Source Adage I’khana Review + A Case for the Basket DRAW

 

source adage i’khana review

Light on a Basket Case Study. Photo, creative direction, digital editing by a_nose_knows for source adage i’khana.

Ask anyone, “what did your grandmother smell like?” and—unless they have none or they were born incommensurably, starkly, rich—they’ll have an answer ready, born of gentle light and close stillness: fabric. geraniums. dough. dry leaves. whey. yarn. camphor. soot. quince jam.

They won’t ask you “which grandma?”, either; somehow, all of us who grew up in two-family tribes have GRANDMA, and we have The Other Grandma. We, here, won’t speak of The Other Grandma; she is not as big, lively, or warm in our lizard brains; she carries no weight in our memories, nor special aromas in our olfactive heart. In any case, not like GRANDMA does.

Choktaw basket.

Kid in a Choktaw basket. Creative direction & digital editing by a_nose_knows for source adage i’khana.

Many millennia have passed since the dawn of early civilizations, and all were made possible by Grandma; she delivered you, she cleaned you, she fed you and she rocked you; she watched over you during hunts and harvest; she hid you through hordes’ raids and kept you spoiled, fat, and happy. She taught you oral tradition and cultural syncretism (fine, she didn’t really call them that, but that’s what they were); she wept when you went away and cried of joy when you came to visit; she nagged, begged, guilted, and revered you all at once. And, more importantly, she kept you at her feet with stories and songs while her hands, never resting, worked on something useful.

source adage i’khana by Christopher Draghi

Choctaw basket diagonal pattern. Creative direction & digital editing by a_nose_knows for source adage i’khana.

To generations next, this may be yet the biggest source of difference, and, too, the biggest loss: the quiet time spent at the feet of Grandma, when the body stilled and the mind rested on her words; the witnessing of life’s toolings; the reverence in front of a handiwork finally done. Depending on how fast the hands or how slow the story, it’d sometimes be an afternoon to mend a sail; a week to darn and knit a sweater; a month to weave a carpet… or, if you’re a Choctaw and double-weave, a humble-but-glorious harvest basket.

source adage perfume reviews

source adage collection. Digital editing by a_nose_knows for source adage i’khana.

Reeds. I think of reeds when I open i’khana, river reeds and canes and cattails and papyruses and slender grasses, much like those my own Grandma used to collect and soak with herbs, then strip thinly and finally bend to her will. This particular nuance is one of the hardest to explain, as it gathers both the marshy feet of such flora, and the desiccated cobs of seeds up top, fluffy like cotton and dry enough to combust, spontaneously, under the summer sun.

The next layer, grassy as it is, builds up the body; the flowery layer, slight and citrusy, roots the composition firmly into smooth; the zesty hesperidic accords give it shine.

The fragrance is natural and clean, easy and functional, and elevated in the same way craft—when done with patience and love for itself—makes art. And thus, somewhat light and somewhat ready for harvests sits i’khana, in a rare case —at least, in perfumery—of practical comfort, making use of simple elements to construct a structure that can be filled, upon one’s own preference, with whatever suits your taste.

Yes, like a basket. A very expensive one you might have seen on Antiques Roadshow. A double-weave one which a Grandma, somewhere in this world, spent months to make while weaving stories of light for the ears of wee children.

Notes: grapefruit rind, lime, pink pepper, coconut, musk, cardamom

Other perceived nuances: reeds/papyrus, vetiver, citrus flowers, marine accords, shells, sweet basil, wild rice, ocre, cedar, ginger

Disclaimer: i’khana shortlisted by me and provided by the company for my review. Thank you so much.

dana sandu, Editor

Thanks to the generosity of source adage, (which we introduced back in 2017 with a Profiles In American Perfumery about the founders Robert Dobay and Christopher Draghi you can find here), we have a 50 ml bottle of source adage i’khana for one registered reader in the US

and

source adage aka’ula c’i’aan i’khana monto'ac

for one registered reader in the UK, EU, and Canada we have a sample set of all four fragrances in the Source Adage line. If you live in the USA you have the option for the sample set as well). You must register on our site or your comment will not count. To be eligible, please tell us what you enjoyed or found interesting about dana’s review, and where you live. Draw closes 2/27/2020

This is our Privacy and Draw Rules Policy

Follow us on Instagram @cafleurebon  @a_nose_knows @sourceadage

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

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


58 comments

  • Josh Teriyaki says:

    This sounds good and interesting. Writing made me think about and miss my Grandma. Like the notes listed would like to try this one from GA USA

  • Dana’s review really piqued my interest in this fragrance. It sounds very fresh and earthy. I’ve never tried anything from this house before but I’d love to. Thanks for the great review and the great giveaway. Commenting from Kentucky USA.

