Posts Tagged ‘choose a perfume’

How To Choose A Perfume?

There is not an eventual advice because everyone interprets odors in their own way, and the same fragrance can smell completely different considering type of skin, hair color, temperament and even the season of a year. There are important nuances if you do not want to seem vulgar or absent of taste.

First, when you select a perfume, do not statement on anybody except yourself. When you breathe in the scent, envision yourself in it, wear it, like an unseen dress, and look at. Does it fit you? After some training, you will learn which of them ideal suits you.

Second, do not purchase cheap perfumes in occidental places.

Third, when using perfumes it is important to take to statement the season, the clothes and the place where you are planning to go. It is known that day perfumes are subtler and more transparent than evening perfumes which are considered as darker and richer in their aroma and mysteriousness.

At work at the office or just on a walk, it is superior to use day perfumes; they are softer and lighter. In the evening, going to the theatre, it is essential to accentuate the luxury.
When you are preparing to a date, refrain using perfumes that include lavender, wood, cumarine and bergamot. Your secret goal is to temptate your man, to shock his senses, to give him a hope, not to demonstrate chesty independence and unavailability.

There is an advice of an old Russian perfumer who had worked for many years for CHANEL: “At night, use perfumes with fruity scents- they evoke the taste (flavor) sense. These odors turn a woman from a flower to a lustful fruit that promises pleasure”.
In winter, cypress perfumes are recommended. Their heavy, sharp woody notes accentuate the luxury of furs and give a feeling of internal heat. By the way, in 1948 Rochas introduced a special winter perfume to use on furs only.

In summer, it is suggested to use sweet-honey and flowery perfumes. They make woman feel like a blossoming fresh flower. Never exaggerate with perfumes. Psychologists have evidenced that our sense of smell stop reacting to odors we are used to, but people around us feel them very well. So it is not suggested to exaggerate if you do not want to become an goal of irritation.