Guest guest Posted July 7, 2006 Report Share Posted July 7, 2006 Hi there, I have been happily lurking and reading soooooo many archives, trying to get a grasp of how to take my first baby steps into natural perfumery when I got inspired to tincture everything. I've tinctured everything from some berries dangling from a tree in a parking lot to the four o'clocks growing in my garden and have come up with a couple of interesting results that I'm curious if anyone else has run across. The first being the four o'clocks. These are prolific little hot pink flowers that have a very heavy, sultry floral scent, not as cloying as jasmine, but if you walk through them, it clings to you, it reminds me of what you might encounter flopping onto a rich old ladies favorite couch. But I digress. I was hoping to capture their scent and I did, but only on the dry- out. The first scent that hits you is almost overwhelming bitter. Do you think this may change as the tincture matures? It is only 3 weeks old. Does anyone have any experience with this garden flower and extracting its perfume? The second notable experiment was with honey of all things. I used some run of the mill tupelo honey from the grocery for my first tincture and the result was deliciously floral. I was surprised at how lovely it was. The second tincture from a local bee keeper who lives in my suburban neighborhood. That tincture smelled like, well... garbage. At first I thought it was just my nose but I have stuck it under half a dosen noses that had the same reaction. It makes sense knowing that the bees probably prowl trash cans and drink the remnants of mountain dew from drippy bottles but I was shocked at how accurately the bees nutritional sources were portrayed in the tincture. Has anyone else encoutered this? I'm almost afraid to tincture the goo. Essence of pizza box anyone? I'm tincturing close to 2 dozen little experiments including clementines, because the eso is too expensive to use in any quantity for my purposes, watermellon, because it survived our 4th of July party and, my strangest, dog hair because I'm hoping that it will smell just like my dog. Why you might ask? I train dogs and bottling a dog's scent would be extremely helpful when introducing a new dog into a situation where other dogs are present. Their scent is their calling card, and if you spray their scent into an area, let the other dogs sniff around and bring the " tinctured " dog in, they would be less likely to bombard the tinctured dog, avoiding nervous tension from the bombardment and reducing aggression. This little step tricks them into thinking that they have all met before and the newcomer belongs there. I just attended a conference where the speaker was musing that if we could bottle thier scent, group aggression could greatly be reduced. This could be great for my industry! And I bet it could be a first for natural perfumery too, although I got the idea from Anya's goat hair. Thanks lady! I can't wait to see if it actually works, but I have some waiting to do. If it doesn't have the desired effect I can always just use it for myself, in case I don't smell enough of dog...like that would ever happen. I would love to hear any advice on tincturing, I'm a little unsure how long to let it mature, if it differs upon the substance you are tincturing or what? I'm also unsure if you have to let it mature after you filter it. Does the filtering stop the scent from becoming stronger or can you still expect some change? I'm facinated and am dying to hear of some other things to try. I'm hooked! Thanks in advance for any reply. , a newbie on the lookout for the stinky bees... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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