New Niche Perfume Review: DSH Perfumes Passport to Paris Collection – Amouse Bouche, Vers la Violette, and Passport à Paris + Reader’s Choice Draw

Passport to Paris Header CaFleureBon

Avenue de Clichy by Louis Anquetin; Dawn Spencer Hurwitz

Artists taking inspiration from other artists working across mediums can have interesting results. Dawn Spencer Hurwitz, the perfumer behind DSH Perfumes, has developed an ongoing relationship with the Denver Art Museum, and there was interest in what kinds of fragrances she could create based on their “Passport to Paris” show of 19th century French art. Ms. Hurwitz was intrigued, because “I also knew that the exhibit was showcasing many 19th Century images and artifacts and I must admit that I have always been wildly attracted to Antique, Vintage, and Historical perfumes. I have a genuine love for classical perfume designs. I have been working on creating a small museum of perfumes so that people could experience the beauty and diversity of bygone eras. I am sure that the perfumes in the museum also informed the work, so, ultimately, it was a mutual attraction.” Three images struck her in particular, and inspired her to create a trio of fragrances that bring to mind perfumery of the past while still having a toe in the modern world: Vers la Violette, Passport à Paris, and Amouse Bouche.

Passport to Paris Amouse Bouche CaFleureBon

The Dunce's Cap by Toulouse Lautrec

Strawberry in perfume can be cloying, like bubblegum, or it can be juicy and delicious like the note used in Amouse Bouche. Inspired by a drawing by Toulouse Lautrec, “The Dunce’s Cap”, the perfume is joyful and unusual. Ms. Hurwitz had several reasons why this image spoke to her: “The Dunce's Cap seemed perfect for Amouse Bouche as it has that fun/funny/quirky element as well as the fact that it is by Lautrec.  Lautrec's work in general, to my mind, lends itself to the rich Chypre or Oriental style.  I also have to admit that I liked the color of the paper.  For me it was very evocative of part of the feel that I wanted Amouse Bouche to have; something with a creamy softness to it.”  Aldehydes and strawberry burst open at first spray, amidst a swirl of light floral notes. The strawberry is fresh from the field, not sugared. The aldehydes provide a powdery lift that is apparent in the sillage, as it kept surprising me with lovely puffs of scent. The slightly woody, cozy drydown retains some of the sweetness of the lingering strawberry. This fragrance is lovely throughout its long skin life.

Notes: Aldehydes, Strawberry, Bergamot, Lemon (top), Grandiflorum Jasmine, Bulgarian Rose, Neroli, Ylang Ylang, Butter co2 (Heart) and Tahitian Vanilla, Ambrette Seed co2, Caramel, Tonka Bean, Australian Sandalwood, and Vetiver (base)

Passport to Paris Vers la Violette CaFleureBon

Village by Hippolyte Petitjean

Vers la Violette, inspired by Hipolyte Petitjean’s painting “Village” pays tribute to the classic perfumery note violet. Ms. Hurwitz explains why this painting fits her idea of this perfume: “I loved the abstract shape making as well as the colors.  It all fit with the kind of violet that I was wanting to create. Violet perfumes can be so Victorian and I wanted to touch upon that feeling while creating something truly modern and universal as well. The image felt as though it was looking forward to the urban skyline, had a balance of masculine and feminine, and the extra brightness of the hues were in line perfectly, I feel, with the kind of modern violet that was created.” Violet is a note that can really suck me in or really put me off.  I have to say that Vers a Violette is in the “sucks me in” category. This perfume is not the candied variety of violet, but a rich, earthy one. It is interesting and complex, with the familiar violet aroma peeking out every so often to tantalize. The leathery notes emerge as the perfume wears, and creates a wonderful aroma that I would like to put on a man I want to snuggle. It is a unisex scent, and hopefully a man would also want to snuggle me when I am wearing it. It grows closer to the skin fairly quickly, but has good staying power. I kept huffing to explore the lovely changes this perfume makes throughout its evolution.

Notes: Galbanum, Bergamot, Lemon, Violet Leaf abs. (top), Cyclamen, Orange Flower abs, Ionone, Orris Root co2, and Bulgarian Rose (heart), Wood Violet, Mysore Sandalwood, oakmoss, Labdanum, Suede, and Civet (base).

