New Fragrance: SJP STASH (Sarah Jessica Parker x IFF) Debuts at ULTA “Can a Celebuscent be Niche”

the perfect scent cafleurebon

Over the past decade we have seen the rise of niche and artisan fragrance, and the decline of celebrity scents. Before you clap too loudly, there were some notable celubuscents. One was Sarah Jessica Parker’s Lovely released in 2005,  it actually  shares some of the personality of the star on the label  and captures  a bit of floral sophistication  of SJP’s alter ego Carrie Bradshaw  Sex in The City.  For those who remember Chandler Burr’s book The Perfect Scent, Chandler Burr follows the development of two fragrances intertwined stories, the first about the year he spent for The New Yorker magazine in Paris behind the scenes at Hermes watching legendary now retired perfumer Jean-Claude Ellena create the Hermes scent “Un Jardin sur le Nil“; and the second about a year (one that started with an article for The New York Times), Chandler called Lovely a “innovative  thoughtful work of art” 

covet  sara jessica parker ad  perfume created by Frank Voelkl

Covet ad campaign

A few mediocre fragrances followed except for Covet in 2007, which was a brilliant fragrance that flopped developed by Frank Voelkl. Its odd notes were ahead of the mainstream. The last scent  that bore her name was SJP NYC in 2009 with Coty before taking a seven-year hiatus.

But she’s back, with Stash SJP, which will break around the time of her new HBO series  Divorce next month.

Sarah Jessica Parker’s new fragrance, Stash SJP.

Stash Bottle via WWD

“It’s like ‘street,’ it’s like contraband. It’s the cheese that’s not pasteurized,” she said, holding up the bottle of Stash, which looks more like an old-fashioned, 100-ml. bottle of spirits than an eau de parfum. As it turns out SJP wanted to bring out the formula for Stash before Lovely but it was not  deemed commercial enough under COTY. These were the days before social media and Instagram, which are key to many successes of the dwindling number of celebuscents.

WWD writes, “The amber color of the juice evokes the feel of whiskey, and the ripped black gaffer tape label — which mimics a piece of electrical tape — was strategically “slapped on” on an angle. It’s packaged in a black box inside a black grosgain bag and a satin black-and-gold rimmed cap is wrapped in twisted black twine. It’s edgier than anything she’s ever done and while not billed as “genderless,” she called it “fragrance for the human being.”

An ad for Stash SJP.

Stash ad Sarah Jessica Parker via WWD

Stash’s concept and idea predates that of Lovely, the first scent she created with Coty Inc., her licensee at the time, and International Flavors and Fragrances. She created Covet in 2007 At the end of 2014, the license for Parker’s fragrances was taken over by Lovely Distribution Co., created specifically for Parker’s fragrance license. She continued to work with IFF to bring Stash to  market.The blurred lines  continue as the U.S. retail partner at launch is Ulta Beau. Ulta will carry the fragrance exclusively in the U.S. for a year in all of its doors doors starting on Aug. 28 and online at ulta.com (the chain will have more than 970 stores by the end of the year). It will also be sold on Parker’s sjpbeauty.com site. SJP told WWD, “Now Ulta is bringing us in. Instead of us fighting, there is a sense of ownership. They are taking more control of it; they have a whole plan and are anchoring this,” she said of the partnership"

While Lovely has top notes of mandarin, bergamot, rosewood and lavender, Stash’s are grapefruit zest, black pepper and sage. The latter is decidedly less feminine than its predecessor, with middle notes of cedarwood atlas, patchouli, ginger lily and pistachio and a base of olibanum, massoia wood, vetiver and musk. “I don’t know if you have an affinity for body odor, but on some people it’s amazing,” she said with a laugh. “Part of it, too, is the warmth of a body and how do you capture heat? [Or] how do you capture [the scent of] a sweater that has been worn by somebody that’s absorbed musk or patchouli?” She said the words that came to mind when creating Stash were body odor, church and leather. It’s inspired by a handful of men’s fragrances Parker would wear, with key notes of vetiver and frankincense,  which is one of the base notes of Stash. 

Another factor that differentiates Stash from previous fragrance projects is social media and the speed at which the digital space allows one to launch product, especially when the person launching it has millions of followers. This is the biggest change since the introduction of Lovely, which took place seven years before Instagram came into existence.

.A good sign is that U.K.-based retailer Debenhams, which rarely buys celebrity scents is all in. according to WWD, “Globally, the scent will be available in Boots, Debenhams and Superdrug in the U.K. and My Chemist in Australia. Industry sources project that Stash can do $25 million in retail sales during its first year.

#comeandfindit SJP STASH

#comeandfindit @sjpbeauty

 Sarah Jessica Parker was once again hands on from concept to out-of-the-box promotions such as a global street-art campaign. Street art started appearing around New York earlier in August, with nearly 100 sidewalks in New York City and Los Angeles tagged with #ComeandFindIt in chalk art. Parker teased the street art on her Instagram account.

The eau de parfum comes in three sizes: 30 ml., 50 ml. and 100 ml., which retail for $50, $75 and $85, respectively, as well as a $25 rollerball and $50 elixir oil that can used for hair and body.

 Via Instagram, WWD

Michelyn Camen, Editor in Chief

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12 comments

  • I live near an ULTA. No fancy stores close and I agree Covet was fabulous
    Thanks for the news

  • I think it’s going to be good although the body odor comment is too weird
    I didn’t know about her new series on HBO Divorce
    I wear LOVELY still
    Glad she broke from Coty and has her own thing now

  • Oh cool! If I recall from the book, she originally wanted a fragrance that matched her signature hybrid of Guerlain Vetiver, Bonne Belle Baby Musk, and this Egyptian body oil, but Coty urged her towards the more commercial vein of Lovely. I hope Stash smells as good as it reads.

  • Hikmat Sher Afridi says:

    Sounds great!
    I haven’t smell any of the SJP perfumes yet. After reading the review, this will be the first perfume from SJP house that I’ll buy.

  • Looking forward to trying this one! There is a terrific Vogue article online about the making of this new fragrance, dated 8-26-16. Also includes a cute video of SJP answering 78 questions in her fabulous digs.

  • If there is any celebrity whose fragrances are near-niche, it’s SJP. I love Covet. Smelling it for the first one from a sample I couldn’t believe it’s a celebrity scent. I thought it’s a least Narciso Rodriguez or Parfumerie Generale. I believe Stash can be as interesting. I have to test it.

  • This is wonderful news. I’m intrigued as well as hopeful that I’ll enjoy SJP Stash. I would like to find Lovely Sheer and give it a try, too.

    Re-reading The Perfect Scent is on my list for fall. Now I’m extra motivated to enjoy it again.

    I really enjoyed the Vogue article TaffyJ mentioned. SJP’s personality is equally charming and fascinating, and it really comes through in the video.

  • Stash sounds so interesting and at so reasonable price! I love Lovely and Covet, they are both my favorite celebrity scents (plus Truth or Dare and 3121 by Prince).