June is right around the corner and so with it brings the big blooming season of my cherished roses in the garden. The yellow roses are in bloom now as they start early but the others are just beginning to bud. This may be in reaction to a long, cold but very wet snap we’ve had since mid-April. The roses are loving the extra moisture and I’m expecting an incredible show in about a week.
It actually couldn’t be better timing as I’m preparing a talk for the Denver Rose Society at the Denver Botanic Gardens on June 10th. The talk will be all about roses, rose molecules that give the aromatic signature of ‘rosey’ and how this applies to the creation of rose perfumes. I’m really excited! I LOVE talking about roses and rose fragrances; especially how they might seem easy to create because there are so many of them and the rose scent is so recognizable. Of course, it’s really deceptive. There are a gazillion different roses with as many varying scents and if you’ve started to *smell the roses* you know this is true. It’s actually true of lots of flowers: we think we know them but if we start to examine them more closely they show many ‘faces’ and many fragrances.
Since last Fall or maybe even earlier I’ve been immersed in flowers and floral perfumes. I’m not sure why, exactly; the inspiration as well as the work itself has brought me to the garden again and again. With the Brilliant Collection for the Cartier exhibit a multi-facteted white floral emerged for Deco Diamonds, a lush, damp earth hyacinth for Jacinthe de Sapphir, and a deep ruby-hued rose for Rubis Rosé. There’s a fascinating array of fruit nuances found in roses, from zesty citrus nuances, to crisp apple and juicy pear, to lush blackcurrant and berry-like notes. Rubis Rosé has a deep tea rose in the heart and a bright red raspberry top note. It’s a combination of influences: my neighbor’s vintage (1960’s) tea roses and the fabulous berry quality of classic red long stems. I also wanted to create a rose design that spoke to a real classicism as well as the mid-century fruited-aldehydic-floral.
You know, speaking of aldehydics and roses, I find it very interesting that some of the roses in my garden display a sort of green aldehydic quality. Part of it is a linalool-ish citral (citrus-y) flash and other parts are the geranium-like, green rosey aromas of geraniol and geranyl acetate. The yellow roses (the Austrian Copper roses especially) that are blooming right now have this incredible scent. It has those geranium-rose notes at play with an almost metallic kick as if it were a constructed perfume with the citrus-green rosy mix of aldehyde c-8 and aldehyde c-12 Enic in the top. I love it!
Years ago I created an all-botanical yellow rose scent called “en Vacances” which is based on a Harrison’s Yellow that grew in my back yard when I was a kid. It always bloomed on the last day of school. To me it was the scent of Summer Vacation. Saving Grace, also in the Garden Bathe aromatherapy perfume collection, is another more woody-based, more clearly rose (I smell it as pink) design that has some of these characteristic gernium-rosey tonalities as well.
But it’s not just the geranium-rosey aromas that are coming out of the rose garden. One of my favorite aspects that is showing up is the characteristic peppery-green notes wafting from the leaves and stems on the centifolias and the fabulous scent coming from the green apple – aldehydic fragranced leaves of my eglantine. It’s reminiscent of certain peonies, which for me are filed away in my mind as a subcategory of rose note flowers. They are their own delicious, wonderful thing, of course, and they too have quite a lot of variation from dewy, ever so slightly powdery-apricot-y, to softly watery pear, to a very deep and spiced rosy-green. Last year I created a Peony perfume after many years thinking on it. I wanted to tell a story like a ‘day in the life’ of the peony flower kind of experience. I could bring it from a slightly metallic-green, softly peppery – softened with dew note at the beginning, through its most ‘rosey’ phase and into a twilight shaded and darker aspect in the drydown. I’m not sure it’s for everyone but I really like it and I feel it tells it’s story nicely.
I grow a fair number of “Old Roses” but I hadn’t really pushed myself to decipher their varied nuances to the point of creating a perfume to speak to their unique characters until recently. Deeply honey – spice, almost carnation-esque, the old rose types are rich and can be a bit heavy. It would be very easy to get involved with a perfume design around the old rose scent and end up at “granny rose” in no time. Not that the roses themselves do the powdery note that I most associate with granny rose but the density of their scent and how you work with that quality could get you there if you weren’t very careful to avoid it. I’ve smelled too many old rose and tea rose perfumes that, for me, smell of granny rose due to their sheer density. (If you couldn’t tell: Granny rose is not my thing. At all. But I digress). I can’t talk much about a recent project I’ve been involved with for Denver Art Museum just yet but I will say that it’s allowed me to delve into the old roses character some and pull it into a rose bouquet that is unlike any of my other rose designs. First off, it’s not intended to be a rose soliflore but the rose is clearly experienced along with a couple of other focal floral notes. There will be more on that topic, and more very soon. 😉
This seems like as good a place to stop part 1 for now. I’m hoping that as I send this out and in the next few days, some of the other buds will pop out into full blossom.
