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Wikipedia

Perfume

Perfume (UK: /ˈpɜːfjm/, US: /pərˈfjm/; French: parfum) is a mixture of fragrant essential oils or aroma compounds (fragrances), fixatives and solvents, usually in liquid form, used to give the human body, animals, food, objects, and living-spaces an agreeable scent.[1] Perfumes can be defined as substances that emit and diffuse a pleasant and fragrant odor. They consist of manmade mixtures of aromatic chemicals and essential oils. The 1939 Nobel Laureate for Chemistry, Leopold Ružička stated in 1945 that "right from the earliest days of scientific chemistry up to the present time, perfumes have substantially contributed to the development of organic chemistry as regards methods, systematic classification, and theory."[2]

Ancient texts and archaeological excavations show the use of perfumes in some of the earliest human civilizations. Modern perfumery began in the late 19th century with the commercial synthesis of aroma compounds such as vanillin or coumarin, which allowed for the composition of perfumes with smells previously unattainable solely from natural aromatics.

History edit

 
Egyptian scene depicting the preparation of lily perfume, 4th century BC

The word perfume is derived from the Latin perfumare, meaning "to smoke through".[3] Perfumery, as the art of making perfumes, began in ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Indus Valley civilization and possibly Ancient China.[4] It was further refined by the Romans and the Muslims.[citation needed]

One of the world's first-recorded chemists is considered to be a woman named Tapputi, a perfume maker mentioned in a cuneiform tablet from the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamia.[5] She distilled flowers, oil, and calamus with other aromatics, then filtered and put them back in the still several times.[6]

On the Indian subcontinent, perfume and perfumery existed in the Indus civilization (3300 BC – 1300 BC).[7]

 
A Byzantine alembic used to distill perfumes
 
Ancient Egyptian perfume vessel in shape of a monkey; 1550-1295 BC; faience; height: 6.5 cm, width: 3.3 cm, depth: 3.8 cm; Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)

In 2003,[8] archaeologists uncovered what are believed[by whom?] to be the world's oldest surviving perfumes in Pyrgos, Cyprus. The perfumes dated back more than 4,000 years. They were discovered in an ancient perfumery, a 300-square-meter (3,230 sq ft) factory[8] housing at least 60 stills, mixing bowls, funnels, and perfume bottles. In ancient times people used herbs and spices, such as almond, coriander, myrtle, conifer resin, and bergamot, as well as flowers.[9] In May 2018, an ancient perfume "Rodo" (Rose) was recreated for the Greek National Archaeological Museum's anniversary show "Countless Aspects of Beauty", allowing visitors to approach antiquity through their olfaction receptors.[10]

In the 9th century the Arab chemist Al-Kindi (Alkindus) wrote the Book of the Chemistry of Perfume and Distillations, which contained more than a hundred recipes for fragrant oils, salves, aromatic waters, and substitutes or imitations of costly drugs. The book also described 107 methods and recipes for perfume-making and perfume-making equipment, such as the alembic (which still bears its Arabic name.[11][12] [from Greek ἄμβιξ, "cup", "beaker"][13][14] described by Synesius in the 4th century[15]).

The Persian chemist Ibn Sina (also known as Avicenna) introduced the process of extracting oils from flowers by means of distillation, the procedure most commonly used today. He first experimented with the rose. Until his discovery, liquid perfumes consisted of mixtures of oil and crushed herbs or petals, which made a strong blend. Rose water was more delicate, and immediately became popular. Both the raw ingredients and the distillation technology significantly influenced western perfumery and scientific developments, particularly chemistry.

There is a controversy on whether perfumery was completely lost in Western Europe after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. That said, the art of perfumery in Western Europe was reinvigorated after the Islamic invasion of Spain and Southern Italy in 711 and 827. The Islamic controlled cities of Spain (Al-Andalus) became major producers of perfumes that were traded throughout the Old World. Like in the ancient world, Andalusians used fragrance in devotion to God. Perfumes added a layer of cleanliness that was needed for their devotion. Andalusian women were also offered greater freedoms than women in other Muslim controlled regions and were allowed to leave their homes and socialize outside. This freedom allowed courtship to occur outside of the home. As a result, Andalusian women used perfumes for courtship.[16]

Recipes of perfumes from the monks of Santa Maria Delle Vigne or Santa Maria Novella of Florence, Italy, were recorded from 1221.[17] In the east, the Hungarians produced around 1370 a perfume made of scented oils blended in an alcohol solution – best known as Hungary Water – at the behest of Queen Elizabeth of Hungary.[18][19][20] The art of perfumery prospered in Renaissance Italy, and in the 16th century the personal perfumer to Catherine de' Medici (1519–1589), René the Florentine (Renato il fiorentino), took Italian refinements to France. His laboratory was connected with her apartments by a secret passageway, so that no formulae could be stolen en route. Thanks to Rene, France quickly became one of the European centers of perfume and cosmetics manufacture. Cultivation of flowers for their perfume essence, which had begun in the 14th century, grew into a major industry in the south of France.

Between the 16th and 17th centuries, perfumes were used primarily by the wealthy to mask body odors resulting from infrequent bathing.[21] In 1693, Italian barber Giovanni Paolo Feminis created a perfume water called Aqua Admirabilis,[22] today best known as eau de cologne; his nephew Johann Maria Farina (Giovanni Maria Farina) took over the business in 1732.[23][24]

By the 18th century the Grasse region of France, Sicily, and Calabria (in Italy) were growing aromatic plants to provide the growing perfume industry with raw materials. Even today, Italy and France remain the center of European perfume design and trade.

Dilution classes and terminologies edit

 
Original Eau de Cologne flacon 1811, from Johann Maria Farina, Farina gegenüber
 
Vintage atomizer perfume bottle

Perfume types reflect the concentration of aromatic compounds in a solvent, which in fine fragrance is typically ethanol or a mix of water and ethanol. Various sources differ considerably in the definitions of perfume types. The intensity and longevity of a fragrance is based on the concentration, intensity, and longevity of the aromatic compounds, or perfume oils, used. As the percentage of aromatic compounds increases, so does the intensity and longevity of the scent. Specific terms are used to describe a fragrance's approximate concentration by the percent of perfume oil in the volume of the final product. The most widespread terms[25] are:

  • Parfum or extrait (P): 15–40% aromatic compounds (IFRA: typically ~20%). In English, parfum is also known as perfume extract, pure perfume, or simply perfume.
  • Esprit de parfum (ESdP): 15–30% aromatic compounds, a seldom used strength concentration between EdP and parfum.
  • Eau de parfum (EdP) or parfum de toilette (PdT): 10–20% aromatic compounds (typically ~15%). It is sometimes called "eau de perfume" or "millésime."[citation needed] Parfum de toilette is a less common term, most popular in the 1980s, that is generally analogous to eau de parfum.
  • Eau de toilette (EdT): 5–15% aromatic compounds (typically ~10%). This is the staple for most masculine perfumes.
  • Eau de cologne (EdC): 3–8% aromatic compounds (typically ~5%). This concentration is often simply called cologne.
  • Eau fraîche: 3% or less aromatic compounds. This general term encompasses products sold as "splashes," "mists," "veils" and other imprecise terms. Such products may be diluted with water rather than oil or alcohol.[25]

Imprecise terminology edit

 
J.B. Filz in Vienna. Perfumeries with long traditions, such as J.B. Filz, created their own scents.[26]

The wide range in the percentages of aromatic compounds that may be present in each concentration means that the terminology of extrait, EdP, EdT, and EdC is quite imprecise with regard to oil concentration. Although an EdP will often be more concentrated than an EdT and in turn an EdC, this is not always the case. Different perfumeries or perfume houses assign different amounts of oils to each of their perfumes. Therefore, although the oil concentration of a perfume in EdP dilution will necessarily be higher than the same perfume in EdT from within a company's same range, the actual amount will vary among companies. An EdT from one house may have a higher concentration of aromatic compounds than an EdP from another.

Furthermore, some fragrances with the same product name but having a different concentration may not only differ in their dilutions, but actually use different perfume oil mixtures altogether. For instance, in order to make the EdT version of a fragrance brighter and fresher than its EdP, the EdT oil may be "tweaked" to contain slightly more top notes or fewer base notes. Chanel No. 5 is a good example: its parfum, EdP, EdT, and now-discontinued EdC concentrations are in fact different compositions (the parfum dates to 1921, the EdT from the 1950s, and the EdP was not developed until the 1980s). In some cases, words such as extrême, intense, or concentrée that might indicate a higher aromatic concentration are actually completely different fragrances, related only because of a similar perfume accord. An example of this is Chanel's Pour Monsieur and Pour Monsieur concentrée.

History of the terms and concentrations edit

The terms "perfume" and "cologne" lead to much confusion in English. "Perfume" is often used as a generic, overarching term to refer to fragrances marketed to women, regardless of their exact concentration, while the term "cologne" is likewise applied to those sold to men. The actual product worn by a woman may be an eau de parfum rather than an extrait, or by a man an eau de toilette rather than an eau de cologne. The reasons why the terms "perfume" and "cologne" are often used in a generic sense is related to the modern development of perfumery in Europe since the 18th century.

The term "cologne" was first used in Europe in the 18th century to refer to a family of fresh, citrus-based fragrances distilled using extracts from citrus, floral, and woody ingredients. These "classical colognes" were supposedly first developed in Cologne, Germany, hence the name. This type of cologne, which is still in production, describes unisex compositions "which are basically citrus blends and do not have a perfume parent."[27] Examples include Mäurer & Wirtz's 4711 (created in 1799), and Guerlain's Eau de Cologne Impériale (1830). "Toilet water," or eau de toilette, referred to wide range of scented waters not otherwise known as colognes, and were popular throughout the 19th century.

The term "perfume" emerged in the late 19th century. The first fragrance labeled a "parfum" extract with a high concentration of aromatic compounds was Guerlain's Jicky in 1889. In the first half of the 20th century, fragrance companies began offering their products in more than one concentration, often pairing an extrait with a lighter eau de toilette suitable for day wear, which made their products available to a wider range of customers. As this process accelerated, perfume houses borrowed the term "cologne" to refer to an even more diluted interpretation of their fragrances than eau de toilette. Guerlain, for example, offered an eau de cologne version of its flagship perfume Shalimar and many of its other fragrances. In contrast to a classical eau de cologne, this type of modern cologne is a lighter, less concentrated interpretation of a more concentrated product, typically a pure parfum, and is usually the lightest concentration from a line of fragrance products.[27]

The eau de parfum concentration and terminology is the most recent, being originally developed to offer the radiance of an EdT with the longevity of an extrait. Parfum de toilette and EdP began to appear in the 1970s and gained popularity in the 1980s. In the 21st century, EdP is probably the most widespread strength concentration. It is often the first concentration offered when a new fragrance is launched, and usually referred to generically as "perfume."[25]

Historically, women's fragrances tended to have higher levels of aromatic compounds than men's fragrances. Fragrances marketed to men were typically sold as EdT or EdC, rarely as EdP or perfume extracts. This is changing in the modern fragrance world, especially as fragrances are becoming more unisex. Women's fragrances used to be common in all levels of concentration, but in the 21st century are mainly seen in EdP and EdT concentrations. Many modern perfumes are never offered in extrait or eau de cologne formulations, and EdP and EdT account for the vast majority of new launches.[citation needed][28]

Solvent types edit

Perfume oils are often diluted with a solvent, though this is not always the case, and its necessity is disputed. By far the most common solvent for perfume-oil dilution is alcohol, typically a mixture of ethanol and water or a rectified spirit. Perfume oil can also be diluted by means of neutral-smelling oils such as fractionated coconut oil, or liquid waxes such as jojoba oil and almond oil.