  • MemoryHunter says:

    In the US- this is the first time I’ve seen a scent review that brings back peeling potatoes and trimming green beans with my big fluffy feisty grandma. If I won this it would be so therapeutic. Thank you for bringing original indigenous life into view <3 Thank you for the opportunity!

  • I love the intro, with the memories of Grandma’s stories, and the Smell..that smell of our mind backyard, who reminds us the loved ones…personally, I like the smell of hay and this review remind me of my childhood in the country with all the scents of it, grass, wood, gardens, forest, wild fruits and Grandma’ dresses, some basil with pie aroma…very nostalgic. Regards from Romania EU

  • This seems like an interesting “basket” full of citrus and spices on a pillow of musk. I am quite curious to see how the coconut plays into this composition. I am in the USA.

  • Dana always brings incredible knowledge to the table. Hope to sniff this wonderful perfume. Thanks for the opportunity! Michigan USA

  • My grandma smells of Royal Violets! I would love to smell this “scent memory” too. The perceived nuances sound particularly interesting, especially as they contribute to a cozy “grandma’s own art” vibe. I am in the US!

  • I loved reading the review, Dana. Love Cardamon and Musk and the pink pepper notes and Coconut hoping to make it nice sweet, spicy and woody. I would love to smell this. An avid reader from Los Angeles, CA

  • I miss my grandma so so much. Even though she has left me many years ago I still vividly remember her smile. I do not know what fragrance, if any, my grandma wore but it was the utmost comforting. Being around her I felt safe and loved. I would do anything to be able to feel her presence again, scent-wise or not. Regards from the USA.

  • As usual,
    I enjoyed the parfum’s description and the note breakdown.
    I always love to test new fragrances,thanks for the giveaway <3

    Aris,Athens Greece

  • Elizabeth T. says:

    This really touched me. The speaking of Grandma, The Grandma, the loss of quiet time spent at Grandma’s feet in future generations, the smells of grasses… this was beautiful and touching, not just a perfume review but an insightful commentary. I really enjoyed reading tonight. Thank you.

    Thank you also to source adage for your generosity! I’m in the USA.

  • Every culture has their basket weaving traditions. I enjoy dana’s description of the fragrance as being natural, like reeds that are woven in a basket. It sounds perfect for spring. I’m in MD USA

  • feelingwomanish says:

    As she’s describing the scent, I can smell sweetgrass baskets – like the Geechee in SC make. And, that damp, green scent is absolutely intoxicating a mesmerizing. This sounds like a beauty.

  • Thanks Dana for another poetic review. I’khana sounds like a beautiful perfume, created slowly and patiently, just as the archetypal Grandma would, and the notes seem soothing. Checking out the perfumers’ website, I’khana means enlightenment. I am ready for some enlightenment. Please consider me for not the drawings – for I’khana as well as the sampler set set of all four fragrances from this house. Appreciate your work in spreading olfactory art and beauty around the world. Writing from USA.

  • Thanks Dana for another poetic review. I’khana sounds like a beautiful perfume, created slowly and patiently, just as the archetypal Grandma would, and the notes seem soothing. Checking out the perfumers’ website, I’khana means enlightenment. I am ready for some enlightenment. Please consider me for both the drawings – for I’khana as well as the sampler set set of all four fragrances from this house. Appreciate your work in spreading olfactory art and beauty around the world. Writing from USA.

    Correcting above an autocorrect typo in the previous post – I wish there was a way to edit one’s posts!!!

  • I enjoyed reading about grandmas and the different kind of smell associated with them. I greatly miss my grandma. I’ll love to get this perfume just because of that.
    I live in USA.

  • I liked how the review was blended with a memory from someone dear to us. It sounds like an interesting concept and scent.
    I live in Georgia US

  • I can’t remember my grandmother’s – either of them – smelling of anything other than whatever they were cooking at the time, whether it was borscht or cabbage or the one time my adventurous grandmother fried catfish we had caught instead of the usual sunfish off the pier!

    The fried catfish was appalling, but what a lovely memory to have triggered! She also made crabapple jelly from the trees in her yard. Also appalling. I ate both with lies on my tongue and a smile on my face to make her happy. To be fair she was an excellent cook normally, but also fled Eastern Europe during the Second World War, so wasting potential food was anathema to her and seeing her grandchildren eat heartily was what brought her the most joy in life.