Passport to Paris Passport a Paris CaFleureBon

The Beach at Trouville by Claude Monet

Claude Monet’s painting “The Beach at Trouville” had Ms. Hurwitz wanting to create Passport à Parisbecause it depicts the type of people I feel would wear the scent. It shows them enjoying the summertime and the beach, but they are in finery and meant to look (and smell!) very smart. The Idea for Passport was for a very universal design that was fresh enough to wear on Holiday at the seaside but also when in town.”  Also created as an homage to two perfume classics, Guerlain Jicky and Houbigant Fougère Royale, this fragrance is an instant classic itself. Redolent at the top with bright citrus and a shimmering floral lavender, I felt rejuvenated immediately upon applying, and surrounded by an aroma that was viscerally familiar but still new and modern. As the fragrance wears, it settles into a comfortable, relaxing, delightful aura that is exquisitely blended. Ms. Hurwitz thought of this as a summery fragrance, but also thinks it could be worn year round. I completely agree.

Notes: Lemon, Bergamot, French Lavender, Rosewood, Mandarin (top), Gradiflorum Jasmine, Bulgarian Rose, Orris root co2, Clover, Australian Sandalwood, (heart), Amber, Vanillin, Coumarin, Ambergris, East Indian Patchouli, and Civet (base).

Preview of the new "Passport to Paris exhibits at the Denver Art Museum

Passport to Paris exhibit at DAM, photo Cyrus McCrimmon, The Denver Post

I asked Ms. Hurwitz what it is about artistic collaboration that seems to bring out the best in her creative spirit. She replied, “I think that when I have the opportunity to work with artistic collaborations, especially the ones with DAM since they give me carte blanche in terms of how I want to interpret the work, I am doubly inspired. I am inspired by the overall concept of an exhibit or artist or whatever the collaboration is about and then by specific works.  Many times I get to set the designs down in time and place to reference perfume history/culture and juxtapose it to the present or even an imagined future. This kind of thing is highly stimulating!  I think that it also feeds my deep-seated need to engage in art. Period.  I need to paint. And I need to "paint" in perfume. And I need to interact with other artists work and experience it.  It gives me real pleasure to be given opportunities to filter it through my own artistic lens. It may be this sense of added pleasure that makes the difference.” This collection is a testament to that collaborative inspiration and experience. Each fragrance is as distinctive and original as the artwork that inspired it. I am hard-pressed to choose a favorite, as I liked them all and enjoyed wearing them for reasons as diverse as the perfumes.

I received my samples courtesy of Dawn Spencer Hurwitz of DSH Perfumes. Vers la Violette, Passport à Paris, and Amouse Bouche are available on the DSH Perfumes website in EDP and parfum.

Tama Blough, Senior Editor

passport to paris sample cafleurebon

Thanks to the generosity of Ms. Hurwitz, we have a reader’s choice draw for a 1.5 ml parfum extrait sample for three readers anywhere in the world. Let us know specifically which of these three scents you would choose, and why, and also let us know if you have a favorite DSH fragrance. Draw ends November 27, 2013.

We announce the winners only onsite and on our Facebook page, so Like CaFleureBon and use our RSS option…..or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

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58 comments

  • Vers la Violette sounds very good. It’d be interesting to see how the painting is interpreted as scent. I love the hazy, soft violet colour used in the painting.

    I haven’t tried any of DSH’s perfumes. It’s not very easy to find. So I’m looking forward to try my first one from her if I win the draw.

  • Jicky is a favourite of mine, so the homage Passeport a Paris is the one I would love to win. I haven’t had the opportunity to try any of Dawn Spencer Hurwit’s perfumes yet, though I know her reputation is outstanding! Thanks for the draw!

  • Victoria Casey says:

    I love Jicky so I’d really like to try Passport To Paris. I’ve never tried any DSH perfumes though a bunch are on my to test list.

  • I am new to appreciating perfume, and am learning as I go. I have very, very few perfumes, and none of them by DSH, unfortunately. Vers la Violette sounds absolutely dreamy, and I’d love to experience it!

  • I’d love to try Amouse Bouche!
    I don’t have a favorite since I’ve never gotten to try anything from DSH before.

  • I’d choose Amouse Bouche. I don’t have a favorite since I have not tried any other DSH perfumes before. I am in the US.

  • I would love to try Vers la Violette. I’ve researched the DSH line but have not yet pulled the trigger. So many amazing choices. The YSL collection coffret would be my dream choice!

  • I would live to try Passport a Paris because of the notes and Monet is one of my favorite artists! Of the few DSH fragrances I’ve tried I love Cimabue. Thanks for the draw!

