Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane Review (Christèle Jacquemin) 2021 + “Coming home” Draw

 

Christele Jacquemin Memory Lane review

Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane photo by Nicoleta ©

The first time I sprayed one of Christèle Jacquemin’s fragrances on my wrist, last year, I knew I was experiencing something truly unique and powerful – and like catching a clear signal through static, all of her fragrances broadcasted to a deeply personal frequency that I immediately recognized and connected to.  A multifaceted artist, Christèle Jacquemin is a world traveler, an award-winning photographer, and a gifted artisanal perfumer who created in her (so far) four fragrances a scented memory map, that unfolds with visuals paired with scent, for a deeply personal journal:

Impermanence: the harmony and tranquility of Jin Ze, a village in the suburbs of Shanghai (an Art and Olfaction Award Finalist 2020)

Underworld: the interplay between shadow and light, intertwined fears and hopes and fear, inspired by Barcelona.

Meandering Soul: the calm introspection of a midnight walk in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan

Memory Lane: the return home – inspired by Valliguières, a village in Southern France.

 

Christele Jacquemin art and olfaction finalist 2020

Christele Jacquemin, photo via Facebook

 Memory Lane is inspired by the collection of photographs I made in Valliguières, a village in the South of France where I lived until I was a teenager. I moved away from it very early in the hope of a rebirth, another, elsewhere. After more than thirty years of avoidance, it finally became clear that the only way to put an end to my old ghosts was to confront them. After these few decades, I got down to translating the feelings of my childhood into olfactory terms.”-Christele Jacquemin

 

Enigma, Return to innocence video still

Spraying Memory Lane on my skin, I had a very vivid flashback to the visuals of a song that was playing in heavy rotation, on MTV, in the mid-’90s: Enigma’s return to innocence – Julien Temple’s video clip which depicts a man’s life in reverse – starting with the forever-burn-in-my-memory sequence of the old man picking up a quince fruit, and rewinding back up to his baptism, as a baby.

Deeply moving, instantly relatable, with artistic sensibility and unexpected juxtapositions,  Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane is an innovative play on the theme of eternal return. The fragrance starts to flow in reverse, or at least in my game of perception game it does, with the top notes that settle on the skin immediately, balmy and endlessly comforting. Sepia tones of aromatic myrrh, with just the right amount of medicinal vibe paint a blurry childhood memory, recorded frame by frame: the old hands of a grandmother opening the squeaky door of an ancient wooden medicine cabinet, looking for her herbal remedies.

Christele Jacquemin fragrances

Christele Jacquemin photos, collage by Nicoleta©

In contra play with the wooden and balmy texture, a silky white construction blooms on the skin – the almost photorealistic meringue note, deliciously turning from wispy and silky clouds to ethereally light ghostly treats, that make your mouth water in anticipation of their imponderable delight. Playing even further on the childhood association game, bringing salty water to the corner of the eyes: reassuring arms are raising you up, up, up in the magnolia tree behind the house, for the picture you take there every spring since you were born. You smile for the camera, eyes squinted in front of the immensely bright April sky.

We fast forward (or backward) to an eerily vivid winter frame: the warm and woody scent of cloves summons the silhouette of a Christmas tree, with a bitter, almost sharp grassy and leathery nuance that cuts the tamed nostalgia out of the picture and ads nuance, nerve, and high pitched dimension. Hands deep in the pockets, stepping on the snowy, muddy path near the riverbed, you feel the red clouds of solstice’s dawn, hanging above you, cumbersome as a rain-soaked jacket. You enter the old stone church and listen to the sermon, breathing in the flickering yellow candle lights, trying to rhythmically smooth out the painful and disjointed feeling that you have outgrown your skin. The Saudade of an expat’s return home, between nostalgia and the slow and painful process of healing one’s ghost, is beautifully interpreted in the drydown in the juxtaposition of the sensual and comforting vanilla and dark muddy waters filled with the deep green, wet, woody notes.

