Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 >> Zz's wrote > >> A little off topic, but still Linden. I accidently >> tipped over a full bottle (125ml) of diluted Linden >> Blossom Abs. yesterday. It was on my stainless work >> table in the studio, and I was able to scoop it up and >> save almost all of it. But I still stink, and so does >> my studio! That got me to thinking about spills. I feel so much better knowing that other people spill things, because in the past six months I have spilled: 1) 1 oz of wild orange eo 2) .25 oz of Jasmine Sambac CO2 3) 1 oz of patchouli. 4) 4 oz of Labdanum extrait. Even though I am ultra-careful and only open a bottle when I'm about to use some of what's inside it, I have still spilled these three things. It was a lesson in being even more ultra-careful. I was able to 'save' much of the patchouli, by grabbing the nearest clean dropper and sucking it up from the spill dropperful by dropperful, and then filtering the shmutz out with a tiny sieve. It's no longer something I consider pure, but at least I did save most of it. Thank goodness I didn't spill the rose otto or the neroli, though...(knocks quickly on wood). Alfred in San Francisco \ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 On Dec 11, 2006, at 4:52 PM, alfred wrote: > Thank goodness I didn't spill the rose otto or the neroli, > though...(knocks quickly on wood). > > > Alfred > in San Francisco > well, ALFRED~~~~~ NEXT TIME YOU SPILL SOMETHING~~~ the least you can do is call your aroma friends to come over for a scent party for an hour or two~~!!!! after all, i am in west oakland, right ac ross the bay bridge! xoxoxo L Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 On Dec 11, 2006, at 5:15 PM, Libby wrote: > On Dec 11, 2006, at 4:52 PM, alfred wrote: > > Thank goodness I didn't spill the rose otto or the neroli, > > though...(knocks quickly on wood). > > > > > Alfred > > in San Francisco > > well, ALFRED~~~~~ > > NEXT TIME YOU SPILL SOMETHING~~~ the least you can do is call your > aroma friends to come over for a scent party for an hour or two~~!!!! > > after all, i am in west oakland, right ac ross the bay bridge! > > xoxoxo > > L Sounds good to me, Libby! (...Libby gets a call at 4:00 AM on a Saturday... " Hi! It's Alfred, and I just spilled some nargarmotha...everyone's on their way over... " ) Alfred in San Francisco Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 > Thank goodness I didn't spill the rose otto or the neroli, > though...(knocks quickly on wood). > > Alfred > in San Francisco Oh -- I'm so glad you were able to save some of your spilled materials. I make a point of not having caffeine in me when I'm working with my stock 'cause it makes me jittery. And I don't work when others are around. Breaks my concentration anyway. I agree with Anya, we work in solitude for good reasons. When I got my first big bunch of precious oils, they were arranged on my blending table/kitchen island and my back was turned when my husband walked in and literally started grabbing vials and slinging things around -- it really was bizarre, and all sort of in slow motion. I was speechless, reduced to wordless vocalization and gesturing like Stuart Masterson in " Benny and Joon " when ny Depp is touching the wet paint on her paintings. I could just see things slipping somehow and smashing on the floor, costly juice flying all over everything; or some comedy of errors with a cat underfoot and all vials flung far and wide. Whew. Carefully, Andrine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 > > Sounds good to me, Libby! > > (...Libby gets a call at 4:00 AM on a Saturday... " Hi! It's Alfred, and > I just spilled some nargarmotha...everyone's on their way over... " ) > > > Alfred > in San Francisco Hi Alfred, You are always mentioning the names of botanicals I (a novice) have never heard of! What is nargarmotha like? And Osmanthus which you mentioned in an earlier, what is that like? I have never smelled either. Ruth http://www.whitewitch.ie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 12, 2006 Report Share Posted December 12, 2006 At 07:52 PM 12/11/2006, you wrote: > >> Zz's wrote > > > >> A little off topic, but still Linden. I accidently > >> tipped over a full bottle (125ml) of diluted Linden > >> Blossom Abs. yesterday. It was on my stainless work > >> table in the studio, and I was able to scoop it up and > >> save almost all of it. But I still stink, and so does > >> my studio! ZZ -- mercy...linden city. I think all this talk vibrated all the way to Morrow, OH! >That got me to thinking about spills. I feel so much better knowing >that other people spill things, because in the past six months I have >spilled: 1) 1 oz of wild orange eo 2) .25 oz of Jasmine Sambac CO2 3) >1 oz of patchouli. 