    I’m in Canada and would love to try the sampler set! I love seeing that this brand has a recycling program for their bottles as well! Lovely initiative.

  • Definitely think this is first review Ive read where author had analogies about grandmothers. But I get it and their importance in different cultures and even in my own family. Ive come close to trying a couple of these fragrances but it always seemed to fall through. Would love to try these out. Im in UT USA

  • Dana Sandu, your review bring me back my childhood memories, thank you so much!
    Very sentimental, warm feeling staying with me after your article!
    Will be nice to try this perfume
    “The fragrance is natural and clean, easy and functional, and elevated in the same way craft—when done with patience and love for itself—makes art. And thus, somewhat light and somewhat ready for harvests sits i’khana, in a rare case —at least, in perfumery—of practical comfort, making use of simple elements to construct a structure that can be filled, upon one’s own preference, with whatever suits your taste.”
    Another masterpiece.
    USA

  • Very interesting review as well seems to me pretty much interesting fragrance, if you describe it as grandma’s smell like I’d be glad to have a samples because I’m from Europe Croatia

  • I enjoyed reading because I had to slow down, imagine the images and smells described and bring to life the memories of my own childhood.

  • This was such an intense and personal article by lovely dana…highly emotional and triggered many memories and a lump in my throat. I would like to smell the scent that inspired such an article too. I guess it would make for another lump in the throat, but I don’t mind those. Please count me in for the sample set, from Romania.

  • Fascinating note breakdown especially musk, cardamom, ginger and cedar. A wonderful description by Dana that reminds her of basket weaving and reeds. Thanks from the United Kingdom

  • Intrigued by the notes and Dana’s description that it is like an expensive basket found on the Antiques roadshow somebody somewhere spent months weaving.
    Thanks a million from United Kingdom

  • QuentinMathieu says:

    I’ve been a fan of Dana’s reviews for now quite a while. I think she’s probably the reviewer I trust the most and to whose impressions I feel the most connected. This fragrance line sounds so intriguing to me, as I’ve never heard of anything like it. The concept, inspirations and notes are just so unique. I would be delighted to win the sample pack. Commenting from Belgium EU

  • blombergskan says:

    Dana, thank you for yet another beautiful review. I totally relate to your thoughts about THE grandmother. Or rather feelings, that you manage to put into words! Brought back a lot of memories of Maya, lavender soap and Nivea creme. Living in Sweden (EU)

  • Lovely review by Dana. Brought back fond memories of my Grandmother. Thank you, made my day!
    Pennsylvania USA

  • my “GRANDMA” smells of shalimar. she does not weave baskets, she collects them when she visits other countries… that aside, i like those notes, i can “see” them, almost smell them. “other perceived nuances” also sound interesting. might have to invest in this 1 in california

  • I’khana sounds like a unique creation. Big bonus that it’s easy, natural, and clean. I’d love to win a bottle. New Jersey, USA.

  • Hesperidic. I had never heard that word before, and was delighted to look it up and dive into the Hesperides. The description of this scent lights up my senses. I never thought I’d want to smell like a basket, but now I do! I am in the US

  • I like the way that dana made this fragrance sound connected to the earth and to nature. She also connected it to memories of scents, which I think is important for almost all perfume. I live in the US, in North
    Carolina.

  • Carlos Nogueira says:

    Having not met any of my Grandmas it was lovely to let my imaginary go with the beautiful words by Dana in this heartwarming review.

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Wow this review really brought back memories for me. I always thinking of my grandmother smelling like apple pie and I remember summers weaving baskets outside with my mother. I love papyrus scents in fragrance. I’m imagining these notes as the reeds of a basket supporting each other. This sounds like such an interesting fragrance and I’ve never tried this house. Thank you for the draw. I’m in the US.

  • Thank you all for your kind comments. Memory works in peculiar ways… but it seems it has the same power on all of us.

  • VerbenaLuvvr says:

    Reading about the perfumers, I am glad to see that a portion of each sale goes toward protecting natural resources and wildlife. I would love to sample these fragrances. USA.

  • The power of scent is often about memory (especially of specific people), and I liked how dana evoked this idea with a particular type of grandma. I live in the USA.

