After he viewed over 30 apartments around New York , the two-bedroom prewar apartment was the perfect find for the architect and perfumer. And as luck would have it, it was just down the block from his prior home on Patchin Place. Something that has this kind of magic, you know? Built in , the apartment hadn't been renovated since the s and was faithful to its original layout, which he loved, having studied architecture with a concentration in historic preservation.
A good-sized nook off the kitchen made for the perfect home office for his boutique fragrance company, Arquiste the name is a clever amalgamation of the Spanish and French words for "architecture" and "history" , which is responsible for the luscious scent permeating the railroad space. In the master bedroom, Huber wanted to capture the feel of something tented and immersive.
Name: Sir John. We go pretty far back with this Sir John. We never met. I feel bad saying this. They did look tasty. Name: Frederick Bouchardy. Company: Fragrance designer, developer, and founder of Joya Studio parfums. In a world dripping with scent, Bouchardy is dripping with charm and dry wit. One of the founders behind indie fragrance trade show Elements, the father of a newborn baby boy champions outside-the-box olfactive creation.
Who: Ben Gorham. Company: Founder, Byredo. So, try not to swoon if you ever meet. Who: Benoit Verdier. Company: Founder, Ex Nihilo fragrances. History is my favorite subject. I read about the meeting of the French and Spanish courts in when the Peace Treaty of the Pyrenees was consolidated. For Fleur de Louis I investigated not only what they used as perfume, but also what they used to scent the room. What are the most exotic locations you have visited in your perfume adventures?
And Sydney is such a fragrant city — full of star jasmine in late spring, magnolias in the early summer, and frangipani later on. My favorite ingredients are gardenia, magnolia grandiflora, vanilla, lavender and rosemary, from Mexico, Australia, Spain and France. I also love burning candles. In the living room there will be a green floral the St. Regis scent actually , in my bedroom something warmer, and in the bathroom something mossy and green.
Not vegetable rotten but animal rotten. My partner is a doctor and we were just talking about the smells of a hospital the other day, and he mentioned the smell of death. That instantly made me nauseous, and I think we can all identify with smelling something like that. Sunday morning smells like: Sipping coffee with some sort of milk involved.
Monday morning smells like: Two cups of black coffee. The one I burn the most is called Art Deco Velvet. It smells like old velvet that has absorbed the tobacco, but it retains a sweetness to it. If I could have one smell on my hands forever, it would be: Orange blossom. But right this instant? I smell like vetiver.
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