Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K (Isabelle Larignon) 2021 + Let it snow draw

 

 Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K review

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K, as soft as a doe… – Doe ©Pixabay – Le Flocon bottle ©Mick Jayet – Collage ©Emmanuelle Varron

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K (Johann K’s snow flake) is the first perfume created by Isabelle Larignon, a French woman passionate about fragrance since her childhood. First an opera singer, then a food copywriter, Isabelle hesitated until 2018, in her forties, when she decided to study olfactive design at Cinquième Sens (a famous French training academy). A heck of a leap for this young mother who finally decided to make a living from her passion!

Isabelle Larignon

Isabelle Larignon – ©Studio Artichaut

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K was composed with a semi-constraint: creating a fragrance to validate her olfactory designer diploma. Isabelle Larignon hesitated between two paths: a tribute to being a wallfower in her childhood (she grew up in La Rochelle) or the story of astrophysicist Johannes Kepler snowflake. Almost 3 years ago to the day (December 30, 2018), she comes across the radio interview of Lydie Lescarmontier, a French glaciologist, who is depicting her famous 2011 Astrolabe trip to Antarctica, where she was struck in the ice for 56 days. As the journalist asks her about the smell of snow, Lydie Lescarmontier cannot find the answer. It was a sign for Isabelle;she will create Le Flocon. She sent an email to the glaciologist; they met, and ideas, sensations and emotions flow from their conversations. At the same time, in the first days of 2019, Isabelle sent her Happy New Year best wishes to one of the perfumers she admires the most … Bertrand Duchaufour. He answered her; they met and spoke about her project. Bertrand Duchaufour was a true mentor and offered to test her formula in his lab, helped balance it. Is Isabelle Larignon’s Le Flocon de Johann K a concept or perfume? As he told Mme Larignon when she asked Does this have to smell good? “ Bertrand Duchaufour simply replied ” Yes, otherwise it’s a smell, not a perfume!

Isabelle Larignon was inspired by astrophysicist Johannes Kepler glaciologist Lydie Lescarmontier -France Inter, and perfumer Bertrand Duchaufour

astronomer Johannes Kepler – ©Futura-Sciences, glaciologist Lydie Lescarmontier – ©France Inter, and perfumer Bertrand Duchaufour – ©TechnicoFlor. Collage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

But back to Johannes Kepler and his snowflake. A famous German astronomer of the 16th-17th centuries, the latter is particularly known for having discovered the mathematical relationships which govern the movements of the planets in their orbit, later exploited by Isaac Newton to develop the theory of universal gravitation. Johannes Kepler is also the author of the first scientific treatise dedicated to snowflakes, in particular their hexagonal symmetry. And in 1610, while looking for a unique New Year’s gift for Matthaüs Wacker von Wackenels, his wealthy patron, he decided to offer him the concept of nothingness: a snowflake, accompanied by a 24-page booklet written in a playful tone, justifying this astonishing present. Here is an extract:

“I was in these worried thoughts as I crossed the bridge, confused by my incivility to appear before you without New Year’s gifts, […] without finding what is close to Nothing, nevertheless lends itself to the spiciness of intelligence.

But as luck would have it […] that little flakes fell here and there on my coat […].

There was something smaller than a drop, yet it had a shape.

There was a special gift for a lover of Nothing and worthy of being offered by an astronomer […] since the snowflakes fall from the sky and are like stars.” Johannes Kepler, On the Six-Cornered Snowflake (1610)

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K

Alexander Calder Snow Flurry (1950) – ©Christie’s and Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K bottle in the snow – Snow ©Pixabay, bottle ©Mick Jayet – Collage and montage ©Emmanuelle Varron.

 Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K opens by plunging into a vivid citrus breeze reminding me of aldehydes. I  also perceive menthol, metallic and watery notes that bloom, like a fine snow of an intense freshness falling in small icy flakes that flush my cheeks. This indefinable scent  fascinated me as a child, when I admired these little white balls that looked like cotton that I was desperately trying to catch … but melted in my hands frozen by the cold. Slowly, the incense develops, icy and intense in an almost mystical tone, silent and impenetrable. On my skin, the floral notes then take precedence: mimosa, in particular, with a facet of incredible purity, as if a bouquet had been placed on a vast bed of snow. As the fragrance develops the mimosa becomes more aerial, then tangles with mint under musky attire that gives it an almost polar appearance. The flakes become flowers, falling delicately to the freezing white ground. The narcissus absolute is then revealed, powdery and honeyed, accentuating the ultra-sensual softness of the perfume on the skin.

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K is an invitation to dreaming and contemplation. On the mouillette, I am immediately carried into the world of Johannes Kepler, so much that I could easily imagine that this perfume is only be a concept. What a mistake! On skin, it comes to life, amplified and offering vibrant facets that bewitches me. This is a superb tribute to winter and to the snowflakes falling in slow motion.

Notes: bergamot; lemon; cyclamen; cardamom; frankincense; mimosa absolute; watery, ozonic, minty notes; oak moss, white musk, narcissus absolute.

Disclaimer: An “énorme merci” to Isabelle Larignon for Le Flocon de Johann K. 10 ml bottle provided for this review. The opinions expressed are my own.

Emmanuelle Varron, Editor

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K. By Isabelle Larignon

Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K. 50 ml bottle – ©Mick Jayet

 Thanks to Isabelle Larignon, we have a 50 ml bottle of Le Flocon de Johann K for one registered reader in US, UK and EU. To be eligible, please leave a comment on what you feel about Emmanuelle’s review, what smell has snow for you, and where you live. Draw closes 1/8/2021.

Available by contacting Isabelle Larignon on Instagram (via DM) and on La Revue Nez eshop.

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47 comments

  • Emmanuelle!!! ❤️❤️❤️ What a great story! This is a very interesting idea for a fragrance & I wish Isabelle Larignon the best in her new & exciting career! For me, snow smells like aldehydes and mineral/metallic cold water; it has the same textural & visceral reaction (in the nose) as the very first spritz of peeling an orange (there is something about bursting open the pith of an orange that smells of snow to me). Now, I am so curious… I want to sample every snow/winter scent I can find (L’eau d’Hiver, etc.). I would love to experience Le Flocon de Johann K! Thank you for this amazing opportunity! ❤️ USA

  • I feel that it’s a great review with lots of interesting details, snow for me has a watery and light smell, I live in Poland, EU.

  • What an amazing history for a perfume. The idea behind it, how Isabelle became a ñerfumer and the incredible listing of notes. I would be so happy to smell this fragrance. To me, snow smells like freezing mountains, like where I first met snow. I live in the U.S.

  • Thanks for the review Emmanuelle!

    It was really interesting to read the about Johannes Kepler’s snowflake. It is such an interesting idea to base a fragrance on a natural phenomenon we all take for granted.

    I wish it would snow again here in the UK. It has been the warmest Christmas and New Year’s Eve that I can remember in 2021. Winters should have a deep layer of snow and that fresh clean smell of mineral rich water when you walk outside.
    I would love to win a bottle of Le Flocon de Johann K to experience that feeling again.

    Greetings from the UK!

  • Le Flocon de Johann K is quite the concept perfume and most likely the first fragrance inspired by Johannesburg Kepler! While reading this review I was reminded of the novel Smilla’s Sense of Snow which featured a young Inuit woman with an encyclopedic knowledge of snow. The aldehydes, ozone and menthol notes point to a metallic iciness over the powdery florals. It sounds like a lovely interpretation of snow and I would live to try it. MD, USA.

