A beacon of light in the gloom: Bergamoss solid perfume by Aftelier
By Donna
Recently I was thinking about why I
like chypre fragrances so much. Obviously I love the way they smell,
but apart from that, the true chypres all share a common thread; they
clearly owe much of their character to natural materials, and in
general those materials are of good quality. From the high opening
note of bergamot through the floral heart and down into the base of
resins and moss, they are grounded in nature. Whether it is the
animalic elegance of Miss
Dior, the wistfully rosy
beauty of Houbigant's ,
Demi-Jour
or the bitter-green oakmoss overdose of Jean-Louis
Scherrer, the chypre structure in all its guises owes its
integrity to things that can't be made in a laboratory. (Don't even
get me started with the so-called “modern chypres” that were born
of necessity out of restrictions on naturals.) As much as I
appreciate contemporary perfumes made into abstract works of creative
art with the use of aroma chemicals, those which are made with
nothing but those lack heart and soul, like a computer-generated
image of a “perfect woman” whose expression is a vacuous stare
and whose face is boring in its eerie symmetry. For the real deal, I
reach most often for my collection of vintage chypres, made before
the days of nanny states, bureaucratic overreach and multinational
detergent companies acquiring perfume houses.
Now we have another entry in the genre
that could easily be a throwback vintage scent, but it's an all new
fragrance called Bergamoss from Aftelier
Perfumes, and it is only available in solid form. Mandy
Aftel wanted to make a true chypre fragrance and decided that
it would work best as a solid. After testing it, I cannot disagree;
it's so good I want to slather it all over myself and live in it
24/7.
Bergamoss is 100% natural, like all
Aftelier perfumes, and it has the true chypre building blocks but
with some unexpected companions. The exhilarating top notes of bergamot and wild
sweet orange are bright and uplifting, like sunlight knifing through
a dense forest canopy to reach the ground below. As the perfume
warms on skin, it opens up to reveal a dreamy, expansive heart
featuring ripe peach and nutmeg, a combination I have not encountered
before but of which I heartily approve. This pastoral effect is
heightened by the use of a most rare material called flouve, which is
an absolute of a sweet grass that has a heartbreakingly beautiful
aromatic character and gives the the wearer the feeling of being in a
broad, romantic meadow filled with waving midsummer grasses drying
into hay and interwoven with scented wildflowers. Of course, the base
has plenty of real oakmoss, the cornerstone of all true chypres,
along with antique civet and coumarin, the latter of which enhances
the impression of the flouve. I have to say that flouve is my new
perfume crush – every time I wear this fragrance I smell something
different in it, as there seems to be no end to its aromatic
revelations. The solid formula adds yet another dimension, with its
sensuous, luxuriant feel when applied to the skin.
Bergamoss has it all – it's
refreshing, bright, sweet, floral, spicy, green (literally and
figuratively so), mossy, earthy, rich, animalic and profound. Classic
perfume lovers rejoice; the art of the chypre is not lost, it's just
living in the small studios of artisan perfumers who are keeping the
flame burning.
Image
credit: “Enchanted Forest” from hdwallpapersos.com
Disclosure:
My testing sample was given to me by Aftelier Perfumes.
Labels: Aftelier, Donna, indie perfumes, Mandy Aftel, natural perfumery |
3 Comments:
Wow, thank you so much Donna for this brilliant review (and gorgeous image) -- I am enraptured by your descriptions and appreciate your savvy perspective and perceptive writing about my work!
xoxo Mandy
Thank you so much for sharing about this perfume and its perfume house I've not come across before. You gave an absolutely enchanting description that's got me so curious to explore this scent now... I completely know what you mean about bergamot having a 'profound' essence - that it exactly how I would describe it.
Thank you very much for your kind words, Neyon M! I love bergamot in anything, but it really sings in Bergamoss.
Thanks so much Mandy, it was my pleasure!
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