Christele Jacquemin meandering soul, impermanence, underworld

Christele Jacquemin photos, collage by Nicoleta©

Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane is “Proustian Madeleine gourmand” with alternating contrasting layers between the light-as cloud meringue vanilla and the dark oud and Nagarmotha. It’s complex, complicated, bittersweet, and ambivalent – like any return home.

Read my review of Meandering Soul here.

Christèle Jacquemin’s Memory Lane was awarded “best fragrance you never heard of” by Michelyn Camen, Editor-in-Chief, and was included in my top 10 Best Fragrances of 2021

The perfume is made of more than 90% of ingredients of natural origin.

Notes: Essential oils:  Clove, Cypriol or Nagarmotha, Magnolia flowers, Myrrh, White Oud  or Crocodile Eaglewood, Parsley; Oleoresin: Green vanilla; Meringue

Nicoleta Tomsa, Senior Editor

Disclosure:  Bottle kindly provided by Christèle Jacquemin, opinions are my own

Christele Jaquemin Memory Lane

Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane, official brand photo

 Thanks to the generosity of  Christèle Jacquemin we have a 30ml bottle of  Memory Lane for one registered reader in the  EU, USA and UK  You must register or your entry will not count. To be eligible, please leave a comment saying what sparks your interest based on Nicoleta’s review of Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane and where you live. Draw closes  February 3, 2022

Follow us on Instagram @cafleurebonofficial  @nicoleta.tomsa  @christelejacquemin  

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

 

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46 comments

  • Ginandsniff says:

    I love the whole sense of a set of notes being used to allow reminiscences and anchoring those thread of memory and longing. Memory lane sounds like a really lovely collection of well thought through but personal notes.

    I’m in Leeds in the UK

  • Nicoleta! ❤️❤️ What a lovely review! I happen to own a sample set of Christele Jacquemin’s wonderful fragrances and Memory Lane is special. A Proustian Madeline indeed! Living in the Midwest, we know a lot of farmers. There is something in this fragrance that captures the kitchen of a dairy farmer we know. It smells of the farm, wet nature, but also the cleanliness of home, and baking. Thank you for a lovely review! ❤️

  • Sadly I do not remember that video but I understand the concept and think this scent sounds like a lovely representation of those memories. It must be beautiful. In maryland.

  • Beautiful imagery Nicoleta! You really know how to paint a picture with your words in your reviews. The description of Memory Lane as a “Proustiam Madeleine gourmand” with the alternating oud and vanilla layers sounds lovely. I love the idea of parsley in the composition as well. I’m in MD, USA.

  • Jocelyne Borys says:

    Oh my goodness!! Those notes! I’m fascinated by all of them!! I am particularly intrigued by the idea of “Green vanilla”, I would want something that consisted only of those! Add myrrh and cloves and I’m yours! I am in the US.

  • Beautiful review Nicoleta! Of the scents I have tried from this house, I have enjoyed them all for their uniqueness. The mention of expats retuning home caught my eye since that is my story as well. I would love to smell this one. Thanks for the draw. US

  • Sorohan Adriana says:

    Lovely review Nicoleta! it reminds me of my childhood when I ran free and the sky, the earth, the trees, the flowers, the grass were my friends.
    I am from EU Bucharest Romania Europe

  • Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane is “Proustian Madeleine gourmand” with alternating contrasting layers between the light-as cloud meringue vanilla and the dark oud and Nagarmotha. It’s complex, complicated, bittersweet, and ambivalent – like any return home. A beautiful description by Nicoleta sparks my interest as well as the notes some which I have never heard of adds to the mystery and charm. Thanks a million from the United Kingdom

  • Sepia tones of aromatic myrrh, with just the right amount of medicinal vibe paint a blurry childhood memory, recorded frame by frame: the old hands of a grandmother opening the squeaky door of an ancient wooden medicine cabinet, looking for her herbal remedies. A beautiful description by Nicoleta has really piqued my interest in this house and perfumer. I am fascinated by the notes especially gourmand fragrances are my favourite category. Thanks a lot from the UK

  • This is such a poetic review I loved the thoughts of early and later memories compared against the perfume. I am so curious about this perfumer, I have a small bottle of Meandering Soul which is beautiful and I would like to try more, the meringue note is particularly interesting. I am in U.K.

