flannel shirts and smell like Kurt Cobain. There was no way my rib cage was ever going to poke out through my skin like Kate Moss´. I was drifting and in need of comfort - which I easily found at the local shopping mall in the Bath and Body Works store. The place was nirvana for me: the gingham checked awning, all the pretty bottles of shower gels, lotions and colognes hooked me instantly. I fell in love with Juniper and Flowering Herbs and just about everything else they sold. I was hurtling towards my thirties in a fog of suburban mall-scent, but I was still longing for something more meaningful and profound that would touch my soul the way Vanilia did. Here I am, at 40, and I still haven´t found it.

Here´s the realization, or maybe rationalization, that I have reached as I am now officially a middle-aged person: When it comes to fragrance, you can have it all if you´d like. There should not be one signature or "holy grail" type scent that you are "supposed" to wear because your mother, sister, best friend, spouse or "X" celebrity in the magazine ad is telling you to. I had a second epiphany sometime in the last decade and that epiphany is that I can have a hundred bottles of scent if I want to, and I can buy them wherever I please, which is exactly what I´ve been doing and have no plans on stopping. Maybe I am a fragrance glutton or a schizophrenic on some level, but I love the variety. My fragrant enigmatic phase is going into its ninth year of existence, so quite possibly, I have achieved a kind of peace in the fact that I like having lots of options. Mind you, I don´t advocate this in every area of life, but when it comes to scent, I am content to always be evolving.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Love and Grace

Hello Fellow Perfume Aficionados,

Many serious perfume lovers out there won't even give a second thought to mainstream fragrances. These days, mainstream fragrances are often celebrity fragrances, ones that have been formulated for mass appeal and annual sales in the tens of millions of dollars.Very often, these fragrances are cavity-inducing amalgamations of fruit, flowers, and a grade of vanilla that can best be described as something resembling vanilla blossom-scented Lysol, or a bottle of artificial vanilla flavoring. Maybe, if you're between the ages of 12 and 16, you find fragrances from Justin Bieber, Selena Gomez, and Rhianna appealing. If you hang on every move Beyonce makes, chances are, you wear one of her fragrances. Unfortunately, in the eyes of many a perfumista, fragrance is one area Queen Bey does not excel in. Sure, she's an amazing performer, but to quote one of my fragrance loving friends, her signature scent, Heat, smells like "unwashed lady parts and canned peaches."

So, where does that leave a line like Philosophy? In my opinion, the company's skin care and fragrance products are mainstream, since they are available in department stores like Macy's and Nordstrom, as well as at Sephora, and at a mess of e-tailers. Moreover, the brand is the star attraction at QVC, where it is flogged endlessly by bubbly show hosts and animated company reps who manage to succeed at selling fragrances, unsniffed, to the home shopping customer.

Philosophy has been around since 1997. It started as a niche brand of skin care, and expanded to include fragrances, and scented bath and body products. The line was originally available at Barney's, but the company's founder, Cristina Carlino, wanted to reach a broader market. She left Barney's, hooked up with QVC and the rest, eventually selling her creation to Coty about two years ago.

Amazing Grace is Philosophy's signature scent, a light, easy-to-wear floral/musk blend that launched a genre of inoffensive, anti-elevator scents that don't enter a room ten minutes before you do. It was followed by Pure Grace, a soap-and-water type scent, and Falling in Love, a blackberry-vanilla-musk confection. From there, the line has morphed into the "State of Grace" and "Love Stories" franchises, with entire wardrobes of scents, and coordinating body products.

Amazing Grace came along at an interesting time in the fragrance industry. It was released post-CK One, when the market was flooded with lighter, unisex scents that were the antithesis of the in-your-face fragrances released during the 1980s. at first, I found Amazing Grace to be too floral, but I believe the formula was tweaked a bit to make it lighter and muskier.

The subsequent Grace scents include Pure Grace, Baby Grace, Inner Grace, Eternal Grace, and the latest, Living Grace. In the Love category, there is Falling in Love, Unconditional Love, and Love Sweet Love. None of these scents are groundbreaking; in fact, some of them are dead-ringers for other scents already on the market. Pure Grace is an exact duplicate of Clean Ultimate; Inner Grace, Lovely Sarah Jessica Parker; Eternal Grace, Issey Miyake; Falling in Love, Trish McEvoy No. 9. At first, the similarities bothered me, but the truth is, the Philosophy scents are well done for what they are, and a better value for what you get. If you love to layer your scents, you can buy liter sizes of shower gels and body lotions from QVC, and 4 ounce bottles of the fragrances for less than $100. These days, when you can't get an interesting niche fragrance for less than $150, scents like these from Philosophy make great staples when you want to spritz with abandon without worrying about breaking the bank.