I’m so thrilled to be talking flowers and roses in particular, that I’d like to offer a little drawing for 3 sets of 3 – mini sprayers of Rubis Rosé EdP, Peony EdP, and en Vacances EdP. Please leave a comment about your favorite rose and/or rose perfume to enter. The 3 winners will be chosen at random in the wee hours of June 6th so the deadline to enter is 11:59 pm on June 5th. Winners will be announced on June 6th. I hope that everyone will enjoy the start of Summer and good luck in the draw! ox
* images are all my own. you can see most or variations on them at my instagram page.
R. Ispahan is blooming outside my front door this morning. The scent on the air is heavenly! R. centifolia variegata is about to bloom. That’s another great fragrance.
Where do you live, James? My Ispahan isn’t even fully budded yet but my Napoleon’s Hat ( a moss centfolia ) is just starting to open a few of it’s buds. Both are heavenly and I can easily imagine what your garden smells of just now. Mmmmm. 🙂 Good luck in the draw!
Your pictures are gorgeous and your garden must be spectacular! I am pretty clueless about roses despite the fact that they are one of my favorite notes – hey, my user name is rosarita, after all 😉 Many favorite rose perfumes: soliflore is your American Beauty, incense rose is Inner Sanctum; I also love Tauer Rose Chypree, Nahema, NV Mohur, many Rosines, I could go on…thanks for the draw and have fun with the presentation!
Hi, Rosarita! It’s such a treat to see you; thank you for popping in with your comment and the kind words. 🙂 I love your perfume picks; so many GORGEOUS rose perfumes! I should think that Rubis Rosé would be really great for you should you win the drawing; Good Luck!
Hi Dawn, My favorite roses are “La Vie en Rose”, your beautiful dressed up rose which to me is a more beautiful, rosy version of Chanel No 5. And I also enjoy Mohur, NV’s Moghul version of a rose perfume. Thanks for the draw!. By the way, if I were suddenly to wake up and find myself a queen, I would definitely ask you to be my royal perfumer!
WOW, Cynthia! 🙂 I can’t imagine a bigger compliment than to be your dream, Royal Perfumer! I’m incredibly flattered and delighted! I’m so happy that you love La Vie en Rose and Mohur is so, so beautiful, too. Good Luck in the draw and thank you for commenting.
I love roses, period!! Can not pick a fave scent due to this 🙂 You are as deeply in rose-love as anyone to be able to create your wonderful scents!! Thanks for the draw 🙂
Hi, Hotlanta Linda! Thanks for commenting! I know just how you feel… there really are so many spectacular roses AND rose perfumes. Thank you for the kind compliment and good luck in the draw, too. 🙂
I am enjoying your flower series of posts so much! I adore roses. I can’t think of a favorite rose because, as you say, there are so many, each different in its own way, from the deeply sensual winey crimson to the pale pink and white roses. Each is exquisite. I’m liking Penhaligon’s Elisabethan Rose at the moment for its easy wearableness as a perfume, though I’ve only sampled it so far.
Thank you, Sherrie! 🙂 I’m so enjoying the opportunity to share about all of my favorite flowers. I will have to get a sniff of Penhaligon’s Elisabethan Rose perfume; I haven’t smelled one of theirs in the longest. You’re so right, too, about all of the fabulous roses out there. When I started my rose garden it was my goal to have at least one rose from each genus but there are so many lovely, lovely roses that I have a gigantic list of roses that I still want to plant. I think someday there won’t be any yard left… just roses. Good luck in the draw and thank you for commenting.
I just loved reading your article on Roses! It puts me in such a happy mood–reminds me of my Grandma. I’m partial to Rose de Mai. Rubis Rose sounds right up my alley with it’s top not of red raspberry.