4) 4 oz of Labdanum extrait. Even though I am >ultra-careful and only open a bottle when I'm about to use some of >what's inside it, I have still spilled these three things. It was a >lesson in being even more ultra-careful. > >Thank goodness I didn't spill the rose otto or the neroli, >though...(knocks quickly on wood). To tweak an old song by the Who: " Alfred the Man with the shaky hands " Here's how I work: I bought a big stainless steel bakers pan from a restaurant supply house. It's about 24 " x 20 " . It has a slight lip, maybe .5 " . Before working, I clean it with alcohol. I only have one bottle on it at a time. I rarely spill, but when I do, I have cotton balls for mopping up the juice. You can then use either your fingers or wide stainless tweezers to squeeze the oil back into the bottle. Very little, if any contamination occurs that way. If there's such a tiny amount it won't squeeze out, plunk it in some alcohol, which will extract it, of course, and either roughly figure out the tincture % for use in the future, or enjoy as is. Anya McCoy Anya's Garden of Natural Perfume http://anyasgarden.com Artisan Natural Perfumers Guild http://artisannaturalperfumers.org Natural Perfumers Community Group / Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2006 Report Share Posted December 13, 2006 Yes, stainless is great that way. That is why I work on a stainless surface. I too swab it down with alcohol, and as well am not prone to spilling a lot of things. The stainless sheet pan is a great idea. I have them in several sizes, and even keep two in my studio. I will line up bottles on a stainless tray for filling. When I do spill, I suck up the oil with a fresh pipette. It is probably more a vision problem for me. Not having my glasses on. Must make a note to absent minded self - wear glasses while making perfume. Another great organizer for the studio is a test tube rack and test tubes. I make all of my test blends in real test tubes, and stand them in a rack. It is also great for upside down storage of those smaller 10ml grad. cylinders. This way nothing can tip over or get lost, and the rack rows are easy to color code tag for identification. Another plus is the ease of cleaning and reuse of test tubes (no lip, or bottle neck). You can buy the disposable plastic caps, but use the tubes over and over. Z...... ZZ's Petals, Parfume Moderne http://www.zzspetals.com Peace Angel Farm http://www.peaceangelfarm.com Zz's Petals, Natural Perfumery.... http://www.zzspetals.com __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2007 Report Share Posted January 7, 2007 > > > Hi Alfred, > > > > You are always mentioning the names of botanicals I > > (a novice) have > > never heard of! > > > > What is nargarmotha like? > > > > And Osmanthus which you mentioned in an earlier, > > what is that like? > > My grandmother grew Osmanthus in her yard in North > Carolina. The blossoms smelled only in the cold > winter time. The fragrance was far reaching and a > sweet floral scent with a hint of citrus & spice have > since seen osmanthus used as tea in Chinese stores. > Lovely > Bb > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ ______________ > Have a burning question? > Go to www.Answers. and get answers from real people who know. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2007 Report Share Posted January 7, 2007 > > > Hi Alfred, > > > > You are always mentioning the names of botanicals I > > (a novice) have > > never heard of! > > > > What is nargarmotha like? > > > > And Osmanthus which you mentioned in an earlier, > > what is that like? > > My grandmother grew Osmanthus in her yard in North > Carolina. The blossoms smelled only in the cold > winter time. The fragrance was far reaching and a > sweet floral scent with a hint of citrus & spice have > since seen osmanthus used as tea in Chinese stores. > Lovely > Bb > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ ______________ > Have a burning question? > Go to www.Answers. and get answers from real people who know. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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