COGNOSCENTI Wild Child (2019), Blue Oud 32 (2015) and Fire and Rain 44 (2022) Dannielle Sergent + the 3 you should be wearing right now giveaway

 

Dannielle Sergent of Cognoscenti photo by Annabelle Breakey courtesy of the perfumer

I’d like to rest my heavy head tonight
On a bed of California stars
I’d like to lay my weary bones tonight
On a bed of California stars
I’d love to feel your hand touching mine
And tell me why I must keep working on
Yes, I’d give my life to lay my head tonight
On a bed of California stars. ~
Woody Guthrie

I sincerely believe that they broke the mold when artisanal perfumer Dannielle Sergent entered the world: here is a woman who marches to her own drum. She recently celebrated the 10th anniversary of her brand, Cognoscenti  – with the release of a new perfume, Fire and Rain. When I was kindly sent a recent sample compilation of her fragrances, I chose three which I felt merited wearing RIGHT NOW. Why now? Because they feel seasonless, effortlessly beautiful and evoke our connection to the natural world and, in turn, ourselves: an aromatic reminder to grow where we are planted. In these times where our movements are potentially fraught with the risk of contagion due to the ongoing pandemic, that reminder is both timely and necessary.

Dannielle Sergent is a native Californian, and her perfumery resounds with fragrant celebration of the environment which has enveloped her from birth to current day. All her perfumes possess the distinct savor of innovation, originality and a sense of open space, freedom. California has an entirely different feel to it than the rest of the United States; it’s younger, less entrenched in custom and history, more recently ‘settled’, if you will – in comparison with other parts of the country. I feel that Cognoscenti fragrances reflect this – and of course, the perfumer’s extensive exploits in the visual arts. These three Cognoscenti fragrances – Wild Child, Blue Oud 32 and Fire and Rain 44 – share the common thread of inspired artistry and imagination.

Dannielle Sergent “Wild Child” courtesy of the perfumer

Cognoscenti Wild Child

“Give me the wild children
with their bare feet and
sparkling eyes. The restless,
churning climbers.

Give me the wonder-filled
glorious mess makers
dreaming of mountains
and mud, aching to run through
a field of stars.”  ~
excerpts from Nicolette Sowder’s poem, Give Me the Wild Children

Cognoscenti Wild Child review

Cognoscenti Wild Child via the brand (Wild Child was an Art and Olfaction Finalist 2020)

 It’s no secret that Cognoscenti Wild Child is a favorite of mine. I love how it’s so difficult to pigeonhole; it commences as a variant of fougère-minus-bergamot and concludes as a gorgeous deep chypre. There is nothing in the least frivolous about Wild Child: it is wanton abandon combined with cryptic sensuality, dark but never menacingly weighty. The deal-breaker here is a significant presence of tarragon and lavender, which read as intensely herbal: two odors which can be polarizing, if especially prominent. There is a fair amount of rose which gentles and rounds out the herbalcy in Wild Child, but it doesn’t diminish the cavernous deep forest-floor-in-shadow verdant hue which reigns supreme. The magnificent base simply sings. Whether it’s warm, cool, or in-between, Cognoscenti Wild Child is sylvan-ly soothing and true-to-nature-evocative. Notes: tarragon, French lavender, ethyl linalyl acetate, Florosa® (Givaudan), Iso E Super® (IFF), Anatolian rose, Givko rose® (Givaudan), labdanum, cedarwood, vetiver, tree moss, aged patchouli and patchouli acetate

Cognoscenti No. 32 Blue Oud via the brand

This is the forest primeval. The murmuring pines and the hemlocks,
Bearded with moss, and in garments green, indistinct in the twilight,
Stand like Druids of eld, with voices sad and prophetic,
Stand like harpers hoar, with beards that rest on their bosoms. ~
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s Evangeline, Boston 1847

The forest primeval feels like an apt description for Cognoscenti No. 32 Blue Oud. Former Senior Contributor Pam Barr, in her beautiful review – proffered the perfumer’s vision of this perfume as a scent meditation upon the color Prussian blue, with which I heartily agree. I would add that, to my nose it feels like the marriage of Prussian blue and malachite: a symphonic blue-green flooded with the dappling light within a conifer-filled glade. Envision a floating wood, and you’re headed in the right direction – a veil of gossamer woods threaded with wisps of uncured tobacco. However, the perfumer has chosen to conjure an impression of fern and flower is her secret – and compellingly subtle. It is rare that one happens upon such a ghostly, airy fragrance that is also tenacious. Notes: blue cypress, black agarwood, tobacco, vetiver, ferns and flowers

Cognoscenti Fire and Rain no. 44

 Cognoscenti Fire and Rain

Green green rocky road
Promenade in green
Tell me who d’ you love
Tell me who d’ you love
~ Tim Hardin

 Ash on an old man’s sleeve
Is all the ash the burnt roses leave.
Dust in the air suspended
Marks the place where a story ended.
~ excerpt from T.S. Eliot, Little Gidding