  • Sue Bennett says:

    What a beautifully evocative scent this sounds. I love scent memories, and perfume that takes you in an unexpected journey. The interplay between deep, dark and frothy light sounds irresistible.

  • Stefania Maradin says:

    I love how Nicoleta writes <3 Memory Lane's collection has a lovely collection now. Can't wait to smell them all!

  • Wow! I don’t think I could pick just one thing that struck me about this review. I am so intrigued using fragrance as a journal, particularly as an aid to face ones’ past. Also, the description of Memory Lane as a “Proustian Madeleine gourmand” was quite striking. And, I am always interested by “best perfumes you have never heard of”! All of these things and more sparked my interest. Thank you for the review! Writing from the EU.

  • Danu Seith-Fyr says:

    Serendipitous indeed, dear Nicoleta. we managed to write about the same perfume at the same time!!!!! Lovely timing, great minds think alike, it had been sitting on my desk patiently awaiting its turn since last year and I am honoured to read that your interpretations run quite parallel to mine. I would love to own a bottle, living in SW France.

  • I would love to experience Memory Lane with all of its earthy nuances. I’m a huge fan of Enigma, and like that Nicoleta mentioned them. Christèle’s collection sounds fabulous. On my wishlist it goes. Mich USA

  • All of Christele Jacquemin’s fragrances sound so special. Her inspiration, and the last line of Nicoleta’s review really say it all. “It’s complex, complicated, bittersweet, and ambivalent – like any return home” I am in the US, and experience those feelings any time I return to my hometown.

  • My interest is sparked because this offering sounds like a winter scent with a clove aspect, and I like clove a lot. Also, I’m interested in seeing how the vanilla works in this. US

  • Really Nice review Nicoleta. I imagine than discovering a new independent perfumer must be a bliss, and this happened to you last year when discovered this photographer-perfumer-traveler: there was an invisible connection. After the scents made with her memories of Shanghai, Barcelona and Taipei, now she is back to her hometown, Valliguières, and the name of the perfume couldn´t be more precise: (down the) Memory Lane. Seems that her photos found their way into a perfume bottle now on the theme of eternal return with her childhood as an association game: medicinal myrrh opens the journey as a “Proustian Madeleine gourmand” like you evocatively say, with the white vanilla and the dark oud and Nagarmotha. In the end, ambivalent as any return home. I live in Spain, EU.

  • Memory Lane by Christele Jacquemin sounds very artistic and way different from any fragrance I have worn before. On the notes list I am seeing notes I have never seen in fragrance. Memory Lane was “best fragrance you never heard of” in 2021, so an additional reason to want to experience this fragrance.
    Greetings from Maryland, US

  • wandering_nose says:

    Really grateful to be able to get to know the story behind another one of Christèle Jacquemin’s creations. Memory Lane sounds so sophisticated in its way of tackling the ‘what used to be’ to create something that ‘is’, and in the most meaningful, almost spiritual way. I can relate to the theme of expats returning home as that is my story too. I have to agree with Nicoleta that returns home are always complex, complicated, bittersweet, and ambivalent… I love the notes used, I adore the color of the liquid – it would be the purest delight to try! Thank you from Dublin, Ireland, EU

  • I am very curious to dive into the alternating contrasting layers you describe. While the magnolia doesn’t really call my name, such was the case with Impermanence as well, which I happen to own and adore. So I’d love to win Memory Lane to Germany, thank you for the draw!

  • Such an evocative description of a multi-faceted perfume. Spring, Christmas, childhood and adulthood all at once; the nostalgic deliciousness of meringue, magnolia flowers blooming in the garden, a deep and mature leather accord and sensual vanilla with a green base – seems like a bunch of heavily contrasting notes, yet I am sure the end result is simply delightful.
    I live in the EU.
    Thanks!

