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Showing posts with label Perfume. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perfume. Show all posts

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Fragrance


The use and enjoyment of fragrances have endured throughout the centuries, from the rituals of ancient cultures to today’s modern lifestyles. In fact, as we celebrate the second millennium milestone, fragrances continue to play a beneficial and purposeful role in adding to the quality of life: a tradition as old as mankind.

The fragrance industry is a multi-faceted one, with fine fragrances holding a celebrity status within it. For those who wear them, perfumes and colognes elicit feelings of joy, confidence, and a sense of well-being. They also present their wearers with an opportunity to create for themselves a virtually unforgettable, personal trademark. A subtle splash of fragrance has the ability to spark cherished memories and a wealth of emotions that can lift spirits, enrich romance, improve one’s mood, and lead to an overall feeling of happiness.

In our homes and work places, we look to a fragranced environment to add quality to our lives, with such items as scented candles, fragrance sprays and shower. Researchers believe the use of fragrances also results in a positive psychological impact. For example, pleasant scents may heighten the senses and at the same time enhance the learning process. In addition, fresh scents may have an effect at keeping people alert. Fragrances also work to boost moods or provide a feeling of calmness in the midst of busy days.

While invisible to the eye, fragrances add a perceived “color” to everyday life and special occasions, providing a deep, rich hue, which often goes unnoticed until it is gone. A walk outdoors would not be the same without the scent of pines or the smell of flowers. A world without fragrances would be comparable to a world without music, like a world without the vital shades that color our planet, like never having experienced the lush green of a verdant pasture, or the stirring emotion of an orchestral masterpiece.

Fragrances are an essential component to our everyday lives. Here are a few specific scientifically based benefits of fragrance:

Why We Use Fragrances

Scent is one of the most powerful of senses. Smelling a certain fragrance can signal a season or a treasured memory or simply make a mundane task, like cleaning, a little more enjoyable. Beyond the allure of the chiseled perfume bottle, fragrances are closely aligned with the benefits of other products, and, in fact, have come to enhance their effectiveness in the perception of those who use them. Researchers say that fragrances contained in household and personal products, from shampoo and cosmetics to laundry detergents and household cleaners, are near to synonymous with their perceived quality. Fragrances make clothes smell "clean," cosmetics "pretty," and households "well kept."

How Fragrances Affect Our Mood

The presence of fragrance can elicit an emotional response and therefore affect our mood. Research has shown that there is an anatomical basis for this. The sense of smell is directly plugged into human limbic system of the brain. This is the region where emotions and memories also reside. Therefore, fragrances can contribute to feelings of happiness, sensuality, relaxation or stimulation. They can also contribute to feelings of irritation, stress, depression and apathy.

Fragrance as a Cue for Cleanliness

Fragrance is an essential cue to consumers of cleanliness. The “smell of clean” is very important in delivering the consumer benefit of clean. For example, the washed laundry should not only look clean but should also smell clean or else the job is not done. If a laundry item smells clean it will also reduce the instance of washing the item again, thus saving natural resources such as water and energy.

Research shows that a pleasant fragrance is of top importance in the consumers’ mind when purchasing cleaning products. Furthermore, consumers frequently cite a pleasant fragrance as making the chore of cleaning easier and more enjoyable.

Fragrance and Health

While more research is needed to validate that fragrance induced positive mood results in measurable health effects, however many believe a correlation exists based on what we already know about the effect of fragrances on mood change. Researchers have found that inhaling a relaxing fragrance ingredient speeds up the recovery of skin barrier function of slightly damaged skin. Also, certain fragrances may reduce performance-related stress as measured physiologically in lowered blood pressure, reduced muscle tension or reduced startle reflex.

There is also increasing evidence that odors may influence human responses to pain. Such findings have been attributed either to odors directing attention away from the pain or to the fact that odors may influence moods, which in turn may modify the unpleasantness or intensity of pain.

Fragrance and Work Performance


Fragrances can have a positive effect on the work environment. Recent studies have shown that periodic administration of pleasant fragrances during a sustained attention task improves performance.

article credit: http://www.ifrana.org/about-br/fragrance-industry/benefits-fragrance
Image credit: beauty.mashangel.com

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Perfume




Sunday, September 11, 2011

Perfume


Top 10 New Perfume Launches

Everyone, from luxury fashion labels to celebrities, have launched new  fragrances in the last 6 months. Here is a round up of the 10 newest perfumes to hit the scene


Lancôme Trésor Midnight Rose: On the lines of 1990 version of Trésor (there is also a 1952 version), the Midnight Rose is fronted by actress Emma Watson. The scent reportedly is a more gourmand version of the original; with notes that include raspberry, pink pepper, jasmine, peony, rose, vanilla, cedar and musk.
Image via Fan Pop




Homme by David Beckham: The footballer's Homme fragrance for men was developed by perfumerPierre Negrin; the notes include citrus, ginger, Szechuan pepper, cashmere wood, leather, rosemary, mahogany wood, patchouli and musk.


Image via Grattan

Watch Beckham's hot commercial here.



Burberry Body: Looks like Burberry has gone all out for its new fragrance launch. The ad featuresTransformers' star Rosie Huntington-Whiteley wearing only a rose gold satin Burberry trench coat. While the scent is an eclectic composition of fruity-chypre notes, the fragrance opens with a fresh, green touch of absinthe and bright hints of peach and freesia.