 Cognoscenti no 44 fire and rain by Dannielle Sergent

Cognoscenti no 44 fire and rain by Dannielle Sergent

Californians must number amongst the bravest people; how does one live with the looming reality of widespread fires, drought, flooding, the potential of disappearing below sea level as an eventuality (for coastal dwellers)? For all the sunshine and desirable climate, miles of beautiful beaches, abundant flora and fauna –  anyone who makes their home there is well aware of incipient earthquakes and other natural events which fall well within the category known as Acts of G-d. In Cognoscenti Fire and Rain, Dannielle Sergent composed a love ballad to her home state, with all its contrasts and contradictions: aromatic unconditional love. Through a variety of clever accords, she creates scent memories which integrate smoke and sun, rain and ocean, blossoms and breezes. Two particular aspects grab my attention: precisely how delicately the smoke accord plays out, when it would have been easier to bombard us with it; and the stature awarded geosmin – with its freshly turned damp soil character. Metallic tones are quite perceptible in her employment of saffron and grisalva (the latter is an ambergris-like material), and they provide counterpoint. Cognoscenti Fire and Rain has substantial longevity – and it reminds me of the summer of 1969, the summer of love. Notes: smoke (cypriol, hydro carbo resin, vetiver) rain (geosmin) California coast (salt, grisalva) sunshine (pink grapefruit, blood orange and saffron) florals (neroli, gardenia, hedione, geraniol) and warm breezes (light woods, musks, resins)

 Samples and artwork generously provided by the perfumer – many thanks.  My nose is my own…

~ Ida Meister, Deputy and Natural Perfumery Editor

Please read Dannielle Sergent’s Profile in American Perfumery here

Dannielle Sergent was featured in our Perfumer’s Workshop ‘Naming a Perfume”

Dannielle Sergent was Michelyn’s CaFleureBon Rising Star of 2012

Enjoy Ida’s review of Cognoscenti Wild Child here; former Contributor Pam Barr’s review of Blue Oud here; and Lauryn Beer’s review of Fire and Rain here.

 

Cognoscenti Perfumes

Discovery Set via  Cognoscenti

Thanks to the generosity of Dannielle Sergent, we have a  draw  for a registered reader for a  7 x 2.5 Cognoscenti discovery kit which will also include Wild Child if you live in the USA You must register or your comment will not count. To be eligible, please leave a comment saying what strikes you about Ida’s reviews. Draw closes 9/12/2022

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR ARTISAN PERFUMERS AND ORDER SAMPLES AND BOTTLES. LINK TO COGNOSCENTI

All photos via Cognoscenti unless otherwise noted.

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25 comments

  • Fire and rain sounds so interesting. I look forward to smelling it and the others from the brand. Live in the US

  • I particularly love #44 as an almost native Californian, it brings up memories of a childhood in summer. My all time favorite smell is water on a warm sidewalk and the memory of sprinklers hitting a hot sidewalk for the first time, which stops me in my tracks every time!
    Also I love the faint smell of smoke curling up around the edges, evoking the summer smell of forests and fires, whether in nature or the result of enjoyed outdoor meals. Lovely!

  • What a fun giveaway! It would be such a treat to try everything this perfumer has made. The three scents reviewed all sound interesting, it sounds like Dannielle Sergent’s work has a strong sense of place and even time, especially Fire and Rain.
    WV, USA

  • I got to admit that this is the first time reading or hearing something from Dannielle Sergent, but after reading this amazing review by Ida I want to totally try all her creations.
    She looks like someone so talented, in this world where there are not so many artisan perfumers, she deliver something special with her perfumes.
    The one that totally catched my attention is Wild Child for the Chypre accord and the fougere start.
    I hope I win this giveaway and try these amazing perfumes.
    USA here.

  • As a European person I find often American perfumers focus much more of their creativity on nature and its contrasts, lights and shadows, compared to European perfumers which are often heavy on the “Luxury” aesthetics.
    That’s what I love about them and what I loved about Ida’s reviews. I can almost smell the different woods, plants, smokey accents of California, the wild land par excellence. I would love to sample this line, so hard to find in Europe!
    Greetings from Italy, EU

  • Not having tried the fragrances reviewed I was struck by Wild Child described as, a “variant of fougère-minus-bergamot and concludes as a gorgeous deep chypre”. PS-the summer of love was 1967. US

  • I appreciate how Ida expressed the idea that Fire and Rain is “aromatic unconditional love.” I grew up in California, then left for college. Life happened, I’m still somewhere else and now I enjoy conjuring memories however I can. It isn’t always eucalyptus and orange blossom breezes. The thing is when it’s all you know, you don’t realize just how gorgeous it is. I would love to remember and experience the full range of natural scents California holds through Cognoscenti…soil, fire, rain, and all….

  • I love how Ida describes the perfumer’s inspiration from nature. I’d love to try the discovery scent, especially Blue Oud to see how it conjures the impressions of ferns and flowers. I’m in MN, USA.