  • Sorohan Adriana says:

    Lovely special gift for a lover of Nothing and worthy of being offered by an astronomer […] since the snowflakes fall from the sky and are like stars.”
    I am from EU Bucharest Romania Europe

  • I loved the story about the snowflake gift. Also, I loved the inspiration behind the fragrance and the name of the perfumer (I’m a fan). The note of frankincense in Le Flocon de Johann K has me interested. Thanks for the opportunity to sniff. Mich USA

  • Inscrutable and undefinable – that certainly brings that magical scent of winter to mind. How to evoke not just the scent but the feeling? I’d certainly love to experience this through perfumery! I live in Houston, TX (where we must make our own snow!)

  • Emanuelle, your inclusion of Bertrand’s quote about a bad perfume being just a smell cracked me up! I would say I have purchased or been given a few “smells” impersonating perfume in my day, haha. I call those scrubbers.
    To me, snow doesn’t have much of a smell. But I do associate the idea of snow with Christmas — a dusting of powdered sugar, a heart of evergreen and something very delicate, luminous and peaceful, much like the baby Christ swaddled up in a manger. Snow smells like the joy of being a child and waking up in my country home and looking out the window upon our little rural property and being completely surrounded by snow — knowing there was no way the snow plows would clear the roads in time for school, so I would get to stay home and play! Snow comes with cold, fresh air as the air is dry and the smell of fertilizer on the local corn and soy bean fields no longer lingers as it does in the summertime humidity. It covers the harsh reality of living in an impoverished community with a blanket of wonder and has a mystical ability to make even the most mundane of views a bit dreamy. I would love to win Le Flocon de Johann K and am grateful for the most generous draw!
    Indiana, USA

  • Emmanuelle, this is why I am so passionate about fragrances. It stretches our mind and olfactory sense beyond their normal confines. Snow, at first thought, has no smell. However, when applied to our memories associated with the snow, it takes on a whole new world…a white Christmas, a walk through the woods after a fresh snow, or playing in the snow as a child. Hot chocolate, a deer bedded down, pine needles, leather gloves, rock salt, and fresh air are a few scents that come to mind for me. The notes in Le Flocon de Johann K open my senses even further to the snow accord. USA

  • I found this review fascinating – first the motivating story of Larignon who embarks on a new path and finds inspiration and mentors in ways others don’t think of. And next the story of Kepler, a story I never heard before, which shows what a gifted spirit this man must have been.

    Snow smells for me like something inbetween weak black tea with citrus-juice and “nothing”.

    Living in Germany, EU

  • LovelyMouse says:

    True, they say that many talented perfumers are born from creative professions and occupations, so is Isabelle Larignon. I have never heard of this brand. But everything about the stars, space and Bertrand Duchaufour is of great interest to me. I really liked how poetically Emmanuelle described the scent itself, so, truly, snow can smell like citruses, aldehydes, incense, because incense has aldehyde aspects too!
    Therefore, I would really like to try this perfume,
    I’m from UK

  • Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K is an invitation to dreaming and contemplation. On the mouillette, I am immediately carried into the world of Johannes Kepler, so much that I could easily imagine that this perfume is only be a concept. What a mistake! On skin, it comes to life, amplified and offering vibrant facets that bewitches me. This is a superb tribute to winter and to the snowflakes falling in slow motion.

    Notes: bergamot; lemon; cyclamen; cardamom; frankincense; mimosa absolute; watery, ozonic, minty notes; oak moss, white musk, narcissus absolute. A beautiful description by Emmanuel snow has a ozonic/aquatic smell to my nose. Thanks a million from the United Kingdom

  • On my skin, the floral notes then take precedence: mimosa, in particular, with a facet of incredible purity, as if a bouquet had been placed on a vast bed of snow. As the fragrance develops the mimosa becomes more aerial, then tangles with mint under musky attire that gives it an almost polar appearance. The flakes become flowers, falling delicately to the freezing white ground. The narcissus absolute is then revealed, powdery and honeyed, accentuating the ultra-sensual softness of the perfume on the skin. A beautiful description by Emmanuel snow smells like metallic and ozonic/water to me. A brand that I have got no experience with but I am intrigued by nonetheless. Thanks a lot from the UK

  • I was reading this review and it made me almost feel the cold airy dance of snowflakes, water crystals that somehow acquire scents from the environment and become fragrant, because unlike water snow has a smell! For me its revitalising whiff of winter forest, first tiny flowers in unreavealed spots of the ground telling the story of a long sleep and energetic awakening.

