St. Clair Scents Pandora and Eve (Diane St. Clair) 2019 + Audacious Innocence Collection Draw

 

St Clair Scents Pandora review

Louise Brooks in Pandora’s Box, image via fanpop.com

Well-behaved women seldom make history.” ~ Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, former Professor of Early American History at Harvard, author of Pulitzer Prize-winning novel A Midwife’s Tale

We have come to expect the extraordinary from Vermont-based perfumer Diane St. Clair. Her fragrance Gardener’s Glove was a finalist for the 2019 Art and Olfaction Award in the Artisan category, well-merited for its evocative verdancy and photorealistic agrestic aroma. Ms.  St. Clair’s fragrances possess the power to bewitch, be it via a tender hand (as in Frost) or unabashed volupté (Casablanca).

Best Pandora paintings

John William Waterhouse’s Pandora

With her latest works, The Audacious Innocence Collection – Diane explores the sisterly correlation between St. Clair Scents Pandora and Eve, with pre-Raphaelite painter John William Waterhouse’s Pandora as a foreshadowing. Italian artist Massimo Alfaioli has collaborated, providing his illustrative grace; he incorporates floral parallels which reverberate within the perfumes themselves and it is wonderful work.

 St.Clair Scents Pandora and Eve Review

Italian artist Massimo Alfaioli for St. Clair Scents Audacious Innocence Collection

The premise behind these perfumes celebrates those women who strayed from the beaten path while pursuing their abundant curiosity. Pandora and Eve were each an intelligent innocent, if you will. No for no’s sake was met with incredulity: why on earth not? No reasons given; no explanations means no dice. Diane chose to interpret their search for knowledge as an act of independent acumen, the exercising of creative will.

St. Clair Scents Pandora review

Italian artist Massimo Alfaioli St. Clair Scents Pandora

According to the Greeks, Pandora (meaning ‘all gifts’) was the first woman on Earth, created by the G-ds. Zeus intended her as punishment for Prometheus’ having stolen fire. From Hephaestus’ clever hands came her divine proportions, from Aphrodite her femininity, from Athena her skills and crafts. Zeus sweetened the pot by insisting that Hermes imbue her with deceit, stubbornness and curiosity – and Hermes was only too happy to oblige. She was offered to Epimetheus, Prometheus’ brother – to wife, and despite his brother’s injunction not to accept gifts from the G-ds – Prometheus’ brother succumbed to her beauty. Along with her charms, Pandora was given a pithos (a box or jar) by the G-ds which she was bidden never to open under any circumstances. Try as she might to thwart her own curiosity, she eventually peeked into the box, unleashing every evil imaginable – despite her efforts to shut it as soon as this became apparent. What she DID manage to salvage was Hope. Pandora was inquisitive, not malicious – and therefore the perfect vehicle for this task.

St. Clair Scents Eve review

Italian artist Massimo Alfaioli for St. Clair Scents Eve

Eve, the Mother of Humanity according to Abrahamic tradition (if one ignores the Jewish Apochrypha which cites willful Lilith as Adam’s first wife – said to embody the Serpent in the Garden) – was created by the Divine from  Adam’s rib, often interpreted as intending her as his equal or support. Of especial interest is her name: Chava, source of life חַוָּה  – is very similar to the Jewish Palestinian Aramaic word for snake חִוְיָא, which has caused Biblical scholars a good deal of amusement. She is traditionally considered the first woman, like Pandora – and like Pandora, she is tested. Adam and Eve are admonished not to eat the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil in the Garden of Eden; they may eat anything else they choose. It is said that Eve was tempted by the serpent as they engaged in conversation; perhaps her burning desire for knowledge got the better of her, leading to her fall from grace and subsequent banishment from the Garden along with her helpmate Adam. A little knowledge can be a dangerous thing…

How does the perfumer portray Pandora and Eve?

Audacious Innocence Collection by Diane St. Clair of St. Clair Scents

 Pandora by Odilon Redon via society.com, Pandora depicted as Eve

Their common DNA appears in both perfumes: an apple accord (no Eve sans apple!), full-hearted citrus notes painted in various vibrant hues to represent abundance, tomato leaf for natural effect. These women were innocent before they were wise and neither was maleficent by nature; this is reflected in the lush floral notes employed. Lilac, sinuous orris butter, lighthearted jasmine sambac with its pronounced sweetness, riotous roses. A curvaceous ylang ylang for feminine allure. Carrot seed waxes vegetal at times with hints of celery. We reach a point in which the base assumes an intaglio effect; it smells as if it were engraved, with florals resting in the background. Eve departs the garden with a somber tone, cloaked in mossy woods and muskily discomfited. Pandora has gleaned a terrible sagacity from her setting loose malevolent forces and it manifests with sylvan profondeur, so very dark with opoponax wed to endless labdanum – just as the backdrop of Waterhouse’s painting intimates. Their beauty, intelligence and strength will see them through whatever follows, with eyes wide opened.

