Guest guest Posted April 18, 2006 Report Share Posted April 18, 2006 Dear Members: It's springtime, and for those of you living in temperate regions, you are enjoying the lovely scent of lilacs blooming. Lilacs flowers resist distillation, enfleurage, well, most extraction methods, therefore we have no raw material to work with in creating a lilac scent. I will follow this post with a generously-shared technique from aromatherapy and natural perfumery maven Jeanne Rose for tincturing lilacs, but this post is for those, like myself, who do not have access to lilac blossoms. In 2004, shortly after joining the group, Terry Sterling, a talented perfumer of Dragonfly Aromatics, shared his formula for a Lilac Flower Accord. A famous perfume critic was fooled by this accord, and accused Terry of using a synthetic lilac fragrance oil. No so, and it's sad to see that this critic is still making this allegation (and others, based on his refusal to listen when we speak to him of lilac, and violet flower accords.) Too bad, because creativity will win out in the end, and the critic will be shamed for repeating his libel. It's a new age of perfumery, and we need more of us to experiment and go out there and prove the dinosaurs wrong ;-) I encourage all of you to play with this formula. The scent is fleeting, so a competition might be held to see who can come up with the perfect fixative that marries well with the scent. Thank you, Terry, and all other talented perfumers who share so graciously, so that we may all move further, faster, along the path of our modern revival of natural perfumery. Here is Terry's post: Lots of wonderful dialog and info in the message archive- what a wonderful resource! I would like to get my feet wet by offering this formulation (does anyone like lilac?): I blended this accord this last spring after a pleasant encounter with some lilac blossoms. I'm not aware of any lilac absolute in present production so this accord may prove useful. The only drawback is the ingredients are pricey. 1-Violet Leaf abs (10% dil.) 1-Blue Lotus abs 1-Ylang Extra 3-Jasmine Grand. abs 3-Linden Bossom abs 1-Tuberose abs This is a vibrant floral accord and makes a wonderful perfume or it can be used in a more complex composition. One might add more violet leaf or other greens to approximate the stemmy/leafy quality of the true fragrance. I'm pleased to finally be corresponding with other perfumers. Peace everyone. Terry Anya http://.com The premier site on the Web to discover the beauty of Natural Perfume / Join to study natural perfumery Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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