    Lina, Lithuania, EU

  • Another great story Emmanuelle! An amazing life story: never late to pursue your dreams! kudos to Isabelle Larignon for finding her path an not being afraid of , even late, studying olfactive design! remind me her story to Manuel Cross. Mr. Duchaufour answer to Ms.Larignon question about the smell of her work is genious: “Yes, otherwise it’s a smell, not a perfume!. For me, snow has no smell, but a feeling: quiteness, silence, peace, stillness, so choosing snow to validate her olfactory designer diploma was courageuos. So I agree 100% with Emmanuelle opinion about the scent being an invitation to dreaming and contemplation. I live in Spain, EU!

  • Aline Pichon says:

    Cette article décrit parfaitement le parfum du flocon de Johann K. L’odeur de la neige pour moi aspire au retrait de soi vers l’intérieur pour retrouver la délicatesse du centre de soi son même. L’odeur de la neige est un retour à la sérénité. Elle est à l’image des montagnes de ma région en hiver, délivrant ses odeurs froides et chaudes.
    J’habite dans les Pyrénées orientales à Prades

  • Very interesting personal story. I have smelled what was described as snow notes/fragrances before I enjoy them. US

  • The back-story is so inspirational. The three-year pursuit of conceiving the perfume reminiscent of the snow seems to be more than an adventure. Isabelle seems to be destined to make this fragrance. 🙂
    Like many fellow readers, I am trying to remember if the show has a scent. As a child, I used to put the snow into my mouth. I still can very vividly remember the taste and the feel, both I connect with the smell. It’s temporary, watery, and gives me chills. 🙂
    I would love to win a bottle of Le Flocon de Johann K to experience that feeling again.
    Greetings from Slovenia (EU)

  • marcopietro says:

    What a beautiful concept scent! I’m fascinating by all the process of creation and building of the fragrance. Duchaufour is one of my favorite nose ever and Le Flocon souds great.
    It’s difficult describe the smell of the snow, a mistical, invigorating elixir. A mix of ozonic notes and steel. A wash for soul and brain.
    I live in EU.
    Thanks!

  • This is a great review by Emmanuelle of how Isabelle became a perfumer and the incredible listing of notes (bergamot; lemon; cyclamen; cardamom; frankincense; mimosa absolute; watery, ozonic, minty notes; oak moss, white musk, narcissus absolute) – the story of Johannes Kepler is a very interesting one too. I would love to smell Le Flocon de Johann K perfume. To me, snow smells airy, fresh, maybe dirt (depending on snow quality). I live in the U.S.

  • From Emmanuelle’s review, it seems that Isabelle Larignon was successful in creating this concept perfume. Snow does have a distinct smell that is very hard to define. I would love to try Le Flocon de Johann K. I am in the US.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Thank you for the great review Emmanuelle.

    It is wonderful to read this journey of a future perfumer, on the cusp of their creative career.

    I love the concept of this fragrance and the review did it a lot of justice. To attempt to put into a scent what someone struggles to explain in words is quite a feat.

    Looking forward to smelling this one.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • Dubaiscents says:

    Such a lovely and informative review Emanuelle! I love the first snows of the season and to me there is a definite scent that permeates this event, fluffy and woody with hints of smoke. I love story of how this scent came to be and I would love to smell it. US

  • I like the story behind this creation. I also like the way you describe it. I am a big fan of Mimosa scents. So curious to smell this wintery mimosa!

