FILM NOIR
FILM NOIR
Film Noir is a hidden gem, it smells like nothing else in recent memory and the warm, elegant drydown lingers for days on cloth or hair. Named for the luminous curling beauty of cigarette smoke in old black-and-white films where flirtation mixes with intrigue and everyone smoked constantly, it’s what cigarette smoke would smell like in an ideal world. Which is to say: it smells nothing like cigarettes. The central accord of Spanish lavender, neroli, tomar seed, rose, allspice, orris, honey, vanilla absolute, patchouli, Buddhawood, vetiver, oud, choya loban, tonka, civet (vegan) and oakmoss creates a lingering aura, a mysterious but soft presence that subtly envelops the wearer and creates an unmistakable dry-woody-powdery trail that’s never heavy or unpleasant. The perfect morning-after fragrance, it’s wonderful to wake up to on a pillow or undershirt and never grows stale.
Film Noir is incredibly versatile, perfect for cold winter days but with fresh, dry-woody aspects and a light body that make it great for summer wear as well. It’s also highly unisexy and smells great on skin. On men it seems to project more of the woody-spicy character, whereas on women the sultry, blonde-woody, vanilla and powdery-mossy aspects are accentuated. Performs particularly well when worn in hair.
“Incredibly evocative perfume from one of the most promising new houses I’ve come across in years. This perfume has certain hallmarks of extremely vintage men’s classic fougeres: definitely a nod to Caron Pour un Homme and also, in my opinion, Caron’s Third Man… but also this doesn’t actually smell like either. The lavender is very present but also atypical and new smelling, combined with the accord of civet, neroli and allspice, it does something very striking here. The perfumer compares it to the idealized image of cigarette smoke in silent films, without smelling anything like a cigarette. Strangely I agree. This smells like you’d imagine the beautiful curling lines of smoke might smell like if you’d only ever seen it onscreen. Fresh, sexy, romantic.” - Proust Madeline, Fragrantica