From a Deeper Well: Zelda by En Voyage Perfumes
By Donna
Well I did it for
kicks and I did it for faith
I did it for lust and I did it for hate I did it for need and I did it for love Addiction stayed on tight like a glove So I ran with the moon and I ran with the night And the three of us were a terrible sight Nipple to the bottle to the gun to the cell To the bottom of a hole of a deeper well
- excerpt from the
song “Deeper Well” written by David Charles Olney
Perfumer Shelley Waddington of
En Voyage
Perfumes has a very modern sensibility when it comes to her
creations, so it was a bit of a shock to try Zelda, the new
oriental fragrance she made in homage to Zelda Fitzgerald and her tumultuous life in the
Jazz Age. It strikes a deeper, darker chord than any of her other
compositions, and I thought I was smelling a classic vintage perfume,
the kind they really don't make anymore. Considering that many
perfumery materials from decades ago are simply not available today,
this feat is even more improbable. My first impression of Zelda was
right on the money; after several wearing I can state with confidence
that this is an instant classic that can take its place among the
best of today's niche and artisan offerings. This is the kind of
scent that used to be made by the major houses as a matter of course
- a complex, disturbing and fascinating beauty that is clearly
intended for adults to wear. Why the fragrance industry at large has
apparently decided that we no longer want these is a mystery, but we
are lucky to have independent artisan perfumers who know better.
Zelda kicks off with one of the best
top note accords I have experienced in some time, an exhilarating
blend of bergamot, galbanum, aged bourbon and zesty spices. I love
the astringent green of galbanum, and this treatment of it is
masterful indeed. The combination of the green and spicy-sweet notes
reminds me of what Coty's marvelous and original Emeraude must have
been before it was so sadly cheapened over time; it has some of that
weirdly addictive “mint and root beer” character that
distinguished Emeraude from all other perfumes. Zelda takes another
path to achieve a similar effect, and it's just as impressive if not more
so.
The florals in Zelda are especially
enjoyable for a vintage lover like me – they are not done in the
current style of photo-realistic “fresh and clean” florals. No,
the languid magnolia, May rose and other garden blossoms are from
another time, sweet, rich, honeyed and seductive in the grand manner
of Emeraude, Blanchard's Jealousy or Charbert's Breathless, to name
just a few vintage greats. They are caught at the moment of full
bloom, just before the descent into decay and then actually going
over that edge, which results in yet another interesting facet to
the perfume. Nothing is innocent or pristine in this fragrance, and that's a
great part of its charm.
It may be hard to believe, but there
was a time when I did not wear orientals, thinking them to be too
heavy and cloying for my taste. I am very happy that I expanded my
horizons and discovered the wonderful world of this genre, the
sexiest of all perfume families; now I can't imagine missing out on
something like this. Zelda's base is profound and intense, intended
partly as a nod to the darkness that overtook its namesake's life
near its tragic end, but oh, is it beautiful! Amber, vintage musks,
vanilla, delicious balsams, sandalwood, vetiver, cedarwood, and
oakmoss all work together to become more than the sum of their parts,
an alchemy rarely encountered in the spare compositions of the
post-IFRA world. Zelda just gets better and better on skin over
time, inviting the wearer and those fortunate enough to be close by
to inhale its shimmering tapestry of interwoven notes over and over
again. A strong yet velvet-smooth animalic undercurrent makes it even
more magnetic. This is the mark of a great fragrance – the nose
never tires of it, but dives into its depths again and again, unable
to resist, each time finding more and different sensations of
pleasure. Its voice is throaty and deep, a love call that cannot be
denied, creating a longing that only more of it can fulfill. It
lingers for many hours and fades slowly, enchanting to the end. I
predict that Zelda is going to end up on a lot of “best of” lists
at the end of the year; it will most certainly be on mine.
Image
credit: “Enchanted Well” by Inês
Cardoso on flickr.com via Creative Commons License, some rights
reserved.
Disclosure:
My review was based on a sample given to me by En Voyage Perfumes.
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3 Comments:
I'm a newbie just starting to appreciate orientals. This one sounds unbelievable.
I'm a newbie just starting to appreciate orientals. This one sounds unbelievable. I don't know if this is accidentally going to post twice. Something weird happened on my computer. If so, my apologies.
BookReports, thanks for stopping by! I hope you get a chance to try Zelda, it is so exceptional.
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