Applying fragrances edit

The conventional application of pure perfume (parfum extrait) in Western cultures is behind the ears, at the nape of the neck, under the armpits and at the insides of wrists, elbows and knees, so that the pulse point will warm the perfume and release fragrance continuously. According to perfumer Sophia Grojsman behind the knees is the ideal point to apply perfume in order that the scent may rise.[29] The modern perfume industry encourages the practice of layering fragrance so that it is released in different intensities depending upon the time of the day. Lightly scented products such as bath oil, shower gel, and body lotion are recommended for the morning; eau de toilette is suggested for the afternoon; and perfume applied to the pulse points for evening.[30][self-published source] Cologne fragrance is released rapidly, lasting around 2 hours. Eau de toilette lasts from 2 to 4 hours, while perfume may last up to six hours.[31]

A variety of factors can influence how fragrance interacts with the wearer's own physiology and affect the perception of the fragrance. Diet is one factor, as eating spicy and fatty foods can increase the intensity of a fragrance.[32] The use of medications can also impact the character of a fragrance.[32] The relative dryness of the wearer's skin is important, since dry skin will not hold fragrance as long as skin with more oil.[31]

Describing a perfume edit

 
An original bottle of Fougère Royale by Houbigant. Created by Paul Parquet in 1884, it is one of the most important modern perfumes and inspired the eponymous Fougère class of fragrances.
 
Fragrance pyramid

The precise formulae of commercial perfumes are kept secret. Even if they were widely published, they would be dominated by such complex ingredients and odorants that they would be of little use in providing a guide to the general consumer in description of the experience of a scent. Nonetheless, connoisseurs of perfume can become extremely skillful at identifying components and origins of scents in the same manner as wine experts.[33]

The most practical way to start describing a perfume is according to the elements of the fragrance notes of the scent or the "family" it belongs to, all of which affect the overall impression of a perfume from first application to the last lingering hint of scent.[34][35]

The trail of scent left behind by a person wearing perfume is called its sillage, after the French word for "wake", as in the trail left by a boat in water.

Fragrance notes edit

Perfume is described in a musical metaphor as having three sets of notes, making the harmonious scent accord. The notes unfold over time, with the immediate impression of the top note leading to the deeper middle notes, and the base notes gradually appearing as the final stage. These notes are created carefully with knowledge of the evaporation process of the perfume.

  • Top notes: Also called the head notes. The scents that are perceived immediately on application of a perfume. Top notes consist of small, light molecules that evaporate quickly. They form a person's initial impression of a perfume and thus are very important in the selling of a perfume. Examples of top notes include mint, lavender and coriander.
  • Middle notes: Also referred to as heart notes. The scent of a perfume that emerges just prior to the dissipation of the top note. The middle note compounds form the "heart" or main body of a perfume and act to mask the often unpleasant initial impression of base notes, which become more pleasant with time. Examples of middle notes include seawater, sandalwood and jasmine.
  • Base notes: The scent of a perfume that appears close to the departure of the middle notes. The base and middle notes together are the main theme of a perfume. Base notes bring depth and solidity to a perfume. Compounds of this class of scents are typically rich and "deep" and are usually not perceived until 30 minutes after application. Examples of base notes include tobacco, amber and musk.

The scents in the top and middle notes are influenced by the base notes; conversely, the scents of the base notes will be altered by the types of fragrance materials used as middle notes. Manufacturers who publish perfume notes typically do so with the fragrance components presented as a fragrance pyramid,[36] using imaginative and abstract terms for the components listed.

Olfactive families edit

The grouping of perfumes can never be completely objective or definitive. Many fragrances contain aspects of different families. Even a perfume designated as "single flower" will have subtle undertones of other aromatics. There are hardly any true unitary-scent perfumes consisting of a single aromatic material.

The family classification is a starting point to describe a perfume, but does not fully characterize it.

Traditional categories edit

 
Opium by YSL, of amber or oriental fragrance class
 
A floral bouquet, Joy from Jean Patou

The traditional categories which emerged around 1900:

  • Citrus: The oldest fragrance family that gave birth to lightweight eau de colognes. Development of newer fragrance compounds has allowed for the creation of more tenacious citrus fragrances. Examples: 4711, Guerlain's Eau de Cologne Impériale, Penhaligon's Quercus.

Modern edit

Since 1945, new categories have emerged to describe modern scents, due to great advances in the technology of compound design and synthesis, as well as the natural development of styles and tastes:

  • Bright Floral: Combining single floral and floral bouquet traditional categories. Example: Estée Lauder Beautiful.
  • Green: Lighter, more modern interpretation of the Chypre type, with pronounced cut grass, crushed green leaf and cucumber-like scents. Examples: Estée Lauder Aliage, Sisley Eau de Campagne, Calvin Klein Eternity.
  • Aquatic, Oceanic, Ozonic: The newest category, first appearing in 1988 Davidoff Cool Water (1988), Christian Dior Dune (1991). A clean smell reminiscent of the ocean, leading to many androgynous perfumes. Generally contains calone, a synthetic discovered in 1966, or more recent synthetics. Also used to accent floral, oriental, and woody fragrances.
  • Fruity: Featuring fruits other than citrus, such as peach, cassis (black currant), mango, passion fruit, and others. Example: Ginestet Botrytis.
  • Gourmand (French: [ɡuʁmɑ̃]): Scents with "edible" or "dessert-like" qualities, often containing vanilla, tonka bean, and coumarin, as well as synthetic components designed to resemble food flavors. A sweet Example: Thierry Mugler's Angel (sweet).

Fragrance wheel edit

 
Fragrance Wheel perfume classification chart, ver. 1983

This newer classification method is widely used in retail and the fragrance industry, created in 1983 by the perfume consultant Michael Edwards. The new scheme simplifies classification and naming, as well as showing the relationships among the classes.[38]

The five main families are Floral, Oriental, Woody, Aromatic Fougère, and Fresh, the first four from the classic terminology and the last from the modern oceanic category. Each of these are divided into subgroups and arranged around a wheel. In this scheme, Chanel No.5, traditionally classified as an aldehydic floral, is placed under the Soft Floral sub-group, while amber scents are within the Oriental group. Chypre perfumes are more ambiguous, having affinities with both the Oriental and Woody families. For instance, Guerlain Mitsouko is under Mossy Woods, but Hermès Rouge, a more floral chypre, is under Floral Oriental.

Aromatics sources edit

Plant sources edit

 
Citrus tree blossom
 
Resins in perfumery include myrrh
 
Frankincense

Plants have long been used in perfumery as a source of essential oils and aroma compounds. These aromatics are usually secondary metabolites produced by plants as protection against herbivores, infections, as well as to attract pollinators. Plants are by far the largest source of fragrant compounds used in perfumery. The sources of these compounds may be derived from various parts of a plant. A plant can offer more than one source of aromatics, for instance the aerial portions and seeds of coriander have remarkably different odors from each other. Orange leaves, blossoms, and fruit zest are the respective sources of petitgrain, neroli, and orange oils.

Animal sources edit

 
A musk pod. Extensive hunting of male musk deer for their pods in recent history has resulted in the detriment of the species.
 
Ambergris
  • Ambergris: Lumps of oxidized fatty compounds, whose precursors were secreted and expelled by the sperm whale. Ambergris should not be confused with yellow amber, which is used in jewelry. Because the harvesting of ambergris involves no harm to its animal source, it remains one of the few animalic fragrancing agents around which little controversy now exists.
  • Castoreum: Obtained from the odorous sacs of the North American beaver.
  • Civet: Also called civet musk, this is obtained from the odorous sacs of the civets, animals in the family Viverridae, related to the mongoose. World Animal Protection investigated African civets caught for this purpose.[40]
  • Hyraceum: Commonly known as "Africa stone", is the petrified excrement of the rock hyrax.[41]
  • Honeycomb: From the honeycomb of the honeybee. Both beeswax and honey can be solvent extracted to produce an absolute. Beeswax is extracted with ethanol and the ethanol evaporated to produce beeswax absolute.
  • Musk: Originally derived from a gland (sac or pod) located between the genitals and the umbilicus of the Himalayan male musk deer Moschus moschiferus, it has now mainly been replaced by the use of synthetic musks sometimes known as "white musk".

Other natural sources edit

  • Lichens: Commonly used lichens include oakmoss and treemoss thalli.
  • "Seaweed": Distillates are sometimes used as essential oil in perfumes. An example of a commonly used seaweed is Fucus vesiculosus, which is commonly referred to as bladder wrack. Natural seaweed fragrances are rarely used due to their higher cost and lower potency than synthetics.

Synthetic sources edit

Many modern perfumes contain synthesized odorants. Synthetics can provide fragrances which are not found in nature. For instance, Calone, a compound of synthetic origin, imparts a fresh ozonous metallic marine scent that is widely used in contemporary perfumes. Synthetic aromatics are often used as an alternate source of compounds that are not easily obtained from natural sources. For example, linalool and coumarin are both naturally occurring compounds that can be inexpensively synthesized from terpenes. Orchid scents (typically salicylates) are usually not obtained directly from the plant itself but are instead synthetically created to match the fragrant compounds found in various orchids.

One of the most commonly used classes of synthetic aromatics by far are the white musks. These materials are found in all forms of commercial perfumes as a neutral background to the middle notes. These musks are added in large quantities to laundry detergents in order to give washed clothes a lasting "clean" scent.

The majority of the world's synthetic aromatics are created by relatively few companies. They include:

Each of these companies patents several processes for the production of aromatic synthetics annually.

Characteristics edit

Natural and synthetics are used for their different odor characteristics in perfumery

Naturals Synthetics
Variance Natural scents will vary from each supplier based on when and where they are harvested, how they are processed, and the extraction method itself. This means that a certain flower grown in Morocco and in France will smell different, even if the same method is used to grow, harvest, and extract the scent. As such, each perfumer will prefer flowers grown in one country over another, or one extraction method to the next. However, due to a natural scent's mixed composition, it is easy for unscrupulous suppliers to adulterate the actual raw materials by changing its source (adding Indian jasmine into Grasse jasmine) or the contents (adding linalool to rosewood) to increase their profit margin. Much more consistent than natural aromatics. However, differences in organic synthesis may result in minute differences in concentration of impurities. If these impurities have low smell (detection) thresholds, the differences in the scent of the synthetic aromatic will be significant.
Components Contains many different organic compounds, each adding a different note to the overall scent. Certain naturally derived substances have a long history of use, but this cannot always be used as an indicator of whether they are safe or not. Possible allergenic or carcinogenic compounds. Depending on purity, consists primarily of one chemical compound. Sometimes chiral mixtures of isomers, such as in the case of Iso E Super.[42] Due to the almost pure composition of one chemical compound, the same molecules found diluted in nature will have a different scent and effect on the body, if used undiluted.
Scent uniqueness Reminiscent of its originating material, although extraction may capture a different "layer" of the scent, depending on how the extraction method denatures the odoriferous compounds. Similar to natural scents yet different at the same time. Some synthetics attempt to mimic natural notes, while others explore the entire spectrum of scent. Novel scent compounds not found in nature will often be unique in their scent.
Scent complexity Deep and complex fragrance notes. Soft, with subtle scent nuances. Highly valued for ideal composition. Pure and pronounced fragrance notes. Often monotonous in nature, yet reminiscent of other natural scents.
Price Dependent on extraction method. More expensive, but not always, as prices are determined by the labor and difficulty of properly extracting each unit of the natural materials, as well as its quality. Typically the relationship between, longevity of a perfume, cost and the concentration of essential oils follows the graph below:
 
This chart shows the typical relationship between price of perfume, its longevity and the concentration of essential oils.
[43]
Dependent on synthesis method. Generally cheaper, but not necessarily. Synthetic aromatics are not necessarily cheaper than naturals, with some synthetics being more costly than most natural ingredients due to various factors such as the long synthesis routes, low availability of precursor chemicals, and low overall yield. However, due to their low odor threshold, they should be diluted when making a perfume.

Obtaining natural odorants edit

 
Itar (herbal perfume) vendor on the street of Hyderabad, India, who can compose an original perfume for the customer

Before perfumes can be composed, the odorants used in various perfume compositions must first be obtained. Synthetic odorants are produced through organic synthesis and purified. Odorants from natural sources require the use of various methods to extract the aromatics from the raw materials. The results of the extraction are either essential oils, absolutes, concretes, or butters, depending on the amount of waxes in the extracted product.[44]

All these techniques will, to a certain extent, distort the odor of the aromatic compounds obtained from the raw materials. This is due to the use of heat, harsh solvents, or through exposure to oxygen in the extraction process which will denature the aromatic compounds, which either change their odor character or renders them odorless.

