Many people think they are allergic to “perfume”, but what they are in fact allergic to is the myriad of artificial fragrance chemicals, scent extenders and bases that are used in perfumes nowadays, even in the expensive French ones! The gorgeous and natural sounding “notes” that you read about aren’t actually real “rose” or “blue violets”, but instead made of a variety of artificial aromachemicals that merely mimic what a rose or a “blue violet” might smell like in real life…
It wasn’t always like this. Up until the beginning of this century, perfumes were made from natural ingredients. Essential oils pressed from fresh plants, Rose absolutes, extracted by hand from crushed rose petals, fragrant tree resins such as frankincense and myrrh.
Perfume was a sacred art, practised for centuries all over the world, often by families that handed down their recipes as sacred treasures from generation to generation.
Perfumers in Italy and France began to develop new ways of scenting both the body and the clothing worn by the European Aristocracy, and personalised perfumes developed by the better known perfumers became a much wanted status symbol.
These perfumes, scented leather gloves and pomanders made from exotic and precious ingredients such as true musk pods from the infamous musk ox, exquisite jasmine absolute painstakingly extracted from acres of jasmine flowers etc, were rather expensive, and really only obtainable by the rich gentry…
As we came closer to our current day, the growth of modern chemistry began to give perfumers cheaper substances to play with. And with these cheap ingredients, and the invention of mechanised packaging and production methods, perfumery slowly became the realm of chemists and factory owners. Perfume became a everyday item in every suburban household and the wholesale marketing of brand name perfume as a status symbol for everyone had begun. With time though, people began to realise that a lot of the modern perfumes had sacrificed the magic that traditional perfumes had had, for the sake of a quick profit.The buzz notes in perfumery became intensity, innovation and above all: price.
We all began to re-discover just how beautiful natural scents could be, and the therapeutic effects of essential oils have come to be so well known that virtually all cosmetic manufacturers have started to add them to their wares in one form or another…(whether or not they use them appropriately is another matter altogether that I’ll maybe look at in a later blogpost!)
You can now find more and more Indie perfumers and small perfume houses that specialise in perfumes made entirely from natural ingredients, the way perfumes used to be! And the difference to what we have come to know as “perfume” is quite amazing. But perhaps the nicest thing about this “rebirth” of natural scents is that people who are sensitive to artificial scent chemicals, can finally wear perfume again! Finally, you can buy beautiful little bottles that smell of of the extracts of REAL roses, fragrant orange blossom, delicious spices such as cinnamon and cardamon and luscious exotic resins such as frankincense and myrrh….