Chinese New Year, photo by Dyana Wing So via Unsplash for Parfums de Nicolai Cuir Cuba Intense
As far back at the 14th century B.C., China has used a lunar calendar. It includes solstices and equinoxes, and is influenced both by the Chinese zodiac and the concept of yin and yang dualism. The Chinese New Year is one of the most important holidays in China as it marks the end of the coldest season. It kicks off the Spring Festival and culminates with a Lantern Festival. In the Gregorian calendar, Chinese New Year typically begins with the new moon after January 20th and lasts until the next full moon (approximately 15 days). Each Chinese New Year is shaped by the characteristics of one of 12 zodiac animals and one of five elements. In preparation for the traditional Chinese New Year, houses are cleaned to remove any misfortune or bad luck that might have accumulated during the previous year. Among other traditions, people set off firecrackers to frighten away evil spirits, and offer food and paper icons to gods and ancestors. A Dragon Dance occurs at every Chinese New Year celebration to usher in good tidings for the New Year.
Metal Ox, photo by Ady Ven via Unsplash
Chinese New Year 2021 (February 12th) will be influenced by the element of Metal, which emphasizes good judgement and paying attention to the details. The main color for a year influenced by Metal is white. To increase your luck in a Metal year, consider wearing metal accessories. The zodiac animal that will help shape the year’s characteristics is the hard-working Ox. This suggests a year when hard work will be rewarded. The Ox is a yin earth sign, indicating great strength, patience, and methodical persistence. The lucky colors of the Ox are yellow and green, which attract prosperity and success in Feng Shui.
Hay Bales, photo by Colin Watts via Unsplash
Since we are embarking on the Year of the Metal Ox with lucky colors of white, yellow, and green, perhaps an ideal olfactory note to explore this year is hay absolute. Its aroma tends to be sweet, herbaceous, and reminiscent of tobacco, honey, and wild grass. Hay absolute is composed of different varieties of dried grass and is often used as a fixative in fragrances. The chemical compound “coumarin” is responsible for that sweet, hay-like scent. Coumarin only activates when plants are cut and dried, which breaks the chemical bonds to releases the aroma.
Parfums de NICOLAI Cuir Cuba Intense, photo by The Perfumed Dahlia
Parfums de NICOLAI Cuir Cuba Intense composed by Patricia de Nicolai ignites with lemon, licorice, and mint followed by a heady dose of crushed tobacco, which could perhaps represent components of a ritual offering to gods and ancestors. Parfums de NICOLAI Cuir Cuba Intense opens further into a deeper, dirtier, leathery earthiness. But this musky earthiness is paired with herbaceous sage and coriander to give a sense of swirling smoke. Both the musky, earthy leather and the vegetal notes could represent this year’s Ox—its habitat, body, and even components of a vernal, grassy meal. Cuir Cuba Intense smells more like straw than hay, which could be helpful for sweeping out the old year’s trials and shifting focus to look ahead. Spring is on the horizon for an auspicious Metal Ox year. Grab those metal accessories and take a long view of the year ahead. Best wishes for a happy and healthy new year!
Parfums de NICOLAI Cuir Cuba Intense was released in 2014. The perfumer is Patricia de Nicolai.
Notes: Aniseed, Liquorice, Sicilian lemon, Spearmint, Sage, Lavender, Pelargonium, Ylang-ylang, Magnolia, Coriander, Tobacco, Hay, Patchouli, Cedar, Musk, Civet.
Disclosure: A bottle of Cuir Cuba Intense was provided for this review by Parfums de NICOLAI.
Here are a few more fragrances that showcase a prominent hay note: Erawan by Parfums Dusita is a beautiful scent of dry grasses gone to seed in the hot sun, softening later to pastel, powdery, spiky flowers from a forgotten fairyland. Tindrer by Baruti opens sweetly like a flowering prairie with spongey soil, then settles into a suggestive musk mixed with prickly, crushed hay. Cuir Pampas by Frassai smells of tobacco smoke on the air as waxy flowers bloom amidst drying grasses. Medullary Ray by Jorum Studio opens with a funky, animalic barnyard note that is very strong and leathery, then expands to blend freshly laid straw with the leather and musk.
Samples of Tinderer by Baruti, Cuir Pampas by Frassai, Erawan by Parfums Dusita, and Medullary Ray by Jorum Studio from Indigo Perfumery.
My opinions are my own.
Dalya Azaria, Contributor
Michelyn’s Bottle of Parfums de NICOLAI CUIR CUBA INTENSE and her copy of Nicolai -Parfumeur -createur, un metier d’artiste
Thanks to the generosity of NICOLAÏ, Parfumeur-Créateur there is a 30 ml PARFUMS DE NICOLAI Cuir Cuba Intense for one registered reader in the EU, USA, UK and Canada. To be eligible for the draw, please leave a comment about what aspect of Dalya’s article on Chinese New year 2021 sparked your interest, if you have a favorite Nicolai perfume, and let us know where you live. Draw Closes February 14, 2021
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