  • Maceration/Solvent extraction: The most used and economically important technique for extracting aromatics in the modern perfume industry. Raw materials are submerged in a solvent that can dissolve the desired aromatic compounds. Maceration lasts anywhere from hours to months. Fragrant compounds for woody and fibrous plant materials are often obtained in this manner as are all aromatics from animal sources. The technique can also be used to extract odorants that are too volatile for distillation or easily denatured by heat. Commonly used solvents for maceration/solvent extraction include ethane, hexane, and dimethyl ether. The product of this process is called a "concrete."
    • Supercritical fluid extraction: A relatively new technique for extracting fragrant compounds from a raw material, which often employs Supercritical CO2. Due to the low heat of process and the relatively nonreactive solvent used in the extraction, the fragrant compounds derived often closely resemble the original odor of the raw material.
    • Ethanol extraction: A type of solvent extraction used to extract fragrant compounds directly from dry raw materials, as well as the impure oily compounds materials resulting from solvent extraction or enfleurage. Ethanol extraction from fresh plant materials contain large quantities of water, which will also be extracted into the ethanol.
  • Distillation: A common technique for obtaining aromatic compounds from plants, such as orange blossoms and roses. The raw material is heated and the fragrant compounds are re-collected through condensation of the distilled vapor.
 
An old perfume still on display at Fragonard
    • Steam distillation: Steam from boiling water is passed through the raw material, which drives out their volatile fragrant compounds. The condensate from distillation are settled in a Florentine flask. This allows for the easy separation of the fragrant oils from the water. The water collected from the condensate, which retains some of the fragrant compounds and oils from the raw material is called hydrosol and sometimes sold. This is most commonly used for fresh plant materials such as flowers, leaves, and stems.
    • Dry/destructive distillation: The raw materials are directly heated in a still without a carrier solvent such as water. Fragrant compounds that are released from the raw material by the high heat often undergo anhydrous pyrolysis, which results in the formation of different fragrant compounds, and thus different fragrant notes. This method is used to obtain fragrant compounds from fossil amber and fragrant woods where an intentional "burned" or "toasted" odor is desired.
    • Fractionation: Through the use of a fractionation column, different fractions distilled from a material can be selectively excluded to modify the scent of the final product. Although the product is more expensive, this is sometimes performed to remove unpleasant or undesirable scents of a material and affords the perfumer more control over their composition process.
  • Expression: Raw material is squeezed or compressed and the essential oils are collected. Of all raw materials, only the fragrant oils from the peels of fruits in the citrus family are extracted in this manner since the oil is present in large enough quantities as to make this extraction method economically feasible.
  • Enfleurage: Absorption of aroma materials into solid fat or wax and then extraction of odorous oils with ethyl alcohol. Extraction by enfleurage was commonly used when distillation was not possible because some fragrant compounds denature through high heat. This technique is not commonly used in the modern industry due to prohibitive costs and the existence of more efficient and effective extraction methods.[34]

Fragrant extracts edit

 
Indian Patchouli - Tincture

Although fragrant extracts are known to the general public as the generic term "essential oils", a more specific language is used in the fragrance industry to describe the source, purity, and technique used to obtain a particular fragrant extract. Of these extracts, only absolutes, essential oils, and tinctures are directly used to formulate perfumes.

  • Absolute: Fragrant materials that are purified from a pommade or concrete by soaking them in ethanol. By using a slightly hydrophilic compound such as ethanol, most of the fragrant compounds from the waxy source materials can be extracted without dissolving any of the fragrantless waxy molecules. Absolutes are usually found in the form of an oily liquid.
  • Concrete: Fragrant materials that have been extracted from raw materials through solvent extraction using volatile hydrocarbons. Concretes usually contain a large amount of wax due to the ease in which the solvents dissolve various hydrophobic compounds. As such concretes are usually further purified through distillation or ethanol based solvent extraction. Concretes are typically either waxy or resinous solids or thick oily liquids.
  • Essential oil: Fragrant materials that have been extracted from a source material directly through distillation or expression and obtained in the form of an oily liquid. Oils extracted through expression are sometimes called expression oils.
  • Pomade: A fragrant mass of solid fat created from the enfleurage process, in which odorous compounds in raw materials are adsorbed into animal fats. Pommades are found in the form of an oily and sticky solid.
  • Tincture: Fragrant materials produced by directly soaking and infusing raw materials in ethanol. Tinctures are typically thin liquids.[34]

Products from different extraction methods are known under different names even though their starting materials are the same. For instance, orange blossoms from Citrus aurantium that have undergone solvent extraction produces "orange blossom absolute" but that which have been steam distilled is known as "neroli oil".

Composing perfumes edit

 
Perfume formula

Perfume compositions are an important part of many industries ranging from the luxury goods sectors, food services industries, to manufacturers of various household chemicals. The purpose of using perfume or fragrance compositions in these industries is to affect customers through their sense of smell and entice them into purchasing the perfume or perfumed product. As such there is significant interest in producing a perfume formulation that people will find aesthetically pleasing.

The perfumer edit

 
The Perfume Maker, by Rodolphe Ernst

The job of composing perfumes that will be sold is left up to an expert on perfume composition or known in the fragrance industry as the perfumer. They are also sometimes referred to affectionately as a "Nez" (French for nose) due to their fine sense of smell and skill in smell composition.

The composition of a perfume typically begins with a brief by the perfumer's employer or an outside customer. The customers to the perfumer or their employers, are typically fashion houses or large corporations of various industries.[45] The perfumer will then go through the process of blending multiple perfume mixtures and sell the formulation to the customer, often with modifications of the composition of the perfume. The perfume composition will then be either used to enhance another product as a functional fragrance (shampoos, make-up, detergents, car interiors, etc.), or marketed and sold directly to the public as a fine fragrance.[33]

Technique edit

 
Paper blotters (fr:mouillettes) are commonly used by perfumers to sample and smell perfumes and odorants.

Although there is no single "correct" technique for the formulation of a perfume, there are general guidelines as to how a perfume can be constructed from a concept. Although many ingredients do not contribute to the smell of a perfume, many perfumes include colorants and antioxidants to improve the marketability and shelf life of the perfume, respectively.

Basic framework edit

Perfume oils usually contain tens to hundreds of ingredients and these are typically organized in a perfume for the specific role they will play. These ingredients can be roughly grouped into four groups:

  • Primary scents (Heart): Can consist of one or a few main ingredients for a certain concept, such as "rose". Alternatively, multiple ingredients can be used together to create an "abstract" primary scent that does not bear a resemblance to a natural ingredient. For instance, jasmine and rose scents are commonly blends for abstract floral fragrances. Cola flavourant is a good example of an abstract primary scent.
  • Modifiers: These ingredients alter the primary scent to give the perfume a certain desired character: for instance, fruit esters may be included in a floral primary to create a fruity floral; calone and citrus scents can be added to create a "fresher" floral. The cherry scent in cherry cola can be considered a modifier.
  • Blenders: A large group of ingredients that smooth out the transitions of a perfume between different "layers" or bases. These themselves can be used as a major component of the primary scent. Common blending ingredients include linalool and hydroxycitronellal.
  • Fixatives: Used to support the primary scent by bolstering it. Many resins, wood scents, and amber bases are used as fixatives.

The top, middle, and base notes of a fragrance may have separate primary scents and supporting ingredients. The perfume's fragrance oils are then blended with ethyl alcohol and water, aged in tanks for several weeks and filtered through processing equipment to, respectively, allow the perfume ingredients in the mixture to stabilize and to remove any sediment and particles before the solution can be filled into the perfume bottles.[46]

Fragrance bases edit

 
A "perfume organ", where perfumers utilize hundreds of essences, in Grasse, France

Instead of building a perfume from "ground up", many modern perfumes and colognes are made using fragrance bases or simply bases. Each base is essentially modular perfume that is blended from essential oils and aromatic chemicals, and formulated with a simple concept such as "fresh cut grass" or "juicy sour apple". Many of Guerlain's Aqua Allegoria line, with their simple fragrance concepts, are good examples of what perfume fragrance bases are like.

The effort used in developing bases by fragrance companies or individual perfumers may equal that of a marketed perfume, since they are useful in that they are reusable. On top of its reusability, the benefit in using bases for construction are quite numerous:

  1. Ingredients with "difficult" or "overpowering" scents that are tailored into a blended base may be more easily incorporated into a work of perfume
  2. A base may be better scent approximations of a certain thing than the extract of the thing itself. For example, a base made to embody the scent for "fresh dewy rose" might be a better approximation for the scent concept of a rose after rain than plain rose oil. Flowers whose scents cannot be extracted, such as gardenia or hyacinth, are composed as bases from data derived from headspace technology.
  3. A perfumer can quickly rough out a concept from a brief by combining multiple bases, then present it for feedback. Smoothing out the "edges" of the perfume can be done after a positive response.

Reverse engineering edit

Creating perfumes through reverse engineering with analytical techniques such as Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC/MS) can reveal the "general" formula for any particular perfume. The difficulty of GC/MS analysis arises due to the complexity of a perfume's ingredients. This is particularly due to the presence of natural essential oils and other ingredients consisting of complex chemical mixtures. However, "anyone armed with good GC/MS equipment and experienced in using this equipment can today, within days, find out a great deal about the formulation of any perfume... customers and competitors can analyze most perfumes more or less precisely."[47]

Antique or badly preserved perfumes undergoing this analysis can also be difficult due to the numerous degradation by-products and impurities that may have resulted from breakdown of the odorous compounds. Ingredients and compounds can usually be ruled out or identified using gas chromatograph (GC) smellers, which allow individual chemical components to be identified both through their physical properties and their scent. Reverse engineering of best-selling perfumes in the market is a very common practice in the fragrance industry due to the relative simplicity of operating GC equipment, the pressure to produce marketable fragrances, and the highly lucrative nature of the perfume market.[46]

Copyright edit

 
An assorti of counterfeit perfumes (in a "kiosk" store)

It is doubtful whether perfumes qualify as appropriate copyright subject matter under the US Copyright Act. The issue has not yet been addressed by any US court. A perfume's scent is not eligible for trademark protection: the scent serves as the functional purpose of the product.[48]

In 2006 the Dutch Supreme Court granted copyright protection to Lancôme's perfume Tresor (Lancôme v. Kecofa).

The French Supreme Court has twice taken the position that perfumes lack the creativity to constitute copyrightable expressions (Bsiri-Barbir v. Haarman & Reimer, 2006; Beaute Prestige International v. Senteur Mazal, 2008).[48]

Sometimes, a knock-off perfume would use an altered name of the original perfume (for instance, now-discontinued Freya by Oriflame perfume has a similar-designed copy produced as "Freyya").

It is still questionable if perfume's "functional purpose" can be protected with technical patent (one which lasts 15 years). Apparently,[according to whom?] Russian "Novaya Zarya" labels their colognes as "hygienic lotions" for a similar reason. A counterexample: NovZar's more-than-century-old Shipr chypre and Troinoi cologne are being produced by other companies in Russia in similar bottles.

Numbered perfumery, "analogs" edit

A different kind of copying perfumes is known in ex-USSR countries as "номерная парфюмерия" (literally "numbered perfumery"):

A "number-making" company with perfumery equipment would use their own, one-style-for-all cheap bottle; de jure labeling a knock-off perfume as an "aroma in the direction of [the well-known perfume]" or a "version" of certain branded perfume. This way, the production costs of initially cheap scents are reduced, since the bottle is used neither for plain counterfeiting nor for subtle re-designing.

