Posted on May 21, 2017 by Matriarch Blog
House of Matriarch is pleased to announce what Perfumer Christi Meshell is calling one of the "most exciting projects" she has ever released.
SEATTLE, WA: 25 years have passed since Laura Palmer, the troubled coquette who worked at the perfume counter of Horne's Department Store in David Lynch's Twin Peaks, made her impression on the minds and hearts of an entire generation. Since, the resounding echoes and haunting chords of the soundtrack have kept her memory and the mysteries surrounding her death brewing in the collective consciousness. They also ignited the creative inspiration for a collection of perfumes both "wonderful and strange".
Residing near the Snoqualmie Forest where the series was filmed, our Perfumer has a deep knowing of how the dark woods depicted in the series would smell. In a video of Angelo Badalamenti, the composer of the famous soundtrack, he recounts the story of how he and David Lynch sat together at his piano to co-compose the soundtrack. As she followed along, Christi began to imagine the aromas which seemed to accompany the famous question still being asked: "Who killed Laura Palmer?"
LIMITED EDITION - VINTAGE 2017
ALLOCATION:
13% of the proceeds from the sale of the Wonderful & Strange Liquid Music Collection of Twin Peaks perfume will be donated to The David Lynch Foundation for consciousness-based education and world peace.
Posted in 100% natural perfume, 25 years, A World of Blue, Agent Cooper, Angelo Badalamenti, art, balsam, blue lotus, Blue velvet, Celebrity Perfume, Charity, Christi Meshell, cinema, collection, collectors, Cologne, compose, copaiba, create, David Lynch, David Lynch Foundation, deerstongue, Education, Enchanted forest, enchanted forests, energy, enhance meditation, essence, Evergreens, exclusive, experience, Falls, Film, Fire Walk With Me, Forest, fragrance, fragrance creation, fragrance design, fragrance ingredients, fragrance launch, Future's Past, gift, giving, Giving Back, Greater Consciousness, haunting, heartwood, heliotropin, high perfumary, highperfume, House of Matriarch, industry, innovative, iris, Laura Palmer, leather, limited edition, liquid music, Liquid Music Trio, Love, luxury, luxury fragrance, luxury perfume, luxury perfumes, Lynchian, made in Seattle, made in USA, magic, masterpiece, matriarch, meaningful luxury, melancholy, memories, men perfumes, mens fragrance, mens perfume 2017, Mill, Music, Mystery, mystic, mystical, natural, natural essences, natural fragrances, Natural oils, natural perfume, natural perfumes, NEW, Non-Profit, North Bend, olfactory, Organic, orris, oud, owl, Own feathers, Perfumary, Perfume, Project, rare, raw materials, red cedar, red perfumes, Salish Lodge, sandarac, Scent, scent and cinema, Seattle, shop, smell, Snoqualmie, Snoqualmie Forest, spooky, The Red Room, Tim Girvin, top perfumes, Twin Peaks, unisex, Unisex Fragrance, Waterfall, western red cedar, Who killed Laura Palmer?, Wonderful & Strange, Wonderful and Strange
Posted on March 04, 2017 by Christi Meshell
High Perfumery is a branch of Epicureanism. Those familiar with the philosophies of Epicureanism know that the goals are beauty, inspiration and tranquility - the same goals of fine fragrance creation. Here, I share my Manifesta of High Perfumery - the 8 standards which can elevate a perfume from a mere scent to a work of High Art.
Epicureanism must be distinguished from hedonism, which always involves a negative aftermath - a price to pay. If the restraint necessary for the practice of Epicureanism is lost, the pleasure is corrupted into divine discontent and dis-ease ensues. A perfume can be exceptionally beautiful and alluring, however if it does not meet the standards of Epicureanism, it cannot be considered High Perfumery.
NATURE IS THE ULTIMATE LUXURY
Posted in 100% natural perfume, alchemy, christi meshell, creative, epicurean, essence, fragrance, fragrance house, fragrances, high, house, industry, inspiration, manifesta, noble, olfactory, perfume, perfumer, perfumery, savor, secrets, the best, tranquility
Posted on February 19, 2017 by Matriarch Blog
"House" (aka Creative House) is the industry term for a company that independently designs and produces perfume. A "Nose" (aka Perfumer) works from a fragrance organ composing fragrances (or flavors) from base materials to create accords that are arranged into the final product. Like a composer that creates music, the Perfumer knows every note inside and out - they could play "blindfolded" so to speak. They write their own music, drawing inspiration from a multitude of sources, and can deliver on a brief. Like musicians, each perfumer has a certain "style" or "sound".
"Brands" are re-sellers of perfumes they purchase from "houses". Many people mistakenly refer to "brands" as "houses". This is inaccurate and also misleading as it implies that the brand is the designer and producer of the perfume rather than a re-seller. Going back to the music reference, brands would be akin to the "record label", not the orchestra.
On the part of the reviewers and fragrance critics, this is just an innocent mistake of the uninformed. However, when done by the brand itself in a direct attempt to deceive the customer into believing they are the creator of the fragrance, it really stinks because the misinformation (aka "marketing campaign") trickles down to the early adopters and brand evangelists, making them an accessory to the deception.
When a brand owner, aka "Creative Director" brazenly poses as the Perfumer creating the juice, things get even choppier - and this exact indiscretion has burst the bubbles of a few notable brands in recent years. Milli Vanilli, anyone?
All houses can have "brands" and many houses have several brands in their portfolios, however, 98% of brands are NOT houses and should not be referred to as such. Consider this important point of distinction: there are hundreds of thousands of brands that sell perfume but only a handful of "Creative Fragrance Houses" worldwide.
Do you know which house produces the perfume your wearing (or writing about)? Have you wondered why so many perfumes smell the same? Hopefully learning the distinction between brands and houses will help you understand the answers to these questions, and invite you to ask new questions. One thing is for sure, in today's age of transparency, there are fewer and fewer secrets about the mystical world of fragrance.
Posted in brand, business, christi meshell, creative, fragrance, fragrance house, house, industry, olfactory, perfume, secrets
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