St. Clair Scents Pandora and Eve common notes: apple accord, cedrat coeur, bergamot, red mandarin, tomato leaf, orris butter, lilac accord, Bulgarian rose absolute, Turkish rose absolute, ylang ylang, jasmine sambac, carrot seed, oakmoss, double-distilled vetiver, tonka, woods, musk. Pandora: addition of opoponax absolute and natural extraction labdanum

Samples provided by the perfumer, Diane St. Clair – many thanks!  My nose is my own…

~ Ida Meister, Senior Editor and Natural Perfumery Editor

Diane St Clair of St Clair Scents

Diane St. Clair of St. Clair Scents via Diane

Editor’s Note: Artisan perfumer Diane St. Clair was the recipient of my CaFleureBon’s Rising Star Award 2018. Gardener’s Glove was a favorite of our beloved Sr. Editor Emeritus (RIP) Robert Herrmann and was on his Top Ten 2018 list and Casablanca was a pick in Sr. Editor Lauryn Beer’s Top Ten Perfumes of 2018. Diane “met” Massimo on Instagram. The fragrance world is a wonderful place that an olfactive and visual artist can work together so seamlessly. The perfumes are extraits with 35 percent concentration.-Michelyn Camen, Editor in Chief

Thanks to the generosity of Diane St. Clair of St. Clair Scents we have two sample packs for two registered readers of deluxe spray vials (2 ml) of St. Clair Scents Pandora and Eve from the Audacious InnocenceCollection for two registered readers anywhere in the world. You must register here or your comment will not count. To be eligible, please comment upon what appealed to you in Ida’s review of Pandora and Eve? Do you have a favorite St. Clair Scents perfume? Draw closes 10/8/2019

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28 comments

  • Michael Lynady says:

    The in depth breakdown was great – the concentration sounds incredible.
    Haven’t put my nose on St. Clair unfortunately.

  • I have had my eye on Gardeners Glove but have not got it yet. I loved the greek mythology and religious history. From the UK

  • I have not tried anything by St Clair. What appealed to me most was the religious story behind the brand. From the UK

  • Symbian Pandora says:

    What a great review by Ida!! That woman weaves a magical incantation with her mastery of descriptive writing.
    I recently purchased Casablanca from American Perfumery and that is a powerhouse of a fragrance.
    I saw these on the St. Clair perfume site just a few days ago. Both sound intriguing.
    Would live to be considered for the draw.
    Thanks to all.
    I am in the USA.

  • I love the story of Pandora, and after unleashing every evil imaginable, was able to salvage Hope. I am a big fan of St. Clair Scents, and would love to try these new creations! Thanks for another fabulous draw! USA

  • Interesting to me that, with such an extensive list of notes, it is the addition of just two that sets them apart. I’d love the opportunity to experience both of these, to compare and contrast their similarities and diffferences. Thank you for the chance! I am in the US.

  • I would love to try these scents and have already checked them out on her site.They contain many of my favorite notes and the stories of the women they were created about are wonderful. The artwork is lovely. I have tried Diane’s Casablanca. It’s gorgeous and the best orange blossom perfume I have ever sniffed/worn. USA.

  • In addition to celebrating two powerful and rebellious women figures, I enjoyed the blend of mythology, Pre-Raphaelite paintings, beautiful drawings, and the description of the notes and accords the two fragrances share. I am not familiar with the scents from this line but would love to try them. I live in the USA.

  • I love the history and the art in Ida’s review. Immaculate. I have Casablanca and I absolutely adore it. Ironically, butter is the only food I don’t eat and Diane St Clair makes a well-regarded artisan butter. Just had to mention. I live in the USA.

  • Such clever inspiration, gorgeous notes and beautiful artwork! Ida’s review, containing the mythological / biblical explanation is no less. One of my favorite reads as a child was Greek mythology, which of course included Pandora’s story, and I remember I was bothered by the forbiddance and also by the fact the box was filled with bad behaviors and emotions and hope was the only positive one. Why would God make such an unbalanced box and leave its burden to someone else in the first place?

