Esxence 2019: Nomenclature Fluo_ral Review (Nathalie Feisthauer) + Fantastic Realism Draw

 

Carlos Quintero and Karl Bradl of Nomenclature
Carlos Quintero and Karl Bradl of Nomenclature

 

Nomenclature Fluo_ral, the latest fragrance from co-founders and creative directors Karl Bradl and Carlos Quintero and award-winning perfumer Nathalie Feisthauer, explores the border, the meniscus so to speak, between the fantastic and the realistic. With the new Fluo_ral, the science of chemistry and the art of perfumery once again fuse, offering a cohesive olfactory glimpse of an imaginal world, a scent landscape that reflects nature but does not imitate it.

 

Nathalie Feisthauer of LABscent

Photo of Nathalie Feisthauer courtesy of Nomenclature NYC

 

A notion, or a premonition perhaps, of fantastic realism in fragrance has been around since the first aroma chemical was synthesized.  With Nomenclature Fluo_ral,  Nathalie Feisthauer brings a vivid florescent twist to aquatic olfactory fantasy. Her deft and skillful use of the molecule Calone ® (AKA Watermelon Ketone) is an exciting, magical interpretation of the familiar marine theme.

In the 90s, Calone was used for clean, limpid aquatic scents.  In Fluo_ral, Nathalie Feisthauer amps up its transparency by backlighting it with green notes so bright they veer on the fluorescent.” – Nomenclature

Best Rhubarb perfumes

 Splashing Rhubarb Leaves – Photo Collage by Gail Gross ©

 

My first impression of Fluo_ral is of an ultra bright green, crunchy, rhubarb aura. The stalks and leaves of the rhubarb plant are very wet – 95 percent water – the perfect vegetal compliment to lively, ozonic Colone. In short order the tart, juicy, slightly soapy-sweet amalgam of pucker power that is “rhubarb” is mitigated by a wave of the darkly sweet, mint-y mystery of black current buds.

 

what is calone molecule

 The Yachats River Meets the Ocean – acrylic on board. Copyright © 2001 by Gail Gross

 

Pink pepper and hints of the leaves of tomato create the sparkling, eerie effect of bioluminescent plankton glimmering along a dark strand. Glowing blues, neon greens, deep purples and pinks float on an ocean of cool black rose and metallic Somalian incense. After about five hours on skin, the glow and glitter of Nomenclature Fluo_ral fades into a breath of cedarwood and the ever-present freshness of the seaside.

 

Nomenclature Fluo_ral review

 Seaside Salt Marsh – Copyright © 2019 by Gail Gross

 

So many common and familiar plants, rocks and minerals – and even animals -fluoresce and phosphoresce.  Our world literally glows with light that, most of the time, we cannot or will not see.  Nomenclature Fluo_ral reminds me to look a little closer, observe more carefully and find the fantastic and the magical in the realism of the myriad worlds that surround us all.

Notes:  Calone ®, marine green, pink pepper, black currant, rhubarb, tomato leaves, rose, Somalian incense and cedarwood.

Nomenclature NYC Fluo_ral with _Glo Pebbles at esxxence 2019

 Nomenclature Fluo_ral Presentation Box with “Glo Pebbles” – Photo by Gail Gross

 

Disclaimer:  I would like to thank Nomenclature for the beautifully fragrant experience of Fluo_ral, boxed with copies of their stunning art – and “Glo Pebbles”.

Editor’s Note:  The Italian Distributor at  Esxence 2019 had these to give out to fragrance reviewers. A unique presentation!

 

Gail Gross – Senior Editor

 Nomenclature Fluo_ral

Nomenclature Fluo_ral courtesy of Nomenclature 

 

Thanks to the generosity of Nomenclature we have one 50 ml bottle of Nomenclature Fluo_ral (for one registered reader in the US (be sure to register or your comment will not count). To be eligible, tell us what appeals to you about Nomenclature Fluo_ral based on Gail’s review and your favorite fragrance from Nomenclature.  Draw closes 5/16/2019

Follow us on Instagram: @cafleurebon @azarsmith7 and @nomenclature_ny @nathaliefeisthauer

Available at @aedes_perfumery @twistedlily and @saksfifthavenue and other fine stockists

We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon and use our Blog feed…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

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26 comments

  • fazalcheema says:

    I welcome the embrace of synthetic molecules since they really promote creative. Fluo_ral shows green fragrances are back. I never thought rhubarb as a note would take over because there were very very few fragrances in previous decades that dared to employ rhubarb note or even mimic its smell. I am in US.

  • Wow, that description and evolution of the notes really evokes a bright pulsating greenness. Between the rhubarb and tomato that so evokes that vegetal smell for me. The transition into the heart and base Woody notes does sound nice. I’ve never tried anything from this house so I don’t have a favorite. I live in the USA. Thanks for the giveaway!

