Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Late Night Musings

Doesn't it just grind your butt up one side and down the other, all inside out when you think that you have a somewhat original idea; only to find out that somene else is already madly running with it?

Yeah. You know that feeling.

Perhaps it is not as dire a situation as I felt it was at the realization of it.  All my late night reading of 100 year old tomes, essential oil chemistry books and herbals has not gone to waste.  Of course that is never a waste, it's a valuable education and I will just have to make a few adjustments; and know that my products will have to be even more unique.

Unique, I can do.

I'm a firm believer that each individual puts a part of themselves into whatever it is that they create. That's the magic and beauty of it - each person adds a little bit of their own mojo into their creations. So what may attract someone to the other person's products - may not attract said person to mine. And vice-versa. I'm good with it all.







Sunday, August 7, 2016

“And so he would now study perfumes, and the secrets of their manufacture, distilling heavily-scented oils, and burning odorous gums from the East. He saw that there was no mood of the mind that had not its counterpart in the sensuous life, and set himself to discover their true relations, wondering what there was in frankincense that made one mystical, and in ambergris that stirred one’s passions, and in violets that woke the memory of dead romances, and in musk that troubled the brain, and in champak that stained the imagination; and seeking often to elaborate a real psychology of perfumes, and to estimate the several influences of sweet-smelling roots, and scented pollen-laden flower, of aromatic balms, and of dark and fragrant woods, of spikenard that sickens, of hovenia that makes men mad, and of aloes that are said to be able to expel melancholy from the soul.”


― Oscar WildeThe Picture of Dorian Gray



Monday, October 12, 2015

How Cute Are These?


These are 1ml sampler bottles I have in case you'd like to try out a blend first before buying the 10ml size. Aren't they cute?

How We Scent and Smell Our Way


Aaah, scent. Mystical, magical, ethereal. How is it that it can in an instant, take us back to a certain place or time? Make our food taste better? Or tell us not to eat it because it is spoiled? It is because of scent! Smell!  In the following article by Jeanne Rose, she talks about how scent unlocks so many things for us.