Hi, Suzy~ Thank you! 🙂 I’m sure you can tell that I LOVE talking roses! I love that the post reminded you of your Grandma…that touches my heart. Good luck in the draw and I hope that, should you win, you will let me know how you like Rubis Rosé. ❤
Great post Dawn! I love the flower pix!
Thanks Stevie!! 🙂 What a treat to see you here! Big hugs to you~ oxox Good Luck in the drawing, too!
Love the Stevie Nicks reference in the title. 🙂 Some of my favorite rose perfumes are Portrait of a Lady, Who Knew?, and Saffron Rose.
Hi, B! Thank you for commenting! “Portrait” is beautiful but I haven’t had the opportunity to smell Saffron Rose. I see a new mission… 🙂 Good luck in the drawing!
hello my fellow artist. To be honest, i never smelled a rose perfume that i couldn’t wear or like, unless it’s synthetic. I love MFK’s Silk Mood which is an our and rose combo.
Hi, Joe! 🙂 How wonderful to see you here and thank you for your comment! I have to try MFK’s Silk Mood. I haven’t smelled any of his newer releases as I don’t get out as much as I used to… but look forward to the opportunity to sniff. I love Rose / Oud designs! YUM-MY! I hope you will like my three roses in the drawing, should you be one of the winners; good luck!
Oh my goodness! Roses, roses & more roses. As you know I LOVE your American Beauty fragrance. It’s the closest I’ve smelled to my own roses. My garden in NJ had 33 glorious roses bushes and I miss them dearly. St Louis doesn’t have the same growing conditions, despite being in the same zone. I see know that I have only scratched the surface of your rose scents. I need to get busy sampling more of your scents.
In addition to your American Beauty, I love wearing FM’s Une Rose. That earthy truffle scent combined with the rose just gets to me!
It’s good to hear from you, Dawn.
Many hugs,
Christine
Christine!!! 🙂 How wonderful to hear from you! ❤
I'm sad that you had to leave so many roses behind… but I think that you may be able to get some good ones going in St. Louis yet. It seems that it would be wet enough. I'm going to keep my eyes peeled for info on roses for that climate (not just zone); ones that might be amazing in a bit more 'lushness' let's say 😉
I wish you luck in the draw, too. Should you be a winner you'd get to try some new designs! I think that Rubis Rosé would be right up your alley. oxox
Thanks so much for all the wonderful roses! I used to live within walking distance to The Huntington Library & Gardens so I used to walk there all the time and they had an incredible rose garden, which makes sense since Pasadena is the home of the Tournament of Roses parade and the Rose Bowl. So many beautiful roses to sniff! I really like Cartier Goutte de Rose for summer and SL La Fille de Berlin, Annick Goutal Rose Splendid, and many others. I love peonies too, so I would love to smell your wonderful interpretation! Thanks so much!
Hi, Calshopper! 🙂 Thank you for stopping by and for your comment! Oh, I have only been to Pasadena twice but the next time I am there I will HAVE to get to the Huntington Library and Gardens… it sounds so splendid. Good luck in the drawing! Should you be a winner, I hope that you will love everything, especially the Peony.
My favorite rose perfume is the oriental floral Rose Anonyme by Atelier Cologne.
Hi, Hofken~ Thank you for sharing your favorite rose perfume and for entering the drawing. I haven’t had the chance to smell this (newer) Atelier fragrance but I do love their overall style. I can’t wait to get out and sniff this one. 🙂
Hi Dawn, I’ve wanted to post a comment since this began, but thought it might be too much. Now, I see I’m in good company as my favorite Rose perfume is your Pretty & Pink. I’m really just beginning to enjoy rose fragrance on myself. I’ve always loved the smell of roses, and it’s only recently(with thanks to you) that I actually think rose smells nice on me. It would be very nice to be able to experiment some more. Thank you for the draw!
🙂 Hee, Melissa! It’s not too much at all; I love comments! I’m so happy to know that my rose perfumes have worked so well for you and that they’ve helped you wear roses. I have a similar problem: rose perfumes, generally, don’t smell good on me. They tend to go very sour or WAY too sweet… so much that they seem sour (ick!). I love designing them , tough an try, when designing to make ones that might also work for me. Some yes, some no… I wish you good luck in the drawing and hope that you’ll get the chance to test some more roses! ❤
Oh! I forgot to add how beautiful the rose photos are!
Thanks so much! You can probably tell that I’m a visual artists that doesn’t get enough time in my painting studio so I have to make due with my iphone, lol. 🙂