The questionable part of numbered perfumery naming is the idea to openly mark perfume #XXX (say, #105) as either "type" or "version", or "аромат направления" (literally "aroma in the direction of") of a well-known perfum.[49]

  • Resellers in offline stores (in malls, airport shops) can offer "fillable" perfumery, sometimes using weasel wording to justify the price.
  • Such perfumes usually get three-digit numbers as an officially registered name, which is stickered to the bottles.
  • When it comes to propellant, a "number" usually has an alcohol base [almost] without stabilization (which may give strong "alcohol base stench", altering perfume's scent into the "smell of cheapness" phenomenon).
    • To avoid this, many "numbers" can be made with (di)propylenglicol base and come as "perfume oil(s)". PG or DPG based numbered perfumery comes in 50ml plastic bottles and is purposed for tiny rollers; (D)PG is not usable in spray bottles (while not affected by the "smell of cheapness" issue nonetheless). Some companies offer all of their own "numbers" in both alcohol based and (D)PG based variants.

In small online "bulk", however (in purchases over 5000RUB), a whole 100ml bottle of such perfume (or 50ml bottle of "scent oil" of same "direction") costs only around 6 EUR.

Health and environmental issues edit

Perfume ingredients, regardless of natural or synthetic origins, may all cause health or environmental problems when used. Although the areas are under active research, much remains to be learned about the effects of fragrance on human health and the environment.

Immunological; asthma and allergy edit

Evidence in peer-reviewed journals shows that some fragrances can cause asthmatic reactions in some individuals, especially those with severe or atopic asthma.[50] Many fragrance ingredients can also cause headaches, allergic skin reactions[51] or nausea.[52][53][54]

In some cases, an excessive use of perfumes may cause allergic reactions of the skin. For instance, acetophenone, ethyl acetate[citation needed] and acetone[46] while present in many perfumes, are also known or potential respiratory allergens. Nevertheless, this may be misleading, since the harm presented by many of these chemicals (either natural or synthetic) is dependent on environmental conditions and their concentrations in a perfume. For instance, linalool, which is listed as an irritant, causes skin irritation when it degrades to peroxides, however the use of antioxidants in perfumes or reduction in concentrations can prevent this. As well, the furanocoumarin present in natural extracts of grapefruit or celery can cause severe allergic reactions and increase sensitivity to ultraviolet radiation.[55]

Some research on natural aromatics have shown that many contain compounds that cause skin irritation.[56] However some studies, such as IFRA's research claim that opoponax is too dangerous to be used in perfumery, still lack scientific consensus.[57] It is also true that sometimes inhalation alone can cause skin irritation.[citation needed]

 
Patch test

A number of national and international surveys have identified balsam of Peru, often used in perfumes, as being in the "top five" allergens most commonly causing patch test reactions in people referred to dermatology clinics.[58][59][60] A study in 2001 found that 3.8% of the general population patch tested was allergic to it.[61] Many perfumes contain components identical to balsam of Peru.[62]

Balsam of Peru is used as a marker for perfume allergy. Its presence in a cosmetic is denoted by the INCI term Myroxylon pereirae.[63] Balsam of Peru has been banned by the International Fragrance Association since 1982 from use as a fragrance compound, but may be present as an extract or distillate in other products, where mandatory labelling is not required for usage of 0.4% or less.[62]

Carcinogenicity edit

There is scientific evidence that nitro-musks such as musk xylene could cause cancer in some specific animal tests. These reports were evaluated by the EU Scientific Committee for Consumer Safety (SCCS, formerly the SCCNFP[64]) and musk xylene was found to be safe for continued use in cosmetic products.[65] It is in fact part of the procedures of the Cosmetic Regulation in Europe that materials classified as carcinogens require such a safety evaluation by the authorities to be allowed in cosmetic consumer products.

Although other ingredients such as polycyclic synthetic musks, have been reported to be positive in some in-vitro hormone assays,[66][67] these reports have been reviewed by various authorities. For example, for one of the main polycyclic musks Galaxolide (HHCB) these reviews include those of the EU Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety,[68] the EU's Priority Substances Review,[69] the EU Scientific Committee on Health and Environmental Risk,[70] and more recently also the US EPA.[71] The outcome of all of these reviews over the past decade or so is that there are no safety concerns for human health. Reviews with similar positive outcomes also exist for another main polycyclic musk (AHTN)—for instance, on its safe use in cosmetics by the EU.[72]

Many natural aromatics, such as oakmoss absolutes,[56][73] basil oil, rose oil and many others contain allergens or carcinogenic compounds, the safety of which is either governed by regulations (e.g. allowed methyl eugenol levels in the EU Cosmetics Regulation (Entry 102, Annex III of the EU Cosmetics Regulation.[74]) or through various limitations set by the International Fragrance Association.[75]

Environmental edit

 
Perfume stall in Cairo

Pollution edit

Synthetic musks are pleasant in smell and relatively inexpensive, as such they are often employed in large quantities to cover the unpleasant scent of laundry detergents and many personal cleaning products. Due to their large-scale use, several types of synthetic musks have been found in human fat and milk,[76] as well as in the sediments and waters of the Great Lakes.[77]

These pollutants may pose additional health and environmental problems when they enter human and animal diets.

Species endangerment edit

The demands for aromatic materials such as sandalwood, agarwood, and musk have led to the endangerment of these species, as well as illegal trafficking and harvesting.

Safety regulations edit

The US FDA controls the safety of perfumes through their ingredients and requires that they be tested to the extent that they are Generally recognized as safe (GRAS). Due to the need for protection of trade secrets, companies rarely give the full listing[citation needed] of ingredients regardless of their effects on health.[dubious ]

In the EU, as from 11 March 2005, the mandatory listing of a set of 26 recognized fragrance allergens was enforced.[78] The requirement to list these materials is dependent on the intended use of the final product. The limits above which the allergens are required to be declared are 0.001% for products intended to remain on the skin, and 0.01% for those intended to be rinsed off. This has resulted in many old perfumes like chypres and fougère classes, which traditionally make use of oakmoss extract, being reformulated.[citation needed]

Preserving perfume edit

 
Perfumes in a museum
 
Potpourri, by Edwin Austin Abbey, 1899

Fragrance compounds in perfumes will degrade or break down if improperly stored in the presence of heat, light, oxygen, and extraneous organic materials. Proper preservation of perfumes involves keeping them away from sources of heat and storing them where they will not be exposed to light. An opened bottle will keep its aroma intact for several years, as long as it is well stored.[33] However, the presence of oxygen in the head space of the bottle and environmental factors will in the long run alter the smell of the fragrance.

Perfumes are best preserved when kept in light-tight aluminium bottles or in their original packaging when not in use, and refrigerated to relatively low temperatures: between 3–7 °C (37–45 °F). Although it is difficult to completely remove oxygen from the headspace of a stored flask of fragrance, opting for spray dispensers instead of rollers and "open" bottles will minimize oxygen exposure. Sprays also have the advantage of isolating fragrance inside a bottle and preventing it from mixing with dust, skin, and detritus, which would degrade and alter the quality of a perfume.

There exist several archives and museums devoted to the preservation of historical perfumes, namely the Osmothèque, which stocks over 3,000 perfumes from the past two millennia in their original formulations. All scents in their collection are preserved in non-actinic glass flasks flushed with argon gas, stored in thermally insulated compartments maintained at 12 °C (54 °F) in a large vault.[79]

Lists of perfumes edit

See also edit

  • Odor – Volatile chemical compounds perceived by the sense of smell
    • Pheromone – Secreted or excreted chemical factor that triggers a social response in members of the same species
  • Eau de toilette – Lightly scented perfume
  • Essential oil – Hydrophobic liquid containing volatile aroma compounds from plants
    • Aromatherapy – Use of aromas during meditation or relaxation
  • Fragrance companies
  • Potpourri – Mixture of dried flowers and other naturally fragrant plant material
  • Pomander – Ball or container of herbs and perfumes
  • Fragrance lamp – lamp that disperses scented alcohol using a heated stone attached to a cotton wick

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Further reading edit

  • Burr, Chandler (2004). "The Emperor of Scent: A True Story of Perfume and Obsession" Random House Publishing. ISBN 978-0-375-75981-9
  • Edwards, Michael (1997). "Perfume Legends: French Feminine Fragrances". Crescent House Publishing. ISBN 0-646-27794-4.
  • Ellena, Jean-Claude (2022) [2020 Flammarion, Paris]. Atlas of Perfumed Botany [Atlas de botanique parfumée]. Translated by Erik Butler. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-04673-2.
  • Klymentiev, Maksym. "Creating Spices for the Mind: The Origins of Modern Western Perfumery". The Senses and Society. Vol. 9, 2014, issue 2.
  • Moran, Jan (2000). "Fabulous Fragrances II: A Guide to Prestige Perfumes for Women and Men". Crescent House Publishing. ISBN 0-9639065-4-2.
  • Turin, Luca (2006). "The Secret of Scent". Faber & Faber. ISBN 0-571-21537-8.
  • Stamelman, Richard: "Perfume – Joy, Obsession, Scandal, Sin". Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-2832-6. A cultural history of fragrance from 1750 to the present day.
  • Süskind, Patrick (2006). "Perfume: The Story of a Murderer". Vintage Publishing (English edition). ISBN 978-0-307-27776-3. A novel of perfume, obsession and serial murder. Also released as a movie with same name in 2006.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Perfumes at Wikimedia Commons
  • IFRA: International Fragrance Association
  • The Fragrance Foundation "FiFi"
  • The British Society of Perfumers