  • I can picture all the times I would go horseback riding with my grandma and stop for water and a quick swim at the creek, the reeds rustling in the hot breeze. In this dry land, the smell was more of dust and horses and sweat but, such wonderful memories they are. Grandmas are such a treasure and I know my kids will have tons of fragrant memories of their grandma as well! Thanks for the wonderful review and the draw. I’m in the US.

  • m.r.everything says:

    I lost my grandmother 3 years ago… yes THAT grandmother. The one that my precious memories are wrapped around. She was a sophisticated woman who loved us with all of her heart. This article has moved me to tears and in the best possible way. I read the first 3 paragraphs and all I could think of was her. I had to sit here for a while before I could even continue reading the article. She was a very important person in my life and still is now. I spent a lot of time with my grandmother. Se was not only someone who cared for me, loved me, and would do anything in the world for me, she was one of my best friends! Besides my mother, she was the only person who knew the most about me in this world, and I miss her every day! I am so glad that Dana found the scent of her grandmother in i’khana, and I am so glad I read this review today. It was not one of the best days at work, and reading this took me right back to being with my grandmother. This was very uplifting, reminiscent, and very much needed. Thank you Dana for this truly beautiful write-up and for taking me back to precious times in my life. Thank you Source Adage, for your generosity and for this amazing opportunity! This is greatly appreciated. Thank you Michelyn, for everything you do and for creating a space where memories are remembered! Ah, the power of scent mixed with the power of words! I absolutely LOVE CaFleureBon! Sending comments from Delaware, US! Good luck to all and I hope this brings back fond memories of a loved one like it did for me!

  • This was one of the most interesting perfumes that I have ever read a description of. So, woody or planty or marshy, but also with a dry component which very much inspires something familiar, such as a….grandma. I would definitely want to smell it so that I can understand. I’m from the EU.

  • I spend lots of time with my GRANDMA now and I am grateful to have her. Surely she’ll also have fun discovery these fragrances like me. I am in Germany, tganks

  • This was another enjoyable read from Dana that also had a nice personal touch. i’khana sounds like a beautiful fragrance. I’m in USA

  • wallygator88 says:

    I did not know my paternal grandmother, but I did know my maternal grandmother.

    I fondly remember the smell of flowers and her snuff/tobacco when I think of her.

    Thanks for the great review Dana.

    Regards from WI, USA

  • YES-in a family with two grandmas there was really only the one for me and she was a true blessing. Love this review. Thanks for the draw, I’m in the US.

  • Interesting and different sounding fragrance. I like the idea of water, reeds, and papyrus all together. I love their aka’ula. Thanks for the review and the draw.

  • “The fragrance is natural and clean, easy and functional, and elevated in the same way craft—when done with patience and love for itself—makes art.” I like the sound of this a lot, and it makes me remember my grandma too. I am in the EU.

  • dana, another fantastic review! Thank you to source adage for their generosity.

    dana hit the nail on the head, there was always “GRANDMA” and the other grandma. When I reference Grandma, it is my mom’s mom – I was always closer to her than anyone else. The role of grandmother has both changed and stayed the same, though nuances are different.

    This sounds like an amazing fragrance based on the notes and the perceived notes. It does sound like this perfume creates a structure to fill with your soul and memories, and to me, that’s a precious thing.

    I’m in the USA.

  • Thank you Dana for a wonderful and personal review. Centering it around grandma is very touching!
    I also spent more the with The Grandma. She smelled of Tea Rose and cookies.
    Being surrounded by forest and meadows, my childhood was filled with the smell of hay, freshly cut grass and wild flowers, plum, raspberry and quince jam. But the most vivid olfactory memory is freshly harvested honey and beeswax. My grandparents had bees.
    I’m always impressed by Dana’s ability to pick up additional notes in the fragrances she reviews. It takes great experience and training to do that.
    Would love to test the rest of the fragrances from the Source Adage line, so the sample set would be the perfect opportunity.
    Greetings from Romania, EU!

  • Sunny Chaudhary says:

    Dana’s review really piqued my interest in this fragrance. It sounds very fresh and earthy. I’ve never tried anything from this house before but I’d love to. Thanks for the great review and the great giveaway.

    I am from Georgia USA
    Sunny

  • Michael Prince says:

    Dana, great review of Source Adage I’khana. Great backstory connecting grandma and the Choctaw basket to this fragrance. It’s interesting how the listed notes make it seem like a light simple fragrance, but the perceived notes make it sound unique and complex. I am from Ohio, USA.

  • This was a most interesting review that resonates with all of us at one level or another. Love the notes in this fragrance. Thanks for the review and generous draw. I’m in the USA