  • My favorite DSH is Winter White! Vers La Violette sounds amazing sicne I have been looking, recently, for earthy, dark violets.
    Thanks for the draw 🙂

  • Thank you so very much, Tama, for the entrancing review of my Passport to Paris collection! It is always so amazing to experience the perfumes through someone else’s senses and I can just feel every moment of how the perfumes lived with you. I am thrilled, as always, to be here at CFB!

  • Passport a Paris sounds delightful. I love the collaborations she has the with the Denver Art Museum. My favorite DSH fragrance is Le Smoking. I am in the US and appreciate the draw. Thanks!

  • I’d love to try Amouse bouche as I’m forever on the search for a non-plasticky strawberry and this one sounds delightful! Unfortunately, I haven’t had the chance to sample any DSH perfumes yet as I am quite new to the world of perfume. Thanks for the draw and the reviews!

  • I admire the work of Dawn Spencer Hurwitz and her ability to find her personal interpretations of typical materials of perfumery. I’d like to try Vers la Violette.
    Thanks!

  • Eric Purrington says:

    Passport à Paris is what i would choose. It sounds like it could be worn anytime and, also, by anyone as the fragrances that insprired her here are both masculine and feminine. Would love to smell what Ms. Hurwitz did with this inspiration.
    I do not, yet, have a favorite DSH fragrance

  • I would like to test Passport a Paris because I like the name and for I love art and the association with Monet’s paint made me very curious. Thanks for the draw

  • It is very difficult to sample DSH here in Australia, and I keep reading reviews which really make me want to.
    I like the sound of a modern, more unisex violet, so Vers La Violette is my choice.

  • I have not tried any from this line yet but, I always hear amazing things about her scents. I would love to try Vers la Violette with the real Mysore Sandalwood mixed with leather and civet – sounds amazing!

  • I’d like to try Vers la Violette, as I’m interested in the violet interpretation, and I like the look of the notes list. I’ve never tried a DSH perfume before.
    I’m in the EU, ty

  • Amouse Bouche would definitely be my choice since I love the aroma of strawberries and their sweet taste let the sensual smell of Tahitian Vanilla along with Ambrette Seed and Caramel!
    Thanks for the draw. I live in EU, Greece.

  • Fazal Cheema says:

    Vers la Violette may appeal to me the most due to Mysore Sandalwood which i love. Btw, the two paintings “Village” and “The Beach” are really awesome. I am in US

  • Passport á Paris is the one I’d choose, simply because summer is my favorite season, I love the sea and beaches and always try to spend some time there each year. I haven’t had the chance to try DSH perfumes, and I live in germany.

  • Raduica Ovidiu says:

    Passport a Paris sounds right up my alley. I love the connection between the smell and Monet’s painting.

  • maysamassimo says:

    Hi! The only DSH fragrance I’ve tried is Nourouz, which is amazing. A very different gourmand. For the draw, I would choose Vers la Violette.
    Thanks!

  • I would love to try Amouse Bouche because I have never worn a strawberry perfume. BTW, I think DSH is a genius with an incredible nose. Her YSL inspired perfumes are dead-on and beautiful, and the Egyptian collection is inspired. I live in the U.S.

  • I would love to try Amouse Bouche because it sounds delicious ~ also because is so very different than my usual scent choices and I am really trying to learn and discover new fragrances.I have never tried any DSH scents and have been wanting to so I would be thrilled to win.Thank you for the chance and Happy Holidays!!

  • Sara Boorman says:

    I have not been lucky enough so far to try a DSH fragrance though I will look for them now here in the UK as they sound wonderful.
    Out of these I would most like to try Vers La Violette because I love Village by Petitjean & am intrigued to see how it is interpreted in a fragrance.

  • I too would love to try the Vers a Violette, am completely sucked in by the description above. Fragrances are a brand new passion so I haven’t tried DSH, but they sound dreamy. I live in the US. Thanks!

  • I’d like to try them all (of course) but Vers a Violette interests me the most. I always want to try new scents that have a violet note, especially if it’s not a candied one. I haven’t any favorite DSH scent (yet!) I’m in the US. Thanks for another great draw!

  • Dawn and Cafleurebon seem the perfect match, because Michelyn always illustrates with that perfect painting evocative of a scent, and Dawn is inspired by paintings to create scent! The Money pictured above is one of my favorites, so naturally I would want to try Passport to Paris.
    DSH is my favorite perfumery, and I would be hard pressed to name a favorite. This time of year I love Gingembre, with it’s edible ginger note. I love the whole YSL scent series she created. Oiellets Rouge is the best carnation note ever. Vert por Madame is a beautiful green. Kohl Gris, Tamarind/Paprika and Piment de Chocolat are also favorite holiday scents. Parfum de Grasse is an instant classic. As you can see, I’m a DSH fangirl!