perfume, this, article, about, fragrant, substance, other, uses, disambiguation, ɜː, french, parfum, mixture, fragrant, essential, oils, aroma, compounds, fragrances, fixatives, solvents, usually, liquid, form, used, give, human, body, animals, food, objects, . This article is about the fragrant substance For other uses see Perfume disambiguation Perfume UK ˈ p ɜː f j uː m US p er ˈ f j uː m French parfum is a mixture of fragrant essential oils or aroma compounds fragrances fixatives and solvents usually in liquid form used to give the human body animals food objects and living spaces an agreeable scent 1 Perfumes can be defined as substances that emit and diffuse a pleasant and fragrant odor They consist of manmade mixtures of aromatic chemicals and essential oils The 1939 Nobel Laureate for Chemistry Leopold Ruzicka stated in 1945 that right from the earliest days of scientific chemistry up to the present time perfumes have substantially contributed to the development of organic chemistry as regards methods systematic classification and theory 2 Ancient texts and archaeological excavations show the use of perfumes in some of the earliest human civilizations Modern perfumery began in the late 19th century with the commercial synthesis of aroma compounds such as vanillin or coumarin which allowed for the composition of perfumes with smells previously unattainable solely from natural aromatics Contents 1 History 2 Dilution classes and terminologies 2 1 Imprecise terminology 2 2 History of the terms and concentrations 2 3 Solvent types 2 4 Applying fragrances 3 Describing a perfume 3 1 Fragrance notes 3 2 Olfactive families 3 2 1 Traditional categories 3 2 2 Modern 3 2 3 Fragrance wheel 4 Aromatics sources 4 1 Plant sources 4 2 Animal sources 4 3 Other natural sources 4 4 Synthetic sources 4 5 Characteristics 5 Obtaining natural odorants 6 Fragrant extracts 7 Composing perfumes 7 1 The perfumer 7 2 Technique 7 2 1 Basic framework 7 2 2 Fragrance bases 7 3 Reverse engineering 7 4 Copyright 7 4 1 Numbered perfumery analogs 8 Health and environmental issues 8 1 Immunological asthma and allergy 8 2 Carcinogenicity 8 3 Environmental 8 3 1 Pollution 8 3 2 Species endangerment 8 4 Safety regulations 9 Preserving perfume 10 Lists of perfumes 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editMain article History of perfume nbsp Egyptian scene depicting the preparation of lily perfume 4th century BCThe word perfume is derived from the Latin perfumare meaning to smoke through 3 Perfumery as the art of making perfumes began in ancient Mesopotamia Egypt the Indus Valley civilization and possibly Ancient China 4 It was further refined by the Romans and the Muslims citation needed One of the world s first recorded chemists is considered to be a woman named Tapputi a perfume maker mentioned in a cuneiform tablet from the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamia 5 She distilled flowers oil and calamus with other aromatics then filtered and put them back in the still several times 6 On the Indian subcontinent perfume and perfumery existed in the Indus civilization 3300 BC 1300 BC 7 nbsp A Byzantine alembic used to distill perfumes nbsp Ancient Egyptian perfume vessel in shape of a monkey 1550 1295 BC faience height 6 5 cm width 3 3 cm depth 3 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City In 2003 8 archaeologists uncovered what are believed by whom to be the world s oldest surviving perfumes in Pyrgos Cyprus The perfumes dated back more than 4 000 years They were discovered in an ancient perfumery a 300 square meter 3 230 sq ft factory 8 housing at least 60 stills mixing bowls funnels and perfume bottles In ancient times people used herbs and spices such as almond coriander myrtle conifer resin and bergamot as well as flowers 9 In May 2018 an ancient perfume Rodo Rose was recreated for the Greek National Archaeological Museum s anniversary show Countless Aspects of Beauty allowing visitors to approach antiquity through their olfaction receptors 10 In the 9th century the Arab chemist Al Kindi Alkindus wrote the Book of the Chemistry of Perfume and Distillations which contained more than a hundred recipes for fragrant oils salves aromatic waters and substitutes or imitations of costly drugs The book also described 107 methods and recipes for perfume making and perfume making equipment such as the alembic which still bears its Arabic name 11 12 from Greek ἄmbi3 cup beaker 13 14 described by Synesius in the 4th century 15 The Persian chemist Ibn Sina also known as Avicenna introduced the process of extracting oils from flowers by means of distillation the procedure most commonly used today He first experimented with the rose Until his discovery liquid perfumes consisted of mixtures of oil and crushed herbs or petals which made a strong blend Rose water was more delicate and immediately became popular Both the raw ingredients and the distillation technology significantly influenced western perfumery and scientific developments particularly chemistry There is a controversy on whether perfumery was completely lost in Western Europe after the fall of the Western Roman Empire That said the art of perfumery in Western Europe was reinvigorated after the Islamic invasion of Spain and Southern Italy in 711 and 827 The Islamic controlled cities of Spain Al Andalus became major producers of perfumes that were traded throughout the Old World Like in the ancient world Andalusians used fragrance in devotion to God Perfumes added a layer of cleanliness that was needed for their devotion Andalusian women were also offered greater freedoms than women in other Muslim controlled regions and were allowed to leave their homes and socialize outside This freedom allowed courtship to occur outside of the home As a result Andalusian women used perfumes for courtship 16 Recipes of perfumes from the monks of Santa Maria Delle Vigne or Santa Maria Novella of Florence Italy were recorded from 1221 17 In the east the Hungarians produced around 1370 a perfume made of scented oils blended in an alcohol solution best known as Hungary Water at the behest of Queen Elizabeth of Hungary 18 19 20 The art of perfumery prospered in Renaissance Italy and in the 16th century the personal perfumer to Catherine de Medici 1519 1589 Rene the Florentine Renato il fiorentino took Italian refinements to France His laboratory was connected with her apartments by a secret passageway so that no formulae could be stolen en route Thanks to Rene France quickly became one of the European centers of perfume and cosmetics manufacture Cultivation of flowers for their perfume essence which had begun in the 14th century grew into a major industry in the south of France Between the 16th and 17th centuries perfumes were used primarily by the wealthy to mask body odors resulting from infrequent bathing 21 In 1693 Italian barber Giovanni Paolo Feminis created a perfume water called Aqua Admirabilis 22 today best known as eau de cologne his nephew Johann Maria Farina Giovanni Maria Farina took over the business in 1732 23 24 By the 18th century the Grasse region of France Sicily and Calabria in Italy were growing aromatic plants to provide the growing perfume industry with raw materials Even today Italy and France remain the center of European perfume design and trade nbsp Ancient Egyptian perfume vase in shape of an amphoriskos 664 630 BC glass 8 4 cm 3 1 1 5 in Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City nbsp Ancient Greek perfume bottle in shape of an athlete binding a victory ribbon around his head circa 540s BC Ancient Agora Museum Athens nbsp Etruscan perfume vase which is inscribed the word suthina for the tomb early 2nd century BC bronze height 16 cm Louvre nbsp Late Hellenistic glass gold band mosaic alabastron perfume bottle 1st century BC glass and gold leaf Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Roman perfume bottle 1st century AD glass 5 2 x 3 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Partially broken perfume amphora 2nd century AD glass from Ephesus Ephesus Archaeological Museum Selcuk Turkey nbsp British Rococo perfume vase circa 1761 soft paste porcelain overall 43 2 29 2 17 8 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp British Neoclassical pair of perfume burners probably circa 1770 derbyshire spar tortoiseshell and wood Carrara marble base gilded brass mounts gilded copper liner 33 14 3 14 3 cm Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Art Nouveau perfume bottle circa 1900 glass with gilt metal cover overall 13 4 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland Ohio USA Dilution classes and terminologies edit nbsp Original Eau de Cologne flacon 1811 from Johann Maria Farina Farina gegenuber nbsp Vintage atomizer perfume bottlePerfume types reflect the concentration of aromatic compounds in a solvent which in fine fragrance is typically ethanol or a mix of water and ethanol Various sources differ considerably in the definitions of perfume types The intensity and longevity of a fragrance is based on the concentration intensity and longevity of the aromatic compounds or perfume oils used As the percentage of aromatic compounds increases so does the intensity and longevity of the scent Specific terms are used to describe a fragrance s approximate concentration by the percent of perfume oil in the volume of the final product The most widespread terms 25 are Parfum or extrait P 15 40 aromatic compounds IFRA typically 20 In English parfum is also known as perfume extract pure perfume or simply perfume Esprit de parfum ESdP 15 30 aromatic compounds a seldom used strength concentration between EdP and parfum Eau de parfum EdP or parfum de toilette PdT 10 20 aromatic compounds typically 15 It is sometimes called eau de perfume or millesime citation needed Parfum de toilette is a less common term most popular in the 1980s that is generally analogous to eau de parfum Eau de toilette EdT 5 15 aromatic compounds typically 10 This is the staple for most masculine perfumes Eau de cologne EdC 3 8 aromatic compounds typically 5 This concentration is often simply called cologne Eau fraiche 3 or less aromatic compounds This general term encompasses products sold as splashes mists veils and other imprecise terms Such products may be diluted with water rather than oil or alcohol 25 Imprecise terminology edit nbsp J B Filz in Vienna Perfumeries with long traditions such as J B Filz created their own scents 26 The wide range in the percentages of aromatic compounds that may be present in each concentration means that the terminology of extrait EdP EdT and EdC is quite imprecise with regard to oil concentration Although an EdP will often be more concentrated than an EdT and in turn an EdC this is not always the case Different perfumeries or perfume houses assign different amounts of oils to each of their perfumes Therefore although the oil concentration of a perfume in EdP dilution will necessarily be higher than the same perfume in EdT from within a company s same range the actual amount will vary among companies An EdT from one house may have a higher concentration of aromatic compounds than an EdP from another Furthermore some fragrances with the same product name but having a different concentration may not only differ in their dilutions but actually use different perfume oil mixtures altogether For instance in order to make the EdT version of a fragrance brighter and fresher than its EdP the EdT oil may be tweaked to contain slightly more top notes or fewer base notes Chanel No 5 is a good example its parfum EdP EdT and now discontinued EdC concentrations are in fact different compositions the parfum dates to 1921 the EdT from the 1950s and the EdP was not developed until the 1980s In some cases words such as extreme intense or concentree that might indicate a higher aromatic concentration are actually completely different fragrances related only because of a similar perfume accord An example of this is Chanel s Pour Monsieur and Pour Monsieur concentree History of the terms and concentrations edit The terms perfume and cologne lead to much confusion in English Perfume is often used as a generic overarching term to refer to fragrances marketed to women regardless of their exact concentration while the term cologne is likewise applied to those sold to men The actual product worn by a woman may be an eau de parfum rather than an extrait or by a man an eau de toilette rather than an eau de cologne The reasons why the terms perfume and cologne are often used in a generic sense is related to the modern development of perfumery in Europe since the 18th century The term cologne was first used in Europe in the 18th century to refer to a family of fresh citrus based fragrances distilled using extracts from citrus floral and woody ingredients These classical colognes were supposedly first developed in Cologne Germany hence the name This type of cologne which is still in production describes unisex compositions which are basically citrus blends and do not have a perfume parent 27 Examples include Maurer amp Wirtz s 4711 created in 1799 and Guerlain s Eau de Cologne Imperiale 1830 Toilet water or eau de toilette referred to wide range of scented waters not otherwise known as colognes and were popular throughout the 19th century The term perfume emerged in the late 19th century The first fragrance labeled a parfum extract with a high concentration of aromatic compounds was Guerlain s Jicky in 1889 In the first half of the 20th century fragrance companies began offering their products in more than one concentration often pairing an extrait with a lighter eau de toilette suitable for day wear which made their products available to a wider range of customers As this process accelerated perfume houses borrowed the term cologne to refer to an even more diluted interpretation of their fragrances than eau de toilette Guerlain for example offered an eau de cologne version of its flagship perfume Shalimar and many of its other fragrances In contrast to a classical eau de cologne this type of modern cologne is a lighter less concentrated interpretation of a more concentrated product typically a pure parfum and is usually the lightest concentration from a line of fragrance products 27 The eau de parfum concentration and terminology is the most recent being originally developed to offer the radiance of an EdT with the longevity of an extrait Parfum de toilette and EdP began to appear in the 1970s and gained popularity in the 1980s In the 21st century EdP is probably the most widespread strength concentration It is often the first concentration offered when a new fragrance is launched and usually referred to generically as perfume 25 Historically women s fragrances tended to have higher levels of aromatic compounds than men s fragrances Fragrances marketed to men were typically sold as EdT or EdC rarely as EdP or perfume extracts This is changing in the modern fragrance world especially as fragrances are becoming more unisex Women s fragrances used to be common in all levels of concentration but in the 21st century are mainly seen in EdP and EdT concentrations Many modern perfumes are never offered in extrait or eau de cologne formulations and EdP and EdT account for the vast majority of new launches citation needed 28 Solvent types edit Perfume oils are often diluted with a solvent though this is not always the case and its necessity is disputed By far the most common solvent for perfume oil dilution is alcohol typically a mixture of ethanol and water or a rectified spirit Perfume oil can also be diluted by means of neutral smelling oils such as fractionated coconut oil or liquid waxes such as jojoba