I've always thought that we all more or less perceived scent the same way, after all, we're all human (apart from those aliens among us ) and our noses and brains pretty much work the same way. Whether or not we enjoy, appreciate or dislike the same scents is another matter altogether. Thats tied up in personal preference, experiences and memories and cultural influences. I had a recent experience that is throwing all of my former beliefs about scent and the perception thereof into disarray.
If you were to look back over my years of posts on DFS (you don't have to) you'd see that the harshest criticism I've directed at otherwise excellent products has been having mild to non-existent scent or that my perception of the scent bears no resemblance to the artisan's stated scent profile for that product. I'm good with either liking or disliking a scent, thats just taste but little to no scent in a product marketed as having scent (i.e., not unscented) is a serious defect in my opinion. Well, maybe I've been unfair to those artisans whom I've felt were guilty of this. I'd just marked it up to either lack of skill scent wise (rarely) or intentionally under-scenting in order not to offend the overly sensitive.
So getting back to the recent experience - my wife and I were in a shop a few days ago that sold among other things, fragrance. I thought I'd sniff a few that I might be interested in so I could give my wife or kids ideas for potential Christmas gifts for me (why leave that up to chance?) I sniffed (and took away on sample cards) Tom Ford Grey Vetiver, Noir and For Men and Monte Blanc Legend Night. My preference was/is Tom Ford Grey Vetiver, Noir maybe second. I found For Men a little light and not to my taste and the Legend Night almost imperceptibly light and again, not really my style. OK fine. My wife liked Grey Vetiver as well as Noir but here's the weird thing, she found the Mont Blanc Legend Night overpoweringly strong. I could barely smell it and she could barely stand to be in the same room with it. Whats up with that?
It occurred to me first, maybe there's something wrong with my nose or more accurately my sense of smell. I'm only 58 and haven't had any significant exposure to substances that might toast my scent receptors and I generally smell most things pretty well, or so I thought. Secondly, I thought that maybe all humans don't perceive the same scents the same way. Maybe there's a genetic component similar to the ability to taste substances differently like cilantro. Now my mind is blown. I might be walking out the door thinking that I'm looking good, smelling good and feeling good and everyone in my wake is swallowing back vomit Maybe that woman who gets on the elevator reeking of some overpowering perfume thinks that she smells subtly and tastefully alluring....and maybe she does to everyone else but me!! This has really shaken me. I don't know what to think, what to believe or what to smell anymore. "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,"
So there it is. Where once I thought I stood on firm foundation now I find I'm struggling to maintain my footing on shifting sands. Most of all I want to apologize to any artisan I may have offended or maligned by accusing them of too light a hand with scent. I now only feel comfortable expressing whether I find a product personally pleasing or not and will, in future, refrain from commenting on scent strength. After all, what do I know?
If you were to look back over my years of posts on DFS (you don't have to) you'd see that the harshest criticism I've directed at otherwise excellent products has been having mild to non-existent scent or that my perception of the scent bears no resemblance to the artisan's stated scent profile for that product. I'm good with either liking or disliking a scent, thats just taste but little to no scent in a product marketed as having scent (i.e., not unscented) is a serious defect in my opinion. Well, maybe I've been unfair to those artisans whom I've felt were guilty of this. I'd just marked it up to either lack of skill scent wise (rarely) or intentionally under-scenting in order not to offend the overly sensitive.
So getting back to the recent experience - my wife and I were in a shop a few days ago that sold among other things, fragrance. I thought I'd sniff a few that I might be interested in so I could give my wife or kids ideas for potential Christmas gifts for me (why leave that up to chance?) I sniffed (and took away on sample cards) Tom Ford Grey Vetiver, Noir and For Men and Monte Blanc Legend Night. My preference was/is Tom Ford Grey Vetiver, Noir maybe second. I found For Men a little light and not to my taste and the Legend Night almost imperceptibly light and again, not really my style. OK fine. My wife liked Grey Vetiver as well as Noir but here's the weird thing, she found the Mont Blanc Legend Night overpoweringly strong. I could barely smell it and she could barely stand to be in the same room with it. Whats up with that?
It occurred to me first, maybe there's something wrong with my nose or more accurately my sense of smell. I'm only 58 and haven't had any significant exposure to substances that might toast my scent receptors and I generally smell most things pretty well, or so I thought. Secondly, I thought that maybe all humans don't perceive the same scents the same way. Maybe there's a genetic component similar to the ability to taste substances differently like cilantro. Now my mind is blown. I might be walking out the door thinking that I'm looking good, smelling good and feeling good and everyone in my wake is swallowing back vomit Maybe that woman who gets on the elevator reeking of some overpowering perfume thinks that she smells subtly and tastefully alluring....and maybe she does to everyone else but me!! This has really shaken me. I don't know what to think, what to believe or what to smell anymore. "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,"
So there it is. Where once I thought I stood on firm foundation now I find I'm struggling to maintain my footing on shifting sands. Most of all I want to apologize to any artisan I may have offended or maligned by accusing them of too light a hand with scent. I now only feel comfortable expressing whether I find a product personally pleasing or not and will, in future, refrain from commenting on scent strength. After all, what do I know?