Lovestruck: Featuring Gossip Girl actor Leighton Meester in the ads, Vera Wang's new fragrance is an addictive floral scent that incorporates a pink guava and mandarin, followed by a mix of tuberose and lotus blossom. Precious woods and sheer musk make for the base notes.
Image via Facebook

Bottega Veneta Eau de Parfum: Launched as their first fragrance for women in July 2011,  Bottega Veneta's Eau de Parfum is a leathery floral chypre developed by perfumer Michel Almairac. The notes include patchouli, oak moss, bergamot, jasmine and pink pepper. A limited edition Extrait in Murano glass will be available only at exclusive Bottega Veneta boutiques.
Image via Style Frizz

Cartier Baiser Vole: Baiser Volé ('Stolen Kiss') debuted in July 2011 from Cartier. Mathilde Laurent, who composed the notes, has brought out ultra feminine essences of the lily. The scent is enveloped all through with scented pistils of the lily; the heart is of refined lily petals, while the base notes offer green leaves of lily.
Image via Perfume Diary

Chanel No 19 Poudre: This year, Chanel introduced a successor to its No 19 called No 19 Poudré. Chanel's in-house perfumer, Jacques Polge created the Eau de Parfum including neroli, galbanum, jasmine, iris, white musk, vetiver, and tonka bean.
Image via Facebook


Gucci Guilty Intense: The scent for women, Gucci's Guilty Intense is an eau de parfum with a warm oriental floral passion at its core, imbued with an audacious fist of pink pepper. The middle notes consist of lilac enriched with the sensuality of violet and heliotropine.
The Guilty Intense Pour Homme scent braces Italian lemon and lavender, undercut with a tang of coriander. A bitter orange flower, with hints of sweet, honeyed and somewhat metallic, yields to an unexpectedly masculinity reinforcing neroli.
Image via Facebook


Armani Code Sport by Giorgio Armani: Launched earlier this year, the new fragrance for men is on the lines of the 2004 Armani Code and apparently has a new twist of freshness, excitement, adrenaline and seduction. The notes for the aromatic woody citrus include lemon, mandarin, three kinds of mint (wild mint, peppermint, and spearmint), ambergris (ambrox, in high concentration), ginger and vetiver.
Image via Giorgio Armani Beauty

Estee Lauder Bloom: Unlike the quirky Balenciaga or polished Cartier, the Bloom fragrance opens with a fresh and playful fruity blend. With a noticeable grapefruit and luscious raspberry scent, lychee adds an uplifting feel to the Violet. The body of the fragrance unfolds with dewy pink peony, rose, jasmine and the spicy green lily. It finishes of with top notes of musk, patchouli and vanilla.

Image and Article Credit: http://luxpresso.com



Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Axe


New Delhi. In what could prove to be a major marketing and legal embarrassment for Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL), a 26-year-old man has filed a case against the FMCG company, which owns the Axe brand of men grooming products, for cheating and causing him mental suffering. The plaintiff has cited his failure to attract any girl at all even though hes been using Axe products for over seven years now. Axe advertisements suggest that the products help men in instantly attracting women.

Vaibhav Bedi, the petitioner, also surrendered all his used, unused and half-used deodorant sprays, perfume sticks and roll-ons, anti-perspirants, aftershaves, body washes, shampoos, and hair gels to the court, and demanded a laboratory test of the products and narcotics test of the brand managers of Axe. Vaibhav was pushed to take this step when his bai (maid) beat him with a broom when he tried to impress her by appearing naked in front of her after applying all the Axe products.

No girl ever asked Vaibhav to call her

Where the fu*k is the Axe effect? Ive been waiting for it for over seven years. Right from my college to now in my office, no girl ever agreed to even go out for a tea or coffee with me, even though Im sure they could smell my perfumes, deodorants and aftershaves. I always applied them in abundance to make sure the girls get turned on as they show in the television. Finally I thought Id try to impress my lonely bai who had an ugly fight with her husband and was living alone for over a year. Axe effect my foot! Vaibhav expressed his unhappiness.

Vaibhav claims that he had been using all the Axe products as per the companys instructions even since he first bought them. He argued that if he couldnt experience the Axe effect despite using the products as directed, either the company was making false claims or selling fake products.

I had always stored them in cool and dry place, and kept them away from direct light or heat. Id always use a ruler before applying the spray and make sure that the distance between the nozzle and my armpit was at least 15 centimeters. Id do everything they told. I even beat up my 5-year-old nephew for coming near my closet, as they had instructed it to keep away from childrens reach. And yet, all I get is a broom beating from my ugly bai. Vaibhav expressed his frustration.

Vaibhav claims that he had to do go a lot of mental suffering and public humiliation due to the lack of Axe effect and wants HUL to compensate him for this agony. An advocate in Karkardooma court, who happened to mistake Vaibhav for some deodorant vendor when he entered the court premises with all the bottles, has now offered to take up his case in the court. HUL has been served a legal notice in this regard.

HUL has officially declined to comment on the case citing the subject to be sub judice, but our sources inform that the company was worried over the possible outcomes of the case. The company might argue that Vaibhav was hopelessly unattractive and unintelligent and didnt possess the bare minimum requirements for the Axe effect to take place. Officially HUL has not issued any statement, but legal experts believe that HUL could have tough time convincing the court.

HUL might be tempted to take that line of argument, but it is very risky. There is no data to substantiate the supposition that unattractive and unintelligent men dont attract women. In fact some of the best looking women have been known to marry and date absolutely ghoulish guys. Id suggest that the company settles this issue out of court. noted lawyer Ram Jhoothmalani said.
Story from: yahoogroup.com

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