  • In Nicoleta’s review of Memory Lane, I like the idea of a number of notes being used to come to terms with one’s past, confronting the ghosts of the past, as Christele says, through olfactory art. Memory lane sounds really lovely. Thanks for the review and draw. I’m in the USA.

  • I was able to smell a sample of Memory Lane a few months ago. It reminded me so strongly of how my house smelled at Christmas time during my childhood – the wood, the vanilla, the cloves and the hints of green. I even found something almost crisp in it that reminded me of cold winter air. It is definitely named properly. It has been on my wish list of fragrances to buy since then. I live in the US.

  • Thanks for the review Nicoleta,

    Trips down memory lane and fragrance go together like peanut butter and jam. Every now and then get a fragrance that makes me frown and images slowly flow back into picture reminding me of my childhood or events that happened decades ago.

    Memory Lane sounds like a fragrances that will take me a while to completely understand. The contrasting layers and the juxtaposition of sensual and comforting vanilla against dark wet, woody notes really piques my interest.

    I haven’t tried any of Christèle Jacquemin’s creations, but now I am very interested in trying her entire catalogue.

    Greetings from the UK!

  • Memory Lane sounds like a nostalgia-inducing fragrance, which is very appealing to me. I love the association with Enigma’s Return to Innocence. The notes of myrrh, meringue, vanilla, clove, and parsley sound fantastic. Based on Nicoleta’s review, it almost sounds like it borders on being gourmand with the photorealistic meringue note. However, Nicoleta’s association of Memory Lane with Christmas seems like it doesn’t veer too far into gourmand territory. She describes it as “complex, complicated, bittersweet, and ambivalent- like any return home”. This really speaks to me, as I’m at a point in life where nostalgic memories are so bittersweet; yet, Memory Lane sounds incredibly comforting. Nicoleta’s review of Memory Lane is one of my favorites thus far because it evokes such a sentimental longing for times of the past.

    “Where we love is home – home that our feet may leave, but not our hearts.” – Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

    Thank you, Nicoleta, for the article, and thank you to Christèle Jacquemin for the giveaway. I am located in the USA.

  • A complex sweet perfume is difficult to do right and I’m always on the lookout for The One. Memory Lane sounds wonderful, and the notes combination is fairly unexpected. Nikoletta’s writing did the scent’s name justice, I got a real sense of longing for a past that we have (unavoidably) idealized or demonized. It brought me back to the melancholically beautiful concept of “saudade”, the portuguese word for the feeling of missing something you never had and probably never will. The loss of a dream, which will hopefully propel you towards a new dream. Bittersweet indeed. Greetings from Greece.

  • Claumarchini says:

    I had already read with great interest Nicoleta’s best of 2021 and I am glad she has featured Memory Lane, which sounds like an amazing scent, so faceted and complex. Being an avid traveller myself (alas, it seems like a distant memory now…), I love scents that are inspired by travel memories or life memories from the past. I am not familiar with Christèle Jacquemin’s work so it would be awesome to be the lucky winner. Greetings from Italy

  • I like how Christelle Jacquemin translates one form of art – photography- into another- perfume. And i like Nicoleta’s take on perfume as a reverse life story.
    I’m in EU

  • Loved the description of the scent and the collage of the photos by Jacquemin. Would love to experience this earthy treasure.

    Living in Germany, EU

  • I just love the photo collage, what rich beautiful colors. The description of “Proustian Madeleine gourmand” is so enticing. I am a fan of sweet and gourmand scents, but am always on the lookout for one that has dimension and soul. I am from New England, USA

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Beautiful imagery in this review. This fragrance sounds incredible and haunting. Such an interesting combo of notes, I would love to try this one. Thank you for the draw. From the US.