oil and almond oil Applying fragrances edit The conventional application of pure perfume parfum extrait in Western cultures is behind the ears at the nape of the neck under the armpits and at the insides of wrists elbows and knees so that the pulse point will warm the perfume and release fragrance continuously According to perfumer Sophia Grojsman behind the knees is the ideal point to apply perfume in order that the scent may rise 29 The modern perfume industry encourages the practice of layering fragrance so that it is released in different intensities depending upon the time of the day Lightly scented products such as bath oil shower gel and body lotion are recommended for the morning eau de toilette is suggested for the afternoon and perfume applied to the pulse points for evening 30 self published source Cologne fragrance is released rapidly lasting around 2 hours Eau de toilette lasts from 2 to 4 hours while perfume may last up to six hours 31 A variety of factors can influence how fragrance interacts with the wearer s own physiology and affect the perception of the fragrance Diet is one factor as eating spicy and fatty foods can increase the intensity of a fragrance 32 The use of medications can also impact the character of a fragrance 32 The relative dryness of the wearer s skin is important since dry skin will not hold fragrance as long as skin with more oil 31 Describing a perfume edit nbsp An original bottle of Fougere Royale by Houbigant Created by Paul Parquet in 1884 it is one of the most important modern perfumes and inspired the eponymous Fougere class of fragrances nbsp Fragrance pyramidThe precise formulae of commercial perfumes are kept secret Even if they were widely published they would be dominated by such complex ingredients and odorants that they would be of little use in providing a guide to the general consumer in description of the experience of a scent Nonetheless connoisseurs of perfume can become extremely skillful at identifying components and origins of scents in the same manner as wine experts 33 The most practical way to start describing a perfume is according to the elements of the fragrance notes of the scent or the family it belongs to all of which affect the overall impression of a perfume from first application to the last lingering hint of scent 34 35 The trail of scent left behind by a person wearing perfume is called its sillage after the French word for wake as in the trail left by a boat in water Fragrance notes edit Main article Note perfumery Perfume is described in a musical metaphor as having three sets of notes making the harmonious scent accord The notes unfold over time with the immediate impression of the top note leading to the deeper middle notes and the base notes gradually appearing as the final stage These notes are created carefully with knowledge of the evaporation process of the perfume Top notes Also called the head notes The scents that are perceived immediately on application of a perfume Top notes consist of small light molecules that evaporate quickly They form a person s initial impression of a perfume and thus are very important in the selling of a perfume Examples of top notes include mint lavender and coriander Middle notes Also referred to as heart notes The scent of a perfume that emerges just prior to the dissipation of the top note The middle note compounds form the heart or main body of a perfume and act to mask the often unpleasant initial impression of base notes which become more pleasant with time Examples of middle notes include seawater sandalwood and jasmine Base notes The scent of a perfume that appears close to the departure of the middle notes The base and middle notes together are the main theme of a perfume Base notes bring depth and solidity to a perfume Compounds of this class of scents are typically rich and deep and are usually not perceived until 30 minutes after application Examples of base notes include tobacco amber and musk The scents in the top and middle notes are influenced by the base notes conversely the scents of the base notes will be altered by the types of fragrance materials used as middle notes Manufacturers who publish perfume notes typically do so with the fragrance components presented as a fragrance pyramid 36 using imaginative and abstract terms for the components listed Olfactive families edit The grouping of perfumes can never be completely objective or definitive Many fragrances contain aspects of different families Even a perfume designated as single flower will have subtle undertones of other aromatics There are hardly any true unitary scent perfumes consisting of a single aromatic material The family classification is a starting point to describe a perfume but does not fully characterize it Traditional categories edit nbsp Opium by YSL of amber or oriental fragrance class nbsp A floral bouquet Joy from Jean PatouThe traditional categories which emerged around 1900 Citrus The oldest fragrance family that gave birth to lightweight eau de colognes Development of newer fragrance compounds has allowed for the creation of more tenacious citrus fragrances Examples 4711 Guerlain s Eau de Cologne Imperiale Penhaligon s Quercus Single Floral Fragrances dominated by the scent of a particular flower i e rose carnation iris In French this type of fragrance is called a soliflore Example Serge Lutens Sa Majeste La Rose Floral Bouquet Compound of several flower scents Examples Houbigant Quelques Fleurs Jean Patou Joy Amber or Oriental Large class featuring sweet slightly animalic scents of ambergris or labdanum often combined with vanilla tonka bean flowers and woods Can be enhanced by camphorous oils and incense resins evoking Victorian era Oriental imagery Traditional examples Guerlain Shalimar Yves Saint Laurent Opium Chanel Coco Mademoiselle 37 Woody Fragrances dominated by woody notes typically agarwood sandalwood cedarwood and vetiver Patchouli with its camphoraceous smell is commonly found in these perfumes Traditional examples Myrurgia Maderas De Oriente Chanel Bois des Iles Modern Balenciaga Rumba Leather A family of fragrances featuring honey tobacco wood and wood tars in the middle or base notes and a scent that alludes to leather Traditional examples Robert Piguet Bandit Balmain Jolie Madame Chypre IPA ʃipʁ Meaning Cyprus in French this category is named after the Francois Coty s Chypre 1917 which was the first modern fragrance built on an accord of bergamot oakmoss and labdanum Example Guerlain Mitsouko Rochas Femme Fougere IPA fu ʒɛʁ Meaning fern in French built on a base of lavender coumarin and oakmoss with a sharp herbaceous and woody scent Named for Houbigant s landmark fragrance Fougere Royale many men s fragrances belong to this family Modern examples Faberge Brut Guy Laroche Drakkar Noir Penhaligon s Douro Modern edit Since 1945 new categories have emerged to describe modern scents due to great advances in the technology of compound design and synthesis as well as the natural development of styles and tastes Bright Floral Combining single floral and floral bouquet traditional categories Example Estee Lauder Beautiful Green Lighter more modern interpretation of the Chypre type with pronounced cut grass crushed green leaf and cucumber like scents Examples Estee Lauder Aliage Sisley Eau de Campagne Calvin Klein Eternity Aquatic Oceanic Ozonic The newest category first appearing in 1988 Davidoff Cool Water 1988 Christian Dior Dune 1991 A clean smell reminiscent of the ocean leading to many androgynous perfumes Generally contains calone a synthetic discovered in 1966 or more recent synthetics Also used to accent floral oriental and woody fragrances Fruity Featuring fruits other than citrus such as peach cassis black currant mango passion fruit and others Example Ginestet Botrytis Gourmand French ɡuʁmɑ Scents with edible or dessert like qualities often containing vanilla tonka bean and coumarin as well as synthetic components designed to resemble food flavors A sweet Example Thierry Mugler s Angel sweet Fragrance wheel edit Main article Fragrance wheel nbsp Fragrance Wheel perfume classification chart ver 1983This newer classification method is widely used in retail and the fragrance industry created in 1983 by the perfume consultant Michael Edwards The new scheme simplifies classification and naming as well as showing the relationships among the classes 38 The five main families are Floral Oriental Woody Aromatic Fougere and Fresh the first four from the classic terminology and the last from the modern oceanic category Each of these are divided into subgroups and arranged around a wheel In this scheme Chanel No 5 traditionally classified as an aldehydic floral is placed under the Soft Floral sub group while amber scents are within the Oriental group Chypre perfumes are more ambiguous having affinities with both the Oriental and Woody families For instance Guerlain Mitsouko is under Mossy Woods but Hermes Rouge a more floral chypre is under Floral Oriental Aromatics sources editPlant sources edit nbsp Citrus tree blossom nbsp Resins in perfumery include myrrh nbsp FrankincensePlants have long been used in perfumery as a source of essential oils and aroma compounds These aromatics are usually secondary metabolites produced by plants as protection against herbivores infections as well as to attract pollinators Plants are by far the largest source of fragrant compounds used in perfumery The sources of these compounds may be derived from various parts of a plant A plant can offer more than one source of aromatics for instance the aerial portions and seeds of coriander have remarkably different odors from each other Orange leaves blossoms and fruit zest are the respective sources of petitgrain neroli and orange oils Bark Commonly used barks include cinnamon and cascarilla The fragrant oil in sassafras root bark is also used either directly or purified for its main constituent safrole which is used in the synthesis of other fragrant compounds 39 Flowers and blossoms Undoubtedly the largest and most common source of perfume aromatics Includes the flowers of several species of rose and jasmine as well as osmanthus plumeria mimosa tuberose narcissus scented geranium cassie ambrette as well as the blossoms of citrus and ylang ylang trees Although not traditionally thought of as a flower the unopened flower buds of the clove are also commonly used Most orchid flowers are not commercially used to produce essential oils or absolutes except in the case of vanilla an orchid which must be pollinated first and made into seed pods before use in perfumery Fruits Fresh fruits such as apples strawberries cherries rarely yield the expected odors when extracted if such fragrance notes are found in a perfume they are more likely to be of synthetic origin Notable exceptions include blackcurrant leaf litsea cubeba vanilla and juniper berry The most commonly used fruits yield their aromatics from the rind they include citrus such as oranges lemons and limes Although grapefruit rind is still used for aromatics more and more commercially used grapefruit aromatics are artificially synthesized since the natural aromatic contains sulfur and its degradation product is quite unpleasant in smell Leaves and twigs Commonly used for perfumery are lavender leaf patchouli sage violets rosemary and citrus leaves Sometimes leaves are valued for the green smell they bring to perfumes examples of this include hay and tomato leaf Resins Valued since antiquity resins have been widely used in incense and perfumery Highly fragrant and antiseptic resins and resin containing perfumes have been used by many cultures as medicines for a large variety of ailments Commonly used resins in perfumery include labdanum frankincense olibanum myrrh balsam of Peru benzoin Pine and fir resins are a particularly valued source of terpenes used in the organic synthesis of many other synthetic or naturally occurring aromatic compounds Some of what is called amber and copal in perfumery today is the resinous secretion of fossil conifers Roots rhizomes and bulbs Commonly used terrestrial portions in perfumery include iris rhizomes vetiver roots various rhizomes of the ginger family Seeds Commonly used seeds include tonka bean carrot seed coriander caraway cocoa nutmeg mace cardamom and anise Woods Highly important in providing the base notes to a perfume wood oils and distillates are indispensable in perfumery Commonly used woods include sandalwood rosewood agarwood birch cedar juniper and pine These are used in the form of macerations or dry distilled rectified forms Rom terpenes Orchid scentsAnimal sources edit nbsp A musk pod Extensive hunting of male musk deer for their pods in recent history has resulted in the detriment of the species nbsp AmbergrisAmbergris Lumps of oxidized fatty compounds whose precursors were secreted and expelled by the sperm whale Ambergris should not be confused with yellow amber which is used in jewelry Because the harvesting of ambergris involves no harm to its animal source it remains one of the few animalic fragrancing agents around which little controversy now exists Castoreum Obtained from the odorous sacs of the North American beaver Civet Also called civet musk this is obtained from the odorous sacs of the civets animals in the family Viverridae related to the mongoose World Animal Protection investigated African civets caught for this purpose 40 Hyraceum Commonly known as Africa stone is the petrified excrement of the rock hyrax 41 Honeycomb From the honeycomb of the honeybee Both beeswax and honey can be solvent extracted to produce an absolute Beeswax is extracted with ethanol and the ethanol evaporated to produce beeswax absolute Musk Originally derived from a gland sac or pod located between the genitals and the umbilicus of the Himalayan male musk deer Moschus moschiferus it has now mainly been replaced by the use of synthetic musks sometimes known as white musk Other natural sources edit Lichens Commonly used lichens include oakmoss and treemoss thalli Seaweed Distillates are sometimes used as essential oil in perfumes An example of a commonly used seaweed is Fucus vesiculosus which is commonly referred to as bladder wrack Natural seaweed fragrances are rarely used due to their higher cost and lower potency than synthetics Synthetic sources edit Main article Aroma compound Many modern perfumes contain synthesized odorants Synthetics can provide fragrances which are not found in nature For instance Calone a compound of synthetic origin imparts a fresh ozonous metallic marine scent that is widely used in contemporary perfumes Synthetic aromatics are often used as an alternate source of compounds that are not easily obtained from natural sources For example linalool and coumarin are both naturally occurring compounds that can be inexpensively synthesized from terpenes Orchid scents typically salicylates are usually not obtained directly from the plant itself but are instead synthetically created to match the fragrant compounds found in various orchids One of the most commonly used classes of synthetic aromatics by far are the white musks These materials are found in all forms of commercial perfumes as a neutral background to the middle notes These musks are added in large quantities to laundry detergents in order to give washed clothes a lasting clean scent The majority of the world s synthetic aromatics are created by relatively few companies They include Givaudan International Flavors and Fragrances IFF Firmenich Takasago SymriseEach of these companies patents several processes for the production of aromatic synthetics annually Characteristics edit Natural and synthetics are used for their different