HOW WE SCENT & SMELL OUR WAY
            “Scents fit into the scent receptors the same way that a key fits into a lock.  And the flavor of food is a combined response to two of the chemical senses; taste and odor.  The sense of odor is more sensitive even in human beings that the sense of taste.  The sense of odor is the major contributor to the perception of flavor.
            A molecule has an odor is dependent on if it can excite and stimulate the olfactory nerve endings inside the nose.  In humans, these nerve endings occupy an area of yellow-brown colored epithelium that is about 5 sq. cm. (square centimeters or 1 inch X 1 inch).  It is in wafting a scent  utilizing eddy currents that this area is able to perceive odor.  When one sniffs and sniffs, it is the eddy currents, not direct blasts, that carry the molecules to this area.”
            WAFT, DON’T DRAFT  is the rule of the aromatherapy enthusiast.
            “The Sense of Smell is an interesting phenomenon.  There are 50 million or so receptors that compose the olfactory epithelium and these are all bare nerve endings.  There is no buffer between the outside world and these bare nerve receptor of the olfactory epithelium.  Thus the nervous system is in direct contact with the outside world: the brain is exposed in the nose.  This part of the brain, the smell brain or reptilian brain with its exposed sense of smell suggests that it is the oldest and most primitive of the senses.  We smell therefore we are.  Smell  is linked in terms of physical closeness with one of the more primitive parts of the brain, the limbic system which is the seat of memory and learning, the place and home and seat of the control of emotions.  We can perceive odors therefore we are alive and in direct contact with that which has made the human race human. This limbic system is the seat of the control of emotions and this may be the reason that scent can have such a powerful impact on our psyche.
            Smelly molecules are called odor vectors or osmophores (smell carrier).  (Osmo = smell in Greek and phore = to bear or to be borne).  It is unknown what the relationship is between the molecular structure of the molecules and the sensation they create that we call ‘its scent’.
            An odor vector must be volatile to reach the nose and secondly, it must be slightlysoluble in water  in order to dissolve in the mucus.  It is possible that these molecules act as detergents in order to carry insoluble molecules into the receptor sites.  It must interact with a protein molecule in the olfactory nerve endings, be able to modify its shape, and thus stimulate the nerve cell to send a smell (or other) message to the brain.
            It is probable that the same lock-and-key mechanism of taste operates the sense of smell.  A molecule of a particular shape can attach to a given protein molecule so long as it matches its shape in some respect.
            About 30 types of anosmia exist, which suggests at least 30 different types of locks that can be opened with the correct key (molecule).  Only a part of a molecule needs to fit snugly into a site to trigger a scent signal.  If it is flexible it can fit into more than one site and excite a mixed response.
            Lurking in the olfactory epithelium, among the mucus-exuding cells, are cells that are part of the system that innervates the face (trigeminal nerve).  It is suspected that pungent and putrid molecules penetrate them, interact with their proteins, and stimulate them to fire.  Thus, there are two types of olfaction: first smell, the ordinary type for specific odors, and second smell for nonspecific pungency and putridity.”
            The color of the  smell  area is important as well. “Found at the upper end of each nostril, the olfactory regions are yellow, richly moist, and full of fatty substances.  We think of heredity as ordaining (such physical characteristics as) how tall one will be, the shape of the face, and the color of the hair. Heredity also determines the shade of yellow of the olfactory area.  The deeper the shade, the keener and more acute the sense of smell.  Albinos have a poor sense of smell.  Animals, which can smell the beatific grandeur, have dark-yellow olfactory regions; ours (humans) are light yellow. The fox is reddish brown, the cat’s an intense mustard brown.”  Thus these animals have a more pronounced ability to detect odors.
Reference: P.W. Atkins: MOLECULES; Freeman; 1987.
Ackerman, Diane, THE COLOUR OF SMELL from the Natural History of the Senses.
©All Rights Reserved 2003, 2004. No part of this article may be used
without prior permission from The Aromatic Plant Project.
©Author’s Copyright and Jeanne Rose, info@aromaticplantproject.com

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

One of those quiet dandies......

Charles Baudelaire was one of those quiet dandies who have their clothes rubbed with emery paper in order to take off the Sunday and brand-new gloss so dear to Philistines and so unbearable to well-bred men.
—Théophile Gautier

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

La Beauté by Charles Baudelaire























La Beauté
Je suis belle, ô mortels! comme un rêve de pierre,
Et mon sein, où chacun s'est meurtri tour à tour,
Est fait pour inspirer au poète un amour
Eternel et muet ainsi que la matière.

Je trône dans l'azur comme un sphinx incompris;
J'unis un coeur de neige à la blancheur des cygnes;
Je hais le mouvement qui déplace les lignes,
Et jamais je ne pleure et jamais je ne ris.

Les poètes, devant mes grandes attitudes,
Que j'ai l'air d'emprunter aux plus fiers monuments,
Consumeront leurs jours en d'austères études;

Car j'ai, pour fasciner ces dociles amants,
De purs miroirs qui font toutes choses plus belles:
Mes yeux, mes larges yeux aux clartés éternelles!
 Charles Baudelaire

Beauty
I am fair, O mortals! like a dream carved in stone,
And my breast where each one in turn has bruised himself
Is made to inspire in the poet a love
As eternal and silent as matter.

On a throne in the sky, a mysterious sphinx,
I join a heart of snow to the whiteness of swans;
I hate movement for it displaces lines,
And never do I weep and never do I laugh.

Poets, before my grandiose poses,
Which I seem to assume from the proudest statues,
Will consume their lives in austere study;

For I have, to enchant those submissive lovers,
Pure mirrors that make all things more beautiful:
My eyes, my large, wide eyes of eternal brightness!

— William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)

Sunday, February 1, 2015

The Blue Bird by Frank Cadogan Cowper (1877-1958)

Oooh to be this calm, without anxiety or stress would be. . . . hmm. Not sure what it's like to be that way anymore.