(12-16-2015, 04:37 AM)Marko Wrote: Hi Will, I've been reading your Fragrance Blogs on the B&M website and I've been finding them interesting and enjoyable. Thank you for sharing your thoughts in this way. In your piece on the Hermes Bel Ami you comment that it can be worn by both men and women but that it definitely cannot be worn by everyone. What do you mean by that and what do you feel determines whether or not a particular fragrance will work for someone? I get that some fragrances just seem incongruous with some people but is it a style thing or an actual chemistry thing going on?
Keep on blogging,
Thanks,
Mark
It's really some of both. There are some scents that require a certain attitude to wear properly; otherwise, the fragrance can seem at odds with that wearer's personality, which generally causes it to be perceived as much harsher and stranger than it actually is. For instance, if I were to wear
Green Irish Tweed (which I find absolutely loathsome), it's very likely that those who know me would wonder what the hell had happened. It wouldn't seem right, even if they couldn't necessarily put their fingers on why.
It's also a matter of body chemistry. There are some people whose skin causes certain fragrances and types of fragrances to "turn;" that is, where they otherwise smell good, the chemical interaction between the fragrance and the wearer's body chemistry causes what would otherwise be a beautiful perfume to turn sour and unpleasant. This can happen in all sorts of ways and each person has certain fragrances that he or she cannot wear. For instance, to use Creed again, I actually quite like
Bois de Portugal on paper, but it becomes freakishly syrupy and unpleasant on my skin, so I cannot wear it. Slumberhouse's
Sova, a brilliantly artistic thing that I love from afar, smells like pickle juice when it interacts with my skin chemistry. I could go on, but you get the idea. It's a matter of both style AND chemistry, and the only way to know is to try it out for yourself.
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