odor characteristics in perfumery Naturals SyntheticsVariance Natural scents will vary from each supplier based on when and where they are harvested how they are processed and the extraction method itself This means that a certain flower grown in Morocco and in France will smell different even if the same method is used to grow harvest and extract the scent As such each perfumer will prefer flowers grown in one country over another or one extraction method to the next However due to a natural scent s mixed composition it is easy for unscrupulous suppliers to adulterate the actual raw materials by changing its source adding Indian jasmine into Grasse jasmine or the contents adding linalool to rosewood to increase their profit margin Much more consistent than natural aromatics However differences in organic synthesis may result in minute differences in concentration of impurities If these impurities have low smell detection thresholds the differences in the scent of the synthetic aromatic will be significant Components Contains many different organic compounds each adding a different note to the overall scent Certain naturally derived substances have a long history of use but this cannot always be used as an indicator of whether they are safe or not Possible allergenic or carcinogenic compounds Depending on purity consists primarily of one chemical compound Sometimes chiral mixtures of isomers such as in the case of Iso E Super 42 Due to the almost pure composition of one chemical compound the same molecules found diluted in nature will have a different scent and effect on the body if used undiluted Scent uniqueness Reminiscent of its originating material although extraction may capture a different layer of the scent depending on how the extraction method denatures the odoriferous compounds Similar to natural scents yet different at the same time Some synthetics attempt to mimic natural notes while others explore the entire spectrum of scent Novel scent compounds not found in nature will often be unique in their scent Scent complexity Deep and complex fragrance notes Soft with subtle scent nuances Highly valued for ideal composition Pure and pronounced fragrance notes Often monotonous in nature yet reminiscent of other natural scents Price Dependent on extraction method More expensive but not always as prices are determined by the labor and difficulty of properly extracting each unit of the natural materials as well as its quality Typically the relationship between longevity of a perfume cost and the concentration of essential oils follows the graph below nbsp This chart shows the typical relationship between price of perfume its longevity and the concentration of essential oils 43 Dependent on synthesis method Generally cheaper but not necessarily Synthetic aromatics are not necessarily cheaper than naturals with some synthetics being more costly than most natural ingredients due to various factors such as the long synthesis routes low availability of precursor chemicals and low overall yield However due to their low odor threshold they should be diluted when making a perfume Obtaining natural odorants editMain article Fragrance extraction nbsp Itar herbal perfume vendor on the street of Hyderabad India who can compose an original perfume for the customerBefore perfumes can be composed the odorants used in various perfume compositions must first be obtained Synthetic odorants are produced through organic synthesis and purified Odorants from natural sources require the use of various methods to extract the aromatics from the raw materials The results of the extraction are either essential oils absolutes concretes or butters depending on the amount of waxes in the extracted product 44 All these techniques will to a certain extent distort the odor of the aromatic compounds obtained from the raw materials This is due to the use of heat harsh solvents or through exposure to oxygen in the extraction process which will denature the aromatic compounds which either change their odor character or renders them odorless Maceration Solvent extraction The most used and economically important technique for extracting aromatics in the modern perfume industry Raw materials are submerged in a solvent that can dissolve the desired aromatic compounds Maceration lasts anywhere from hours to months Fragrant compounds for woody and fibrous plant materials are often obtained in this manner as are all aromatics from animal sources The technique can also be used to extract odorants that are too volatile for distillation or easily denatured by heat Commonly used solvents for maceration solvent extraction include ethane hexane and dimethyl ether The product of this process is called a concrete Supercritical fluid extraction A relatively new technique for extracting fragrant compounds from a raw material which often employs Supercritical CO2 Due to the low heat of process and the relatively nonreactive solvent used in the extraction the fragrant compounds derived often closely resemble the original odor of the raw material Ethanol extraction A type of solvent extraction used to extract fragrant compounds directly from dry raw materials as well as the impure oily compounds materials resulting from solvent extraction or enfleurage Ethanol extraction from fresh plant materials contain large quantities of water which will also be extracted into the ethanol Distillation A common technique for obtaining aromatic compounds from plants such as orange blossoms and roses The raw material is heated and the fragrant compounds are re collected through condensation of the distilled vapor nbsp An old perfume still on display at FragonardSteam distillation Steam from boiling water is passed through the raw material which drives out their volatile fragrant compounds The condensate from distillation are settled in a Florentine flask This allows for the easy separation of the fragrant oils from the water The water collected from the condensate which retains some of the fragrant compounds and oils from the raw material is called hydrosol and sometimes sold This is most commonly used for fresh plant materials such as flowers leaves and stems Dry destructive distillation The raw materials are directly heated in a still without a carrier solvent such as water Fragrant compounds that are released from the raw material by the high heat often undergo anhydrous pyrolysis which results in the formation of different fragrant compounds and thus different fragrant notes This method is used to obtain fragrant compounds from fossil amber and fragrant woods where an intentional burned or toasted odor is desired Fractionation Through the use of a fractionation column different fractions distilled from a material can be selectively excluded to modify the scent of the final product Although the product is more expensive this is sometimes performed to remove unpleasant or undesirable scents of a material and affords the perfumer more control over their composition process Expression Raw material is squeezed or compressed and the essential oils are collected Of all raw materials only the fragrant oils from the peels of fruits in the citrus family are extracted in this manner since the oil is present in large enough quantities as to make this extraction method economically feasible Enfleurage Absorption of aroma materials into solid fat or wax and then extraction of odorous oils with ethyl alcohol Extraction by enfleurage was commonly used when distillation was not possible because some fragrant compounds denature through high heat This technique is not commonly used in the modern industry due to prohibitive costs and the existence of more efficient and effective extraction methods 34 Fragrant extracts edit nbsp Indian Patchouli TinctureAlthough fragrant extracts are known to the general public as the generic term essential oils a more specific language is used in the fragrance industry to describe the source purity and technique used to obtain a particular fragrant extract Of these extracts only absolutes essential oils and tinctures are directly used to formulate perfumes Absolute Fragrant materials that are purified from a pommade or concrete by soaking them in ethanol By using a slightly hydrophilic compound such as ethanol most of the fragrant compounds from the waxy source materials can be extracted without dissolving any of the fragrantless waxy molecules Absolutes are usually found in the form of an oily liquid Concrete Fragrant materials that have been extracted from raw materials through solvent extraction using volatile hydrocarbons Concretes usually contain a large amount of wax due to the ease in which the solvents dissolve various hydrophobic compounds As such concretes are usually further purified through distillation or ethanol based solvent extraction Concretes are typically either waxy or resinous solids or thick oily liquids Essential oil Fragrant materials that have been extracted from a source material directly through distillation or expression and obtained in the form of an oily liquid Oils extracted through expression are sometimes called expression oils Pomade A fragrant mass of solid fat created from the enfleurage process in which odorous compounds in raw materials are adsorbed into animal fats Pommades are found in the form of an oily and sticky solid Tincture Fragrant materials produced by directly soaking and infusing raw materials in ethanol Tinctures are typically thin liquids 34 Products from different extraction methods are known under different names even though their starting materials are the same For instance orange blossoms from Citrus aurantium that have undergone solvent extraction produces orange blossom absolute but that which have been steam distilled is known as neroli oil Composing perfumes edit nbsp Perfume formulaPerfume compositions are an important part of many industries ranging from the luxury goods sectors food services industries to manufacturers of various household chemicals The purpose of using perfume or fragrance compositions in these industries is to affect customers through their sense of smell and entice them into purchasing the perfume or perfumed product As such there is significant interest in producing a perfume formulation that people will find aesthetically pleasing The perfumer edit Main article Perfumer nbsp The Perfume Maker by Rodolphe ErnstThe job of composing perfumes that will be sold is left up to an expert on perfume composition or known in the fragrance industry as the perfumer They are also sometimes referred to affectionately as a Nez French for nose due to their fine sense of smell and skill in smell composition The composition of a perfume typically begins with a brief by the perfumer s employer or an outside customer The customers to the perfumer or their employers are typically fashion houses or large corporations of various industries 45 The perfumer will then go through the process of blending multiple perfume mixtures and sell the formulation to the customer often with modifications of the composition of the perfume The perfume composition will then be either used to enhance another product as a functional fragrance shampoos make up detergents car interiors etc or marketed and sold directly to the public as a fine fragrance 33 Technique edit nbsp Paper blotters fr mouillettes are commonly used by perfumers to sample and smell perfumes and odorants Although there is no single correct technique for the formulation of a perfume there are general guidelines as to how a perfume can be constructed from a concept Although many ingredients do not contribute to the smell of a perfume many perfumes include colorants and antioxidants to improve the marketability and shelf life of the perfume respectively Basic framework edit Perfume oils usually contain tens to hundreds of ingredients and these are typically organized in a perfume for the specific role they will play These ingredients can be roughly grouped into four groups Primary scents Heart Can consist of one or a few main ingredients for a certain concept such as rose Alternatively multiple ingredients can be used together to create an abstract primary scent that does not bear a resemblance to a natural ingredient For instance jasmine and rose scents are commonly blends for abstract floral fragrances Cola flavourant is a good example of an abstract primary scent Modifiers These ingredients alter the primary scent to give the perfume a certain desired character for instance fruit esters may be included in a floral primary to create a fruity floral calone and citrus scents can be added to create a fresher floral The cherry scent in cherry cola can be considered a modifier Blenders A large group of ingredients that smooth out the transitions of a perfume between different layers or bases These themselves can be used as a major component of the primary scent Common blending ingredients include linalool and hydroxycitronellal Fixatives Used to support the primary scent by bolstering it Many resins wood scents and amber bases are used as fixatives The top middle and base notes of a fragrance may have separate primary scents and supporting ingredients The perfume s fragrance oils are then blended with ethyl alcohol and water aged in tanks for several weeks and filtered through processing equipment to respectively allow the perfume ingredients in the mixture to stabilize and to remove any sediment and particles before the solution can be filled into the perfume bottles 46 Fragrance bases edit nbsp A perfume organ where perfumers utilize hundreds of essences in Grasse FranceInstead of building a perfume from ground up many modern perfumes and colognes are made using fragrance bases or simply bases Each base is essentially modular perfume that is blended from essential oils and aromatic chemicals and formulated with a simple concept such as fresh cut grass or juicy sour apple Many of Guerlain s Aqua Allegoria line with their simple fragrance concepts are good examples of what perfume fragrance bases are like The effort used in developing bases by fragrance companies or individual perfumers may equal that of a marketed perfume since they are useful in that they are reusable On top of its reusability the benefit in using bases for construction are quite numerous Ingredients with difficult or overpowering scents that are tailored into a blended base may be more easily incorporated into a work of perfume A base may be better scent approximations of a certain thing than the extract of the thing itself For example a base made to embody the scent for fresh dewy rose might be a better approximation for the scent concept of a rose after rain than plain rose oil Flowers whose scents cannot be extracted such as gardenia or hyacinth are composed as bases from data derived from headspace technology A perfumer can quickly rough out a concept from a brief by combining multiple bases then present it for feedback Smoothing out the edges of the perfume can be done after a positive response Reverse engineering edit Creating perfumes through reverse engineering with analytical techniques such as Gas chromatography mass spectrometry GC MS can reveal the general formula for any particular perfume The difficulty of GC MS analysis arises due to the complexity of a perfume s ingredients This is particularly due to the presence of natural essential oils and other ingredients consisting of complex chemical mixtures However anyone armed with good GC MS equipment and experienced in using this equipment can today within days find out a great deal about the formulation of any perfume customers and competitors can analyze most perfumes more or less precisely 47 