Contact me Ordering from the Perfumer Supply House website is currently disabled from October 1 through October 12 for inventory and maintenance. Access to emails will be spotty during this period as well but I will answer when I can.
All orders in the queue will be shipped during the shutdown.
We will re-open on Sunday October 13.
In the meantime, please consider signing up to my YouTube channel HERE to catch the Live AMA (ask me anything) video on Saturday October 19 at 11:00 am Eastern Daylight Time.
All orders in the queue will be shipped during the shutdown.
We will re-open on Sunday October 13.
In the meantime, please consider signing up to my YouTube channel HERE to catch the Live AMA (ask me anything) video on Saturday October 19 at 11:00 am Eastern Daylight Time.
dr_pablo –
This is a very old chemical which deserves more attention. Smelling on blotter alone gives a rather indistinct impression, smells it green? Milky? woody? It’s like a intense smell of nothing. But it give an incredible soft pillow integrating and taming sharpness of an agrestic- herbal top note accord of lavandin, armoise, clary sage, tarragon ect.. And it can be used probably many other contexts as well, awaiting exploration only.
callumrory –
Firstly, I’ll be honest. I really, really wanted to like Glycolierral. But there is a sweaty note in Glycolierral that I find quite repulsive. It’s giving tomato-vine meets armpit. Tomato vines have a sweaty tone. Go find some in your garden or at your grocer and get right in there and sniff. That’s what I pick up. However, I’m going to say, this is equally a fun, green molecule. Great for fig and for emphasising naturalistic qualities, like tomato vine, ivy, herb gardens. I also read on basenotes that Glycolierral was used to provide a green note to contrast the tuberose in Dior’s “J’adore”. However, it is quite quiet in a blend, unlike Stemone. But I will be ordering more, so the armpit note is not that bad…