Continuing my perfume powered around the world tour courtesy of my tour guide Gerald Ghislain. I take on four more of the 20 fragrance The Scent of Departure collection. The itinerary for Monday starts in Tokyo then a quick hop to Hong Kong before heading to Istanbul and finally finishing in Dubai.
Tokyo is the modern city at the center of Japan and M. Ghislain chooses to mix a traditional Japanese milieu of watery lotus paired with freesia and peony in TYO. This creates a slightly aquatic freshly floral style to the early going. The modern aspect comes courtesy of the clean white musk. This musk reminds me of modern electronics technology as it seems to have penetrated everywhere. Whether one likes TYO is going to come down to your tolerance for the white musk. In the case of TYO it seems like the right choice to add a modern edge to the whole composition.
Hong Kong is the most vertical city in the world as the sheer number of tall buildings reaching to the sky makes it a surreal vista; especially as your plane swoops right by someone’s living room window on the one hundred and somethingth floor. HKG is a towering skyscraper of floral notes which are sent even higher with a citrus booster. The florals are a spicy rose, astringent violet and a slightly metallic lily. Together they create an almost non-floral accord. When I first wore HKG I thought it was a violet and resin combo but the rose does the heavy work as the spicy quality adds contrast to the violet and lily. Lemon and pear add the fruit component and they make HKG soar to its own one hundred and somethingth floor.
Istanbul is a city I have never visited in real life but many perfumers have been inspired by the mystique of the Grand Bazaar. Most often a perfumer uses a spicy heart but M. Ghislain chooses a magnificent Turkish rose as the core of IST. This is an unbelievably memorable rose. I smelled IST for the first time at the Elements Showcase in January and I could not wait to wear this. My memory was not incorrect as the spicy phase is right upfront as pink pepper carries the top notes. Then that Turkish rose arises out of that pink pepper and gains in intensity. There is a touch of lychee circling the rose as well. The base is musk and cinnamon. IST is one of my three favorites of the entire collection.
Today’s trip finishes in the Middle Eastern city of Dubai. DXB has an almost classic Middle Eastern perfume architecture. It mixes fresh citrus in the opening like a breeze off the desert. This is followed by a traditional deep rose note. The base is the perfume note most closely related to this part of the world, oud. DXB is the most traditional of all of The Scent of Departure fragrances. It is no surprise that a rose-oud composition would be one of the compositions to represent one of the Middle Eastern cities. If you like that combo DXB is your destination.
Back tomorrow with four more cities.
Disclosure: This review was based on samples provided by The Scent of Departure.
Thanks to The Scent of Departure we are offering a reader’s choice of a full bottle of any of the 20 cities in this first release. To be eligible leave a comment talking about your first departure to a town different than your own. Each comment from all five parts will be combined for the draw. You get one entry for each piece so you could conceivably have five chances if you leave a comment on all five parts. You also can give yourself one more chance by “liking” The Scent of Departure Facebook page at this link. We will draw one winner via random.org from all five parts on April 29, 2012.
If you missed part one click here for NYC, Singapore, Vienna and Abu Dhabi
We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon and use our RSS option…or your dream prize will be just spilt perfume.
-Mark Behnke, Managing Editor
Editor’s Note: Those of you who live in New York City have a unique chance to experience The Scent of Departure in a very special way. On Tuesday night April 24th, at Henri Bendel from 5-8PM, Gerald Ghislain will debut the collection underneath 240 airplanes hanging from the ceiling. There is also a Proust Questionnaire which is supposed to help you narrow down your choice. If you can’t make it on Tuesday night for the party M Ghislain will be there on Wednesday and Thursday from 6-8PM each night. -MB