andy57 wrote:Has anyone tried the Fragrance Customization service offered by Floris that Simon Crompton wrote about last week? I've been a customer of Floris for decades but was unaware of the service. It sounds like it would be rather interesting, with the possibility of a unique result.
I don't see the advantage, in terms of the logic of perfume construction, of taking a perfectly balanced formula and then tweaking parts of it, or of building a LEGO fragrance from modular blocks.
Decency forbids any comment on the development of this great houses's scents in the last decades, suffice it to say I curate my 1980s Flacons of 127 and 89 with the utmost attention. Sadly, the fragrance houses on Jermyn St. etc. have taken a similar path as its shirtmakers. To me the only one holding up the flag of the English grooming and fragrance tradition in the bottle, rather than as a mere marketing proposition, is Trumper's (as far as it is possible within
IFRA regulations)
Whether bespoke in perfume is of the same necessity as in tailoring is a difficult question (Luca Turin famously rejects it), but if it is a personalized perfume you desire, true bespoke it should be - and that is a process as time-intensive and expensive as having a Savile Row suit made (depending on the perfumer, a lot more). Some serious perfumers who offer bespoke are Christopher Brosius (CB I Hate Perfume, Brooklyn), Lorenzo Villoresi (Florence), natural perfumer Dominique Dubrana/Abdessalaam Attar (Rimini - a real steal compared to the others) and Francis Kurkdjian (Paris -you're talking three Savile row suits here).