Antique or badly preserved perfumes undergoing this analysis can also be difficult due to the numerous degradation by products and impurities that may have resulted from breakdown of the odorous compounds Ingredients and compounds can usually be ruled out or identified using gas chromatograph GC smellers which allow individual chemical components to be identified both through their physical properties and their scent Reverse engineering of best selling perfumes in the market is a very common practice in the fragrance industry due to the relative simplicity of operating GC equipment the pressure to produce marketable fragrances and the highly lucrative nature of the perfume market 46 Copyright edit nbsp An assorti of counterfeit perfumes in a kiosk store It is doubtful whether perfumes qualify as appropriate copyright subject matter under the US Copyright Act The issue has not yet been addressed by any US court A perfume s scent is not eligible for trademark protection the scent serves as the functional purpose of the product 48 In 2006 the Dutch Supreme Court granted copyright protection to Lancome s perfume Tresor Lancome v Kecofa The French Supreme Court has twice taken the position that perfumes lack the creativity to constitute copyrightable expressions Bsiri Barbir v Haarman amp Reimer 2006 Beaute Prestige International v Senteur Mazal 2008 48 Sometimes a knock off perfume would use an altered name of the original perfume for instance now discontinued Freya by Oriflame perfume has a similar designed copy produced as Freyya It is still questionable if perfume s functional purpose can be protected with technical patent one which lasts 15 years Apparently according to whom Russian Novaya Zarya labels their colognes as hygienic lotions for a similar reason A counterexample NovZar s more than century old Shipr chypre and Troinoi cologne are being produced by other companies in Russia in similar bottles Numbered perfumery analogs edit A different kind of copying perfumes is known in ex USSR countries as nomernaya parfyumeriya literally numbered perfumery A number making company with perfumery equipment would use their own one style for all cheap bottle de jure labeling a knock off perfume as an aroma in the direction of the well known perfume or a version of certain branded perfume This way the production costs of initially cheap scents are reduced since the bottle is used neither for plain counterfeiting nor for subtle re designing The questionable part of numbered perfumery naming is the idea to openly mark perfume XXX say 105 as either type or version or aromat napravleniya literally aroma in the direction of of a well known perfum 49 Resellers in offline stores in malls airport shops can offer fillable perfumery sometimes using weasel wording to justify the price Such perfumes usually get three digit numbers as an officially registered name which is stickered to the bottles When it comes to propellant a number usually has an alcohol base almost without stabilization which may give strong alcohol base stench altering perfume s scent into the smell of cheapness phenomenon To avoid this many numbers can be made with di propylenglicol base and come as perfume oil s PG or DPG based numbered perfumery comes in 50ml plastic bottles and is purposed for tiny rollers D PG is not usable in spray bottles while not affected by the smell of cheapness issue nonetheless Some companies offer all of their own numbers in both alcohol based and D PG based variants In small online bulk however in purchases over 5000RUB a whole 100ml bottle of such perfume or 50ml bottle of scent oil of same direction costs only around 6 EUR Health and environmental issues editPerfume ingredients regardless of natural or synthetic origins may all cause health or environmental problems when used Although the areas are under active research much remains to be learned about the effects of fragrance on human health and the environment Immunological asthma and allergy edit Evidence in peer reviewed journals shows that some fragrances can cause asthmatic reactions in some individuals especially those with severe or atopic asthma 50 Many fragrance ingredients can also cause headaches allergic skin reactions 51 or nausea 52 53 54 In some cases an excessive use of perfumes may cause allergic reactions of the skin For instance acetophenone ethyl acetate citation needed and acetone 46 while present in many perfumes are also known or potential respiratory allergens Nevertheless this may be misleading since the harm presented by many of these chemicals either natural or synthetic is dependent on environmental conditions and their concentrations in a perfume For instance linalool which is listed as an irritant causes skin irritation when it degrades to peroxides however the use of antioxidants in perfumes or reduction in concentrations can prevent this As well the furanocoumarin present in natural extracts of grapefruit or celery can cause severe allergic reactions and increase sensitivity to ultraviolet radiation 55 Some research on natural aromatics have shown that many contain compounds that cause skin irritation 56 However some studies such as IFRA s research claim that opoponax is too dangerous to be used in perfumery still lack scientific consensus 57 It is also true that sometimes inhalation alone can cause skin irritation citation needed nbsp Patch testA number of national and international surveys have identified balsam of Peru often used in perfumes as being in the top five allergens most commonly causing patch test reactions in people referred to dermatology clinics 58 59 60 A study in 2001 found that 3 8 of the general population patch tested was allergic to it 61 Many perfumes contain components identical to balsam of Peru 62 Balsam of Peru is used as a marker for perfume allergy Its presence in a cosmetic is denoted by the INCI term Myroxylon pereirae 63 Balsam of Peru has been banned by the International Fragrance Association since 1982 from use as a fragrance compound but may be present as an extract or distillate in other products where mandatory labelling is not required for usage of 0 4 or less 62 Carcinogenicity edit There is scientific evidence that nitro musks such as musk xylene could cause cancer in some specific animal tests These reports were evaluated by the EU Scientific Committee for Consumer Safety SCCS formerly the SCCNFP 64 and musk xylene was found to be safe for continued use in cosmetic products 65 It is in fact part of the procedures of the Cosmetic Regulation in Europe that materials classified as carcinogens require such a safety evaluation by the authorities to be allowed in cosmetic consumer products Although other ingredients such as polycyclic synthetic musks have been reported to be positive in some in vitro hormone assays 66 67 these reports have been reviewed by various authorities For example for one of the main polycyclic musks Galaxolide HHCB these reviews include those of the EU Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety 68 the EU s Priority Substances Review 69 the EU Scientific Committee on Health and Environmental Risk 70 and more recently also the US EPA 71 The outcome of all of these reviews over the past decade or so is that there are no safety concerns for human health Reviews with similar positive outcomes also exist for another main polycyclic musk AHTN for instance on its safe use in cosmetics by the EU 72 Many natural aromatics such as oakmoss absolutes 56 73 basil oil rose oil and many others contain allergens or carcinogenic compounds the safety of which is either governed by regulations e g allowed methyl eugenol levels in the EU Cosmetics Regulation Entry 102 Annex III of the EU Cosmetics Regulation 74 or through various limitations set by the International Fragrance Association 75 Environmental edit nbsp Perfume stall in CairoPollution edit Synthetic musks are pleasant in smell and relatively inexpensive as such they are often employed in large quantities to cover the unpleasant scent of laundry detergents and many personal cleaning products Due to their large scale use several types of synthetic musks have been found in human fat and milk 76 as well as in the sediments and waters of the Great Lakes 77 These pollutants may pose additional health and environmental problems when they enter human and animal diets Species endangerment edit The demands for aromatic materials such as sandalwood agarwood and musk have led to the endangerment of these species as well as illegal trafficking and harvesting Safety regulations edit The US FDA controls the safety of perfumes through their ingredients and requires that they be tested to the extent that they are Generally recognized as safe GRAS Due to the need for protection of trade secrets companies rarely give the full listing citation needed of ingredients regardless of their effects on health dubious discuss In the EU as from 11 March 2005 the mandatory listing of a set of 26 recognized fragrance allergens was enforced 78 The requirement to list these materials is dependent on the intended use of the final product The limits above which the allergens are required to be declared are 0 001 for products intended to remain on the skin and 0 01 for those intended to be rinsed off This has resulted in many old perfumes like chypres and fougere classes which traditionally make use of oakmoss extract being reformulated citation needed Preserving perfume edit nbsp Perfumes in a museum nbsp Potpourri by Edwin Austin Abbey 1899Fragrance compounds in perfumes will degrade or break down if improperly stored in the presence of heat light oxygen and extraneous organic materials Proper preservation of perfumes involves keeping them away from sources of heat and storing them where they will not be exposed to light An opened bottle will keep its aroma intact for several years as long as it is well stored 33 However the presence of oxygen in the head space of the bottle and environmental factors will in the long run alter the smell of the fragrance Perfumes are best preserved when kept in light tight aluminium bottles or in their original packaging when not in use and refrigerated to relatively low temperatures between 3 7 C 37 45 F Although it is difficult to completely remove oxygen from the headspace of a stored flask of fragrance opting for spray dispensers instead of rollers and open bottles will minimize oxygen exposure Sprays also have the advantage of isolating fragrance inside a bottle and preventing it from mixing with dust skin and detritus which would degrade and alter the quality of a perfume There exist several archives and museums devoted to the preservation of historical perfumes namely the Osmotheque which stocks over 3 000 perfumes from the past two millennia in their original formulations All scents in their collection are preserved in non actinic glass flasks flushed with argon gas stored in thermally insulated compartments maintained at 12 C 54 F in a large vault 79 Lists of perfumes editFurther information List of perfumes List of essential oils and List of celebrity branded fragrancesSee also editOdor Volatile chemical compounds perceived by the sense of smell Pheromone Secreted or excreted chemical factor that triggers a social response in members of the same species Eau de toilette Lightly scented perfume Eau de Cologne Type of perfume Scented water Lightly scented perfumePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Essential oil Hydrophobic liquid containing volatile aroma compounds from plants Aromatherapy Use of aromas during meditation or relaxation Fragrance companies Fragrance Museum museum in Cologne GermanyPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback John Maria Farina opposite Julich s Square World s oldest perfume factory FiFi Awards Fragrance industry awards Potpourri Mixture of dried flowers and other naturally fragrant plant material Pomander Ball or container of herbs and perfumes Fragrance lamp lamp that disperses scented alcohol using a heated stone attached to a cotton wickPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackReferences edit Perfume Definition and More from Dictionary Merriam Webster Archived from the original on 6 June 2022 Retrieved 14 June 2010 Shyndriayeva Galina 2015 Perfume at the Forefront of Macrocyclic Compound Research From Switzerland to Du Pont PDF International Workshop on the History of Chemistry Tokyo Archived PDF from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 17 March 2021 perfume Online Etymology Dictionary Archived from the original on 29 September 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Balasubramanian Narayanaganesh 20 November 2015 Scented Oils and Perfumes American Chemical Society ACS Symposium Series 1211 219 244 doi 10 1021 bk 2015 1211 ch008 ISBN 9780841231122 Archived from the original on 18 August 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Bossi R Johansen JD et al June 2004 Content of oak moss allergens atranol and chloroatranol in perfumes and similar products Contact Derm 50 6 367 70 doi 10 1111 j 0105 1873 2004 00379 x PMID 15274728 S2CID 38375267 B REGULATION EC No 1223 2009 OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 30 November 2009 on cosmetic products PDF Eur lex europa eu Archived from the original on 3 October 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2019 standards IFRA International Fragrance Association in every sense Ifraorg org Archived from the original on 1 March 2018 Retrieved 19 February 2018 Duedahl Olesen L Cederberg T Pedersen KH Hojgard A October 2005 Synthetic musk fragrances in trout from Danish fish farms and human milk Chemosphere 61 3 422 31 Bibcode 2005Chmsp 61 422D doi 10 1016 j chemosphere 2005 02 004 PMID 16182860 Peck AM Linebaugh EK Hornbuckle KC September 2006 Synthetic Musk Fragrances in Lake Erie and Lake Ontario Sediment Cores Environ Sci Technol 40 18 5629 35 Bibcode 2006EnST 40 5629P doi 10 1021 es060134y PMC 2757450 PMID 17007119 DIRECTIVE 2003 15 EC Eur lex europa eu Archived from the original on 21 May 2019 Retrieved 19 February 2018 Colton Sarah L Osmotheque Preserving The Past To Ensure The Future Beauty Fashion Archived 15 June 2010 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editBurr Chandler 2004 The Emperor of Scent A True Story of Perfume and Obsession Random House Publishing ISBN 978 0 375 75981 9 Edwards Michael 1997 Perfume Legends French Feminine Fragrances Crescent House Publishing ISBN 0 646 27794 4 Ellena Jean Claude 2022 2020 Flammarion Paris Atlas of Perfumed Botany Atlas de botanique parfumee Translated by Erik Butler Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 04673 2 Klymentiev Maksym Creating Spices for the Mind The Origins of Modern Western Perfumery The Senses and Society Vol 9 2014 issue 2 Moran Jan 2000 Fabulous Fragrances II A Guide to Prestige Perfumes for Women and Men Crescent House Publishing ISBN 0 9639065 4 2 Turin Luca 2006 The Secret of Scent Faber amp Faber ISBN 0 571 21537 8 Stamelman Richard Perfume Joy Obsession Scandal Sin Rizzoli ISBN 978 0 8478 2832 6 A cultural history of fragrance from 1750 to the present day Suskind Patrick 2006 Perfume The Story of a Murderer Vintage Publishing English edition ISBN 978 0 307 27776 3 A novel of perfume obsession and serial murder Also released as a movie with same name in 2006 External links edit nbsp Media related to Perfumes at Wikimedia Commons IFRA International Fragrance Association The Fragrance Foundation FiFi The British Society of Perfumers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Perfume amp oldid 1196099584, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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