  • This was a fascinating article! I hung on every word. I felt I was right there. I think snow would smell clean and pure. Mabe an ice cube vibe. I live in the US and would be wildly thrilled to win this draw!!!

  • I am from a place which experiences abundant snowfall and for me, the smell is almost a combination of wet and dry. It isn’t quite like rain, though there’s a hint of it. I’m intrigued by the idea of florals and incense mixed with this. USA

  • wandering_nose says:

    Thank you Emmanuelle for this amazing review! While reading, I could see snowflakes dancing around me in the sparkling frozen winter air and melting on my face and hands while I admire the beauty of the universe in the microscopic patterns. I love the way Johannes Kepler made a very meaningful gift out of ‘nothingness’ – that goes to show the genius of his mind. Snow smells sparkly, tingling and very bright to me. Thank you from Ireland, EU.

  • Oh, to be as eloquent as Emmanuelle! It is always obvious when fragrance writers truly love the scents that they are describing. The descriptions almost reach the level of poetry.
    Sigh.

    Alas! My nose is still in training and my words not nearly as polished to set the beautiful scene described above. To me, snow has always seemed like mint and menthol when newly fallen and cold, damp leaves and dirt when melting. You see…no eloquence. Just appreciation.

    I live in the US.

  • If one of the greatest noses of our times,Master Perfumer Bertrand Douchafour said a perfume has to smell good,i’m convinced Le Flocon de Johann K is one of those which incapsulates beauty into a synesthetic perception,thanks for the draw ,from Romania with love!

  • Ginandsniff says:

    I love the descriptive walkthrough of the notes in this review, it really brings a sense of the fragrance to the reader.

    The coldest/snowiest I’ve experienced was -21c in the north of Finland. It was like breathing in the sharpest, dryist cedar, lavender and mint notes – almost metallic (as referenced in the review and other comments) – and like nothing of experienced before or since. We’ve had a really mild winter here and feels like the scent of that deep crisp snow is passing us by!

    UK

    UK

  • As this review perfectly demonstrates, the perfume is both a concept, developed slowly, carefully and lovingly over time, and a perfume, which remains a mystery despite the list of ingredients included. I’ve been wanting to smell it, since I’ve been reading quite a lot about Kepler in Maria Popova’s book, Figuring. For me, snow smells watery and muddy, but also metallic and sharp, like something spicy… It sounds contradictory when I write it down… I live in Metz, France.

  • Intriguing review! I love all stories of Arctic adventures. I live in Buffalo, NY, and as I write this, there is a blizzard swirling around outside my window creating a beautiful landscape. This perfume has a lot of interesting notes. I love the clean look of the bottle as well. Thanks for the draw! I’m in the US.

  • I loved this piece! Maybe because I love to learn of women that transform themselves and their lives as they move through it. It is also so satisfying how the journey takes us to the end goal of our passions. I imagine snow smells different to us all depending on where we live and our experience with a moment in our memories that required the full attention of our senses. For me snow smell of Spruces so old and full of stories of ancient times and a silience so still that you get to see and feel your soul at its core. I live in the US.

  • Such a interesting article !!
    Start with aldehydic citruses, menthol and metalic notes, than icy incense – sounds very interesting!
    Thanks for beautiful review and draw!
    USA, DE

  • This is such an inspiring review! I love stories of people following their passions at any age. Isabelle Larignon’s first perfume on snow sounds beautiful and is described so well. Growing up in California and now living in Texas, snow has always been something I dreamt about but rarely saw. The couple of times, I’ve experienced snow, I was struck by the silence it creates, a buffer of powder. Can silence have a scent? I am also very curious what fragrance would represent a childhood spent as a wallflower. Maybe that one will be next? I wish her great success and thank you for the draw.

  • Great story behind this perfume. Congratulation to Isabelle for original idea. Great review by Emmanuelle. The scent of snow…it really depends if it’s frosty snow glittering in the sun. Then in smells like rose, citruses with some salty notes and if it’s falling softly in the evening, then it’s smell is more cozy, milky, with green tea and marshmallows.Thee could be snow storm that smells more like violet and oud. I live in Poland, EU.

