
Stylish Perfumes :
Hi everybody,
The impressive jeans,short top,shaining shoes,stylish gowgle,cool hair,zakkas bike and fancy leather bag on back .that are the identity of young boys & grils. By thinking of “First impression is Last impression” that is openion of those boys & grils. but dont worry I m also thinking same.but it is not limite to have these all things to us. so we want to more accesaries beyond limite . and also there must ”maal’ of headphone. and also thinking about our mobile,volet,pen etc.
into that one is the most usefull & necessary thing is our “PERFUME” perfumes so is it to be desi or imported. they work as in part of style statment there are so many brand of perfumes like Zintak,Zatact,Rock,sigaar,musk,woodysmell,field,do it,etc.
All perfumes contain notice of how it use . but all perfumes contain anti perspireant which harmful to our body & nature. the sprey of perfume contain propelant meance CFC affect is decresing ozoen on earth.
IT’S Simple :-
1] Whenever u will buy perfume plz check the stamp of “CFC FREE” and there is also one label on some perfume that “Does not contain chloro floro carbon”
2] Please keep it far from Fire .
3] Similarly, it should sprey minimum 10 to 15 cm from our skin.
4] By ignoring all these we can use one small “Attar” than perfumes.
The word perfume used today derives from the Latin “per fumum“, meaning through smoke. Perfumery, or the art of making perfumes, began in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt and was further refined by the Romans and Persians. Although perfume and perfumery also existed in India, much of its fragrances are incense based. The earliest distillation of Attar was mentioned in the Hindu Ayurvedic text Charaka Samhita. The Harshacharita, written in 7th century A.D. in Northern India mentions use of fragrant agarwood oil.
The most practical way to start describing a perfume is according to the elements of the fragrance notes of the scent or the family it belongs to, all of which affect the overall impression of a perfume from first application to the last lingering hint of scent.
Traditional
The traditional classification which emerged around 1900 comprised the following categories:
- Single Floral: Fragrances that are dominated by a scent from one particular flower; in French called a soliflore. (e.g. Serge Lutens‘ Sa Majeste La Rose, which is dominated by rose.)
- Floral Bouquet: Containing the combination of several flowers in a scent.
- Amber: A large fragrance class featuring the sweet slightly animalic scents of ambergris or labdanum, often combined with vanilla, flowers and woods. Can be enhanced by camphorous oils and incense resins, which bring to mind Victorian era imagery of the Middle East and Far East.
- Wood: Fragrances that are dominated by woody scents, typically of agarwood, sandalwood and cedar. Patchouli, with its camphoraceous smell, is commonly found in these perfumes.
- Leather: A family of fragrances which features the scents of honey, tobacco, wood and wood tars in its middle or base notes and a scent that alludes to leather.
- Chypre: Meaning Cyprus in French, this includes fragrances built on a similar accord consisting of bergamot, oakmoss, patchouli, and labdanum. This family of fragrances is named after a perfume by François Coty. A notable example is Mitsouko (a popular name for girls in Japanese) by Guerlain.
- Foug're: Meaning Fern in French, built on a base of lavender, coumarin and oakmoss. Houbigant’s Foug're Royale pioneered the use of this base. Many men’s fragrances belong to this family of fragrances, which is characterized by its sharp herbaceous and woody scent.
- By Kapil Kale
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