  • I love Discovery sets! That’s how I found Champs Lunaires from Rogue Perfumery (courtesy of an article on CaFleureBon). Like Rogue, Cognoscenti sounds like an independent perfume house with a unique vision and lots of talent. Wild Child sounds very green and slightly bohemian with the lavender and tarragon and chypre base. I also love the idea of an ode to prussian blue in Blue Oud. The addition of fern and flower accent is a interesting detour ina blue fragrance. Smoke and metal in Fire and Rain is a great tribute to California in all of its facets. Excited to try Cognoscenti! MD, USA.

  • Ida’s review are very descriptive and take me to the moment that she feels the fragrances smell like. I love that especially with Cognoscenti No. 32 Blue Oud. That one intrigued me the most. When Ida says “Envision a floating wood, and you’re headed in the right direction – a veil of gossamer woods threaded with wisps of uncured tobacco.” an instant smell comes to mind and I like that.

  • Ida!!! ❤️❤️ I Love Cognoscenti fragrances!!! Fire & Rain is Gorgeous! ❤️❤️❤️ All the scents I’ve experienced from Dannielle Sergent are so intelligent, lovely, and brilliant!

  • The combination of photo, poetry, and your vivid descriptions is deadly! I will be adding all of these to my must-try list.

    Thank you for the review, writing from the EU.

  • Ida, thanks for taking us with you on your scent journey via your wonderful written reviews on these three fragrances! Your detail to each note, and what thought it provokes within your own imagination, is truly enjoyable to read. Also, I really like how you incorporated Dannielle Sergents art work in this and your older review of Wild Child, as well. That botanical painting with the black background is beautiful! Thank you for the chance to win a discovery set! Fingers crossed!
    Bonnie, USA

  • I’m not a native Californian however I’ve lived there for 18 years. I know exactly how it feels to lay your head on a bed of California stars. Miss it. Will these perfumes bring the feeling back? I hope so.

    I live in Portugal

  • I have not had the chance yet to try Cognoscenti, as it is difficult to find American perfumery here in Europe. What I find really interesting is that the perfumes – as Ida beautifully described them – seem to really depict the intensity of the Western US wilderness, the colours of this amazing nature and its natural ingredients. I would love to be able to discover this interesting and alluring fragrances. Greetings from Italy

  • I have never heard of this house, which is why I love Cafleurebon! I have found so many beautiful fragrances due to the writings of these talanted lovers of fragrance. I will be adding this to my list, especially to try out Cognoscenti No. 32 Blue Oud, which sounds right up my alley. Thank you for the draw! US.

  • Thank you for profiling one of my favorite perfumers, Ida. I’m lucky to have tried all three of these fragrances and you pointed out some aspects of each I hadn’t considered. My sample of Wild Child is dwindling and I’ve started to conserve it; the lively, herbal tones of this fragrance are wonderful for bright spring and summer days, and like Ida said, the base is wonderful. I tried No. 32 Blue Oud for the first time recently and have worn it a few times in recent weeks. The agarwood and cypress combination is dark, smoky, and heady—indeed a “symphonic blue-green.” Fire and Rain is all about the long and detailed progression through snapshots of wet earth, dampened smoke, dewy flowers, dry citrus, and salty breeze. I like how Ida calls it “aromatic unconditional love”; I was immediately impressed by this one, but I think I’ll enjoy its challenging artistry more as I return to it. Dannielle’s catalog is excellent—especially No. 30 Hay Incense—and she’s very communicative with customers. I’d recommend trying her discovery set.

  • Ida’s review of Cognoscenti Fire and Rain describes the yin and yang of living in California, and how this perfume brings it out beautifully. I am intrigued by this perfume and number 32 Blue Oud, especially as I love oud in all its incarnations. Haven’t tried anything by this brand, yet, but I am curious about these two perfumes, among others. Thanks for the reviews and draw. I am from the USA.

  • foreverscents says:

    I love the feature “3 You Should Be Wearing Right Now.” This edition was especially interesting. I love that Dannielle Sergent’s fragrances pay tribute to the glorious state of California (even if the state isn’t always in a glorious state). I think I would particularly enjoy Wild Child because I love lavender and tarragon. In the review of the three Cognoscenti fragrances, I enjoyed reading the passages that Ida selected.
    I live in the USA.

  • Regis Monkton says:

    I’ve heard of two of these fragrances from reading from Cafleurebon, and I appreciate the further insight from Ida. All three fragrances seem interesting to me. I’d like to try this discovery set. I’d like to try Cognoscenti “Wild Child” because Ida describes it as “sylvan-ly soothing and true-to-nature-evocative.” I live in the U.S.A.

  • Thanks for the great reviews Ida.

    I liked your review of No 32 Blue Oud a lot – it strikes as exactly what I imagined the scent to be before ordering a sample – a wodnerfully blue tinged and incensey meditation on a dark coniferous forest.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • Great review Ida! What strikes me about Ida’s reviews is how she describes it as a combination of a fougere and a chypre starting as one and ending as the other defying categorization. I love fragrances that are hard to define like that and defy expectations. It makes me very eager to try it! I live in the US.