  • Emmanuelle!!! Another incredibly well written review of a perfume I wouldn’t have even heard of otherwise! It sounds divine, gorgeous and just the thing I was wondering if anyone would ever try to replicate – the smell of snow! As for me, snow would be an overload of white musks with ozonic notes – as airy as it could be! I live in Croatia EU

  • Bryant Worley says:

    I really appreciated Emmanuelle’s review, as it gave great depth of information concerning the perfumer’s guiding light, along with other bits of information to give the reader more insight into the process.

    The smell of snow? I can always tell its about to rain,, because there is a metallic smell in the air. So, I would have to go with that – – snow smells metallic (sorta’kinda, kinda’sorta).

    I live in Waldorf, Maryland, USA.

  • Claumarchini says:

    Thank you for this review, I was not familiar with the fragrance and what a lovely project it must have been to try and recreated the smell of snow! I love snow, I have learned to ski when I was 5 (so that is 40 years now) and I remember when we were children and used to stop next to the slope, where fresh and untouched snow was, in order to eat it! To me, snow smells mineral, iron-y and I would love to be the lucky winner. Greetings from Italy

  • this was my favourite part – “Is Isabelle Larignon’s Le Flocon de Johann K a concept or perfume? As he told Mme Larignon when she asked Does this have to smell good? “ Bertrand Duchaufour simply replied ” Yes, otherwise it’s a smell, not a perfume! ”
    So totally agree with monsieur Duchaufour.
    as for the smell of snow, that’s definitely something worth going on a new, unknown and different path.

  • Michael Prince says:

    I loved Emmanuelle’s review of Isabelle Larignon Le Flocon de Johann K. I loved learning the backstory on Isabelle Larignon, how she became a perfumer later in life and white inspired her to make her first fragrance which was astrophysicist Johannes Kepler who is the author of the first scientific treatise on snowflakes and their hexagonal symmetry. Isabelle attempted to capture the smell of ice and snowflakes in this composition using watery, ozonic, and cooling mint notes. Snow also has a watery, cooling, and icy taste and smell to it which I can envision her capturing quite clearly. I am from Ohio, USA.

  • Johan K sounds so unqiue. I love mimosa ND am very curious how it blends with “cold” notes. I love hearing how about the colab/feedback from Bertand D. What a fun experimental perfume and process. Would love to get a sample and please throw me in for the give away. In the US. Ohio.

  • After having read from this review, I would like to try this fragrance. I want to see how much this fragrance would remind me of snow. To me, snow has a watery scent. It was interesting for me to discover this perfumer. I live in the U.S.A. Thanks for the giveaway opportunity.

  • Great story spanning over centuries and a great scientific inspiration for perfume. Snow and its taste and smell are a fascination – I’m observing my small daughter trying to taste it at any given occasion. To me the snow smells cold, and would love to smell this aldehydic, mimosa interpretation.
    I’m in EU

  • sephrenia300 says:

    Wonderful review Emmanuelle! I absolutely love that Emmanuelle’s review focuses on the remarkable fact that there are two, that’s right TWO, amazing scientists that inspired the fragrance, one directly and one indirectly. It is so fascinating to me that Isabelle more than just being inspired by the glaciologists interview, but actually met with her and had conversations from which the ideas and inspiration for the fragrance grew. I can’t wait to give it a sniff.

    To me snow smells crisp, fresh, and with a hint of minerality along with it’s briskness. It has a hint of green pine notes as the snow falls through evergreen boughs. It is clean but more than that, it is bracing and refreshing. I live in the US.

  • Richard Potter says:

    What a gorgeous, evocative and poetic review. The whole fragrance sounds lovely, but you had me at narcissus.

    Fascinating origin story. I wish Ms Larignon well in her new venture. USA