  • I would love to try Vers la Violette- I love violet notes! Unfortunately I haven’t tried anything yet from DSH, but I’m hoping to remedy that this Christmas!

  • I live in South Africa and have never tried anything from DSH – but I have heard a lot that makes me eager to try anything I can from her:)

    I would choose Vers la Violette because the idea of a non-sugary violet is appealing; but even more so because I adore the picture…

  • vers la violette for me – i *just* (this year) discovered violet for myself, and haven’t tried one of dawn’s yet.

    as for my favorite dsh perfume — it is still one of the first i tried of hers: prana.

  • Passport a Paris sounds just perfect! Trouville is my weekend getaway and would love to discover how Dawn re actualised her inspiritations from the gorgeous Jocky and Fougere Royale. Dawn created the beautiful Celadon: the perfume I always have a backup bottle of!
    Thank you for this draw!

  • I have not yet tried a DSH perfume, but have heard wonderful things about them; it is time to explore them. My choice would be Amouse Bouche, as I love the scent of strawberries, and it had been a long time since I’ve experienced a good strawberry perfume.

  • I have tried any DSH Perfume, but if I win this draw I would choose Vers la violette, because it is supposed to show the earthy side of this flower, and not the candied violet easier to find enywhere. (I’m international)

  • helical gnome says:

    I love DSH Keni. I just love it. I think I’d love to try Amouse bouche mainly because I have never liked a strawberry scent before due to the sugary blast of plasticness I had the misfortune of encountering. A green, non-sweet strawberry with a creamy dry down sounds delectable.
    Thanks!

  • The strawberry note in Amouse Bouche sounds very interesting. I have not smelled any of DSH’s creations, but have read so many good things. Thanks for the chance!

  • I love DSH perfumes! Some of my favorites are Winter White, Sweet Dreams, and Bois et Chocolate. Amuse Bouche sounds like something I would really enjoy because of its playful sweetness.

  • Chris Schaefer says:

    Dawn is so skilled and I love reading how she has created these scents inspired by art. I’d love to try any of them but Vers la Violette intrigues me the most. I am in the US.

    Thanks for the draw!

  • I would pick Vers la Violette because it immediately checks all the right boxes: Monet, Violet, earthy, abstract =) My favorite so far from DSH is her YSL retrospective collection.. really proves the point that Dawn really shines with these special collaborations!

  • My favorite DSH fragrance is Cimabue, but there are so many others I’d like to try, including Vert la Violette. I like the idea of a modern, complex violet, and I adore the painting of the ‘Village’. I live in the US. Thanks!

  • I would choose Amouse Bouche as its soft and creamy nature appeals to me, and fresh strawberries are never to be turned down. I’m in the US. Thanks!

  • I would love to try her Passport to Paris. It sounds lovely.
    Celadon is my favorite scent of hers, so far

  • I have gotten to try her Passport au Paris… and it is absolutely lovely. I’m almost through with my sample and would love to win that one. I have a full size of Amouse and everyone who has sniffed it LOVES it. I really like her Tuberouse and Piment et Chocolate. I am in the US

  • I would choose Vers la Violette for myself. I do not know her fragrances but this one sounds interesting to me since it has leather notes. Thanks

  • As I love violets in perfumes, my choice would be Vers la Violette. It has a very respectable list of raw materials(as usual for DSH perfumes). I’m impressed by Épices d’Hiver but there are many of DSH perfumes I plan to try in near future.

  • I would choose Passport a Paris because I adore Jicky and it would be interesting to smell something that was created partly as an homage to it. My favourite DSH fragrance to date is Cimabue. I have not tried many of her fragrances but would like to get to know more.

  • Cimabue is my favorite of DSH fragrances (at the moment), but Amouse Bouche sounds intriguing! I’d love to smell them all…probably time to order another set of decants! I live in the U.S…just say that out of habit!

  • I don’t have a favorite DSH fragrance but my favorite going by description would have to be Passport a Paris! I love the freshness of the top notes and feel like it would be a joy to wear.

  • I would choose Passport a Paris. I feel that the mix of the citrus and the lavender at the top would be a great combo. I would love to smell this one a day.