    I am especially interested in the labdanum note in Pandora. I love labdanum. I never tried anything from this house. From EU.

  • The idea behind these perfumes is interesting and the 35% oil concentration is impressive. Would love to test them, since I never tried anything from this house. Thanks.

  • m.r.everything says:

    Everything Ida writes, I find captivating… if you walk away from one of Ida’s reviews or posts, missing a detail, that is your own fault! She is so vivid and paints such a picture with her words, that only Ida can do! That was a fantastic read and I am already looking forward to the next one! I have not yet experienced any of Diane’s fragrances. I remember reading about them last year, but I still have not tried them, although she is still on my list! Thank you again Ida, for the amazing write-up, and thank you to Diane and CaFleureBon for the opportunity to experience Diane’s work! I live in Delaware, US.

  • Reading this, I just realised that there might be 0 females in classic tales or religion or mythology that manifested their intelligence, curiosity or courage openly and stayed a positive character. And for the sake of the guys that wrote all of the tales.. I so hope I am wrong…

  • wallygator88 says:

    I love the way that Ida has spoken about the duality of the scents, while keeping the common olfactory framework in perspective. I also love the bit of context and the beautiful Massimo images in the review.

    I unfortunately have never tried a St. Clair scents perfume before and don’t have a favorite.

    Love from Madison, WI!

  • Dubaiscents says:

    I have been wanting to try this line but haven’t gotten around to it yet. I love the story of these two scents and Ida’s beautiful weaving of history and myth. I can just imagine the scents from it. Thanks for the chance to try these. I’m in the US.

  • I’ve not tried any of the St.Clair fragrances, but I am most intrigued by this collection, especially Pandora as I love the addition of the opoponax and labdanum. As always, Ida’s reviews brings the fragrances front and center in our imaginations with beautiful and evocative language. Many thanks to her and thank you for a most generous draw. I’m in the USA.

  • I like very much that Ida reminds us the two stories, making a parallel between Eve and Pandora. Also, the paintings are so well chosen, but what appeals to me the most are Massimo Affaioli’s drawings. Unfortunately, I have not smelled anything from St. Clair. I’m from EU.

  • doveskylark says:

    I love reading anything about Diane St. Clair. I know she lives in New England, where I have a place. I am always amazed ay her inspirations and how her knowledge of nature informs her creations. I always wonder what her next inspirations will be. The notes in Pandora and Eve sound juicy and forceful–like all the best women. As gardener, I love Gardener’s Glove.
    I live in the USA.

  • I’d really love to smell the “sylvan profondeur” that is Pandora. I’ve heard a lot of wonderful things about Ms. St Clair’s work from an American friend, hope to try them all someday soon!

    Russia

  • The comparison to the Greek and Hebrew myths was interesting. Especially since I’ve had to brush up on biblical criticism lately, so it’s been on my mind. The scent itself is sort of difficult to figure out. It sounds green, vegetal, and somewhat dry though.
    I havent tried any from the house
    Im in the US. thanks for the draw

  • Y’know, I never knew that Pandora was considered the first woman by the Greeks. Lilith is who I associate with first. Maybe they are the same. Guess I don’t know my greek mythology very well, and will have to rectify that.Thanks for turning me on to a new avenue of education. I am in the U.S.

  • I found the artwork featured in this post to be exceptionally beautiful! Seems to capture the gentle, feminine spirit of these fragrances as Ida has described. I have yet to try anything fro St. Clair, unfortunately. US

  • I’ve always been a fan of mythology and the tomato leaf note especially caught my attention because that’s one of my favorite scents. Thanks for the draw! USA

  • Amazing review, as always i have never tried St Clair fragrances, but according to Ida’s review, Pandora and Eve must be very interesting. Would love to test them.

  • I love the idea of making perfume as a tribute to women.
    Telling about Eve and Pandora must be a hard task, specially when we choose a fragrance as a way of communication.
    I am really curious of common notes that tthese rwo fragrances share. And also of these additional notes which make Pandora a darker scent.
    I don’t know any of St. Clair’s work. I am from Poland.

  • Scentitar Fragrance says:

    What appealed to me most was the intent to capture the feeling of cureosityb and even rebelliousness ! I love that inspiration and have never tried this brand before, but hope to find a favorite ! USA

  • I have tried Garners glove and Casablanca! Fantastic. I would love to try these new ones. Lovely descriptions by Ida. interesting to create fragrances for Eve and Pandora. Love it! USA