  • Well, what interested me the most in the review is the memory part of scents. Yes, proust’s madeleine is the most known fragrantic memory, but in my experience, scents can truly evoke memories! Nicoleta wrote a great review of a great sounding fragrance! I live in Croatia, EU and i follow Cafleurebon on instagram – my handle is il.dolce.papi

  • Nicoleta Tomsa in this review you evoked a feeling. Somewhere between the “reassuring arms”, the “old hands of the grandmother” trying to help and protect us & the “ethereally light treats”, I found myself wanting to smell this scent just to remember some of this pictures of my own childhood. Thank you for this review and Christèle Jacquemin for her generosity!!

  • Nicoleta Tomsa in this review you evoked a feeling. Somewhere between the “reassuring arms”, the “old hands of the grandmother” trying to help and protect us & the “ethereally light treats”, I found myself wanting to smell this scent just to remember some of this pictures of my own childhood. Thank you for this review and Christèle Jacquemin for her generosity!!
    I live in Greece, EU!

  • What a fantastic review for a fantastic perfume. The fact that the idea of the perfume is returning to a childhood place and memory is amazing. Fragrances trying to imitate places have always amazed me and the fact that Memory Lane is made of more than 90% of ingredients of natural origin just blew my mind.
    Thank you Nicoleta for this review and thank you Christele for this amazing fragrance. Hope to smell it soon.
    I live in the U.S.

  • Ever since I first read about this fragrance (i.e. in a previous Cafleurebon article) I wanted to see what it’s like. I’m very interested to try it because of its notes, e.g. I love cloves in fragrances, and I’m interested to see what some of the other ingredients are like, e.g. the white oud and the green vanilla. I live in the U.S.A. Thanks for the giveaway opportunity.

  • Many thanks for a another great review. The concept behind Christèle Jacquemin perfume is beautiful and deep. Nicoleta, you really got me nostalgic with the Enigma’s song. I love Return to innocence. It is a song and the video that I remembered from my childhood but I appreciate it more now as a grown up. And Memory Lane has such a interesting combination of notes. Parsley? Meringue? You described it all beautifully. I live in Poland, EU.

  • This perfume sounds amazing — I love the idea of the myrrh and clove scents mixing with an airy comforting sweetness… even just the description evokes a certain melancholic beauty…

    I’m in Washington DC— thanks!

  • Michael Prince says:

    What interests me based on Nicoleta’s review of Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane is how return home is inspired by Valliguières, a village in Southern France where Christèle Jacquemin grew up and all the nostalgic memories and scents she has connected to them. The classic hit Return to Innocence by Enigma was mentioned which definitely would tie into her inspiration. The fragrance itself was described beautifully and sounds like something that really resonates with me. I am from the USA.

     

  • Memory Lanes was the first of Christèle Jacquemin’s fragrances I smelled and it is wonderful! Nicoleta captured the concept and story in her lyrical review. The notes in this one sound discordant but work. I have a small bottle and would welcome its big sibling. In NC USA

  • I must admit I can’t imagine meringue note paired with myrrth, herbs, flowers and oud. But everything is in hands of perfume creator and I believe that the result is great. Regarding Enigma… this is a band which I was listening to when, as a child, I was travelling with my parents around Europe! So many memories indeed..

    I would like to win a bottle and I live in Poland.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Thank you for the great writeup Nicoleta.

    I love this review because of the catharsis that the perfumer demonstrates in the realization that you can never run away from your past. I love how she has channeled this into a beautiful olfactive composition with the most interesting notes/

    I would love to get a nose on this and experience some of the perfumers healing process.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • sephrenia300 says:

    Very interesting review Nicoleta! What sparks my interest based on Nicoleta’s review of Christèle Jacquemin Memory Lane is that she describes it as flowing in reverse, beginning with traditionally base notes settling on the skin immediately of myrrh and a sweet meringue, flowing into woody and floral magnolia heart notes, and then finally culminating in crisp green and grassy notes. It sounds like such an interesting progression, and it perfectly mirrors the name and inspiration of the fragrance of “Memory Lane”. I live in the US.

  • What a stunning combination of notes! And I especially love when Nicoleta compares her first experience of the scent as “like catching a clear signal through static”. This sounds like it would create some unique mental pictures.
    (USA)