My favorites are Amazing Grace, Pure Grace, Living Grace (lily of the valley, neroli and musk), Baby Grace (a single note linden scent), Falling in Love, and Unconditional Love (black currant, vanilla, musk). The scents are interchangeable and easily layered with Amazing Grace and Falling in Love body lotions. If you want a wardrobe of no-brainer scents that don't smell like the typical mainstream celebrity and teeny-bopper scents, Philosophy might very well be the line for you.

My former collection included these scents, as does the one I am in the process of creating.

With love and fragrant wishes,

Nava

Saturday, February 23, 2013

The First Bottle

Hello Fellow Perfume Aficionados,

Way back when, I used to choose the bottles of scent I purchased with a somewhat wanton attitude: if I wanted it, I bought it. Now, I find myself contemplating my purchases, mainly because I realize that it's not quantity that matters, it's quality. A well-edited selection of scents is the path I'm choosing to take; we'll see how many I actually wind up with.

The first bottle is Diptyque L'Ombre dans L'Eau, which means, "Shadow in the Water." I find it somewhat ironic that I've chosen a scent with the word "shadow" in it, since I'm trying very hard to emerge from quite a large shadow of despair.

I've always admired the Diptyque line, especially the candles. My home smelled like Essence of John Galliano (pre-anti-semitic rant), Figuier, and Baies on occasion, but I never chose to wear any of the eaux de toilettes until now. 

L'Ombre dans L'Eau is comprised of black currant leaves, rose and a smidge of musk. It is an intense green scent, which is reflective of my new locale: year-round green amid almost constant cool and damp. The leaves retain the juiciness of the fruit, and compliment the rose note perfectly. I've never been one to wear a heavy rose fragrance; the rose note has to be balanced by something equally as assertive for it to appeal to me. Plus, since I am now in a more moderate climate, I am gravitating towards scents that are not quite as heavy as ones I wore in the past. The dark, spicy, incense-y "bear hug" scents I used to love in much colder climes would now overwhelm me.

Despite the green-ness of L'Ombre dans L'Eau, there is a comfort and familiarity to it. Some green scents can be excessively zesty, but this one has a warmth you won't find in others. Maybe that's why I am so drawn to it; cheerful greens and warmth. What more could a melancholy nose ask for?

With love, and fragrant wishes,

Nava

Friday, February 15, 2013

Now


Hello Fellow Perfume Aficionados,

If you're wondering what this blog is about, please scroll down and read the two previous entries. After you've read them, come back and read this one.

Now that I've explained what lead to the creation of Collection Redux, it's time for me to give you my mission statement:

You are invited to accompany me on a fragrant journey of rebirth. Before losing my vast collection of fragrances, I was always on the prowl for the next great scent; I attended fragrance events; cased department, and other stores for things that tickled my nose; I traveled to places near and far, and always managed to ferret out interesting things to smell; I bought full bottles - not decants or samples - full bottles; I never spoke about my fragrant adventures to anyone in my "real" life; I talked about the things I smelled with people on the Internet, and wrote about them on a well-known fragrance blog. Then, I lost everything: my marriage, my home, my life as I knew it. Those bottles I wrote about earlier, somewhere between 100 and 150, had a retail value of over $18,000. I know this because the woman (I can no longer refer to her as "my aunt" without goose bumps the size of baseballs forming on my body) who gave them away for a tax credit had her secretary research each and every bottle online to determine their worth. My collection consisted of bottles from Bond No. 9, Tom Ford, L'Artisan Parfumeur, and other names we are all familiar with. There were precious vials of oils, and niche fragrances that were available only at one or two very specific locations. Then, there was my collection of 30 Serge Lutens fragrances, some hand-carried back from Paris by me, and others obtained through back-channels and other places. Those bottles were my prized possessions.

It has taken me a long time to get over this loss; some might compare it to the destruction of a great wine cellar, or a financial loss akin to that of being ripped off by the likes of a Ponzi schemer. Granted, $18,000 is not a lot of money in the big picture, but it was never about the monetary value of the bottles; it was about what they meant to me. Before that woman put a dollar amount on them, I never once thought about how much I'd spent or what their resale value might be. I've realized, someone who appreciates perfume cannot be a black-and-white thinker. A person who appreciates the art of fragrance must be able to think in the abstract, and realize that not everything in life is comprised of only two colors. Life is made up of many beautiful colors, scents, and visual magnificence. If you happen to be someone who can't literally stop and smell the roses, then you're missing out on one of life's greater pleasures. That is what this woman is like. For her, it was all about striking back for perceived harms she believed I caused her. She knew how much those bottles meant to me; the act of taking them from me was, in her mind, a triumph.

It has taken me a long time to get over losing my collection. At first, I was in some serious denial. I told myself over, and over that my fragrances were just material possessions. Then, I finally gave in and allowed myself to mourn their loss. That might seem superficial to some people, but for those of us who understand what I'm talking about, you know my grieving process was long, and I am finally now emerging on the other side of it.

So, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to visit this page periodically, to join me on my journey. I will be writing about the bottles I have recently acquired, the bottles I want to acquire (I will make every attempt to include some samples and decants this time around), and the bottles I used to own. The catharsis I thought I previously achieved was a false one; now it is time for the real thing. I'm hoping to have some wonderful company along the way.

With love, and fragrant wishes,

Nava

And Then...


This post, originally titled, $7,319.68, was published on October 13, 2011, also on Perfume Posse.

The number above – that’s the tax deduction 30 Serges (Exports and Exclusives), plus about 100 more miscellaneous fragrances, and other items, will get you if you donate them to charity.

How do I know this? I found out about 2 weeks ago, finally, what my "wonderful" aunt (see my previous post) did with my perfume collection and some other items I was forbidden to retrieve from her house.

Now, I guess you can say I have “closure” of the situation since she threw me out over a year ago.

I’m usually not one to air dirty laundry, but since I’ve been through so much over the past few years, I thought, what the hell. I’ve lost everything so I literally have nothing left to lose.

The problem is, finding out that my treasured collection is gone forever has put me off fragrance. This is worse than going off meds or having a run of bad luck. Right now, I just don’t care what I smell like or what anything smells like. I even pitched what  few bottles that did manage to make it out of her house; I just couldn’t stand looking at them anymore.

So, for now, I bid you all adieu. I have no desire to smell anything and I don’t know when I will again. I know my attitude sounds defeatist and it’s allowing evil to triumph over good, but I am too exhausted, emotionally and physically, to keep fighting. The only thing I can hope for is that my aunt will receive some sort of karmic retribution for all the crap she’s pulled on me over the past couple of years. You know the saying: what goes around, comes around. Let’s all keep our fingers crossed, shall we?

I hope to see you all again before too long.

The Facts, In a Nutshell


The following words were first published on November 4, 2010, in a post titled In Memoriam, on the perfume review blog, Perfume Posse.

Three years ago, my life as I knew it changed forever. The details of this transformation don’t matter, but in coping with all the upheaval, I decided, who better to help get me through it than family? Turns out, this was the worst decision I could have made.

Those of you with close, reliable family ties might be thinking: how could family possibly turn their backs on one of its members? The answer to that question is: quite easily. This isn’t an essay written in anger, and as I said, the details don’t matter. What matters are the lessons we learn from our experiences. The lesson I’ve learned is this: no matter how awful things get, the only person you can rely upon when the going gets tough is yourself. Nothing and no one else matters more.

I’ve lost my entire perfume collection; all my Serges; everything. As far as I know, the bottles themselves are still alive and well, I am just being denied access to them. Unfortunately, they will be elsewhere in a few weeks time, and there isn’t anything I can do about that. Many of you know I’ve been living with my aunt and uncle in Toronto for the past year, and sadly, my relationship with my aunt took a turn so sharp that not only am I no longer living in her home, I am not allowed, by her mandate, to access any of my belongings except through third parties. I’ve joked in the past about my aunt’s intolerance to my fragrant endeavours, and always did so cheekily, and without rancour. But, our conflict now goes much deeper, and, I fear, there won’t be any reconciliation in the near future.

The casualties of this particular war are my material possessions. In making my move from the D.C. area in August 2009, I jettisoned most of my belongings. What’s left, I’ve realized, doesn’t mean all that much to me, including my bottles of fragrance. I’m not saying I will not continue to love fragrance; I always will, and I will continue to write here at the Posse indefinitely (or for as long as they’ll have me). Going through as much as I have for as long as I have, has made me realize it is impossible to hang on to everything. I’ve thought about the prolific disasters of the recent past: September 11, hurricane Katrina, the Thailand tsunami, the earthquakes in India, China, and Haiti; not to mention others. Those who were lucky enough to survive found the will to carry on, despite losing all their worldly possessions. Thankfully, my situation isn’t anywhere near as tragic as those; but I have a grasp of what matters. The rest is just extraneous; including my perfumes. It might take me a while to get back to the Salons in Paris, but no one will ever be able to take away my memories of being there. The scents will live on in the same manner.

I’ve chosen to share this with all of you because writing it down is part of the journey. My ability to do so is something no one will ever deprive me of. That is the most empowering feeling I can ever know. Dissemination of information may not always accomplish what you want it to, but in this instance, the forum of fragrance goes much deeper than the actual scents. We revel in our knowledge and find solace in our common interests. Loving and losing is part of life. The loss may be a precious, irreplaceable vintage bottle of something, or it could be everything. In my case, the loss is all encompassing; but only metaphorically. The tangible items may be gone, but there is the hope of a brighter future, and even more scents to sniff and enjoy.

Onward and upward…