  • NiceVULady says:

    I’ve never tried anything from this house so far. This particular fragrance sounds really interesting. The art work by Gail just blew me away and really illustrates what this perfume must smell like. So wow! Thanks for the great review, the beautiful art work ,and a fabulous draw. I’m in the USA

  • I enjoyed the idea of watching shimmering plankton in a pond at night. I haven’t tried anything from Nomenclature, but would like to. USA

  • Damiana C says:

    I like how this fragrance embodies things that glow with light that we may not always be able to see. This should encourage us to look a bit more closely. Of Nomenclature I especially like Iri-del. I live in the USA. Thank you!

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Wow this one sounds too interesting not to sample. I immediately went to their website to see that they have discovery set which will be in my future soon. The vegetal elements are what draws me. It is interesting to think of fragrances in terms of bioluminescence but your description really makes me feel like I understand where this is going. The packaging is also stunning and I feel like I may need some glo pebbles in my life. What a great draw, thank you. I’m in the US.

  • doveskylark says:

    I love what Nomenclature is doing with fantastic realism to create a fragrance that sounds so close to the natural world. What an interesting paradox/dichotomy. I’m particularly interested in the pink pepper and tomato leaf that creates a plankton effect.
    I haven’t tried anything from this house.
    I live in the USA.

  • Great review! Presentation looks awesome. This sounds great as far as the notes listed. Black Rose and metallic Somalian Incense sound interesting. Thank you for the draw. US.

  • Wow, the concept of bioluminescence alone makes me want to try this, and the green, earthy notes add to the allure. I have yet to explore Nomenclature’s offerings so I don’t have a favorite yet, but Efflor-esce is also at the top of my list to try. Thanks for the draw, live in the US.

  • recursivemask says:

    I’m super interested in the flourescent green notes that this perfume emphasizes. I love the smell of plants, and to have somethign that’s formulated to be an intense and amped up version of that would be supremely interesting. I haven’t had the chance to smell anything by Nomenclature. I’m in the US.

  • Oh! I need this perfume, because I must my perfume collection lacks of such fresh, aquatic-green parfume.
    Thank you for this interesting news and draw
    US

  • Marvalicious says:

    Wow the description of the bioluminescent plankton and the use of the elements in this sound amazing. I’d love to get the chance to win this giveaway! I live in Indiana USA

  • This sounds magicI love Calone, it doesnt seem to get much love, like aquatics which I still adore since the 90s wave..
    Hope us mailing adress is ok. I would love to enter!

  • I love the pictures you selected! Nomenclature’s Fluo_ral has a lot of notes that are unfamiliar to me. It makes me very curious to experience it. Thank you for the giveaway.

  • bigscoundrel says:

    Rhubarb, pink pepper, and tomato leaves sounds like a very intriguing mix for a marine fragrance. I have not tried a Nomenclature fragrance, yet. I’m in the USA.

  • Very pretty bottle! I’ve never smelled anything by Nomenclature. I love the drydown notes of rose, incense and cedarwood. I love spicy rose fragrances.
    I live in the US.

  • First off, I love the bottle design. I found this most appealing… “After about five hours on skin, the glow and glitter of Nomenclature Fluo_ral fades into a breath of cedarwood and the ever-present freshness of the seaside“. I’ll love to try this.
    I live in USA.

  • d3m0lici0n says:

    Wow, i never thought I’d say that calone looks so interesting in a perfume composition, but this green fluorescent thing makes it different. Looks great and looks great for hot weather.
    Thanks , i live in the US

  • This sounds like a fun and unique fragrance! I’m particularly fond of green scents from the nightshade family, so you had me at tomato. We also had a sizable patch of rhubarb on the farm where I grew up, so there might be a little nostalgia in this one. I’m based in California. Thanks for the review and the draw!

  • I was surprised reading that that are new aquatic, ozonic perfume appeared- becuse aquatic perfumes boom was as I remember in the end of 20 century.
    I like fresh perfumes and I think rhubarb will give this perfume interesting, beautiful character.
    USA

  • Michael Prince says:

    Gail, great review of Nomenclature Fluo_ral. I love gails description, “ultra bright green, crunchy, rhubarb aura

  • Michael Prince says:

    Gail, great review of Nomenclature Fluo_ral. I love gails description, “ultra bright green, crunchy, rhubarb aura that fades into a breath of cedarwood and the ever-present freshness of the seaside. I like the interesting combination in the note breakdown…especially of the unique note of tomato leaves. I don’t have a favorite fragrance from Nomenclature because I haven’t had an opportunity to sample anything from this house.

  • Great review by Gail. The note break down of this fragrance is interesting. Synthetics are not back to me if done right. I live in CA, USA.

  • wildevoodoo says:

    Well even though calone and aquatics seem to get a great deal of hate among the fragrance community I have a soft spot in my heart for many of the ones I have tried. The idea of a green, rhubarb-y aquatic perfume, so bright it glows, underlined with the comparative darkness of incense and rose, seems to check so many of my personal ‘fragrance love’ boxes. Gail’s comments about phosphorescence are particularly resonant with me since I recently learned humans glow in the dark, but at a frequency our own eyes cannot perceive! Thanks for the opportunity to try my first Nomenclature fragrance. I am in the US 🙂

  • The notes listed for this sounds great and the presentation is beautiful, I love it. I have not tried anything by this house would love to though!

    I’m ln the US