10/21/14
Play (Givenchy)
10/19/14
The Dust Collectors: Why No Sales?
"The dude is asking $14500! That awful garbage is worth $800 at most. Not the price of a brand new Chrysler."
"Owned an 85 Yugo GV. First car right out of college. Had it 4 years, took care of it, and did the maintenance when it was due. Had 56000 miles on it and it never broke down. Other than tires and brakes I had no issues. Would love to find one I can work on with my son. But not for $14,000!"
"I want to buy this car, but it's nowhere near worth $14,500, my older brother had one brand new and only payed $1000 for it. So now I wouldn't even pay that, I would only pay like $300 for it, maybe $500.
1. Relax, Davidoff (1990) This is my favorite discontinued posher, a fragrance which today only the well-funded are allowed to enjoy, it seems. Released 24 years ago, it was an almost instant commercial failure, and in some ways that actually pulls its current high prices closer to the breast of reason. One can argue that Relax never had a chance for people to embrace its beauty, as it was pulled too soon. Sometimes brands do that, pull a product because they didn't do adequate market research on it, and can no longer justify the distribution costs. Unfortunately though I think Relax was out long enough to catch on, simply because there's such a preponderance of bottles out there still, which tells me that the world's stock was extensive enough for at least one or two large countries to shine to it. That simply did not happen. It was not moving units. But why? The answer is in the scent itself. Davidoff, like Joop! and many other designer brands, has a signature synthetic accord that is reminiscent of rosewood and pipe tobacco, a very burly little number that is quite nice. Zino has it, even Cool Water has a hint of it. Relax had it too, but that was all Relax had, the basic two-chord aroma wafting gently from under a sweet mint top. What does that amount to? A good perfume, certainly, but rather like an overdone Skin Bracer. Was it worth $20 an ounce back then? Not to consumers. So should it be worth $125 an ounce now? Regrettably not. Pretty bottle, though.2. Zino, Davidoff (1986) Davidoff discontinued most of their older scents, and Zino may have been a victim of overproduction. I would guess that what happened in the middle of the 1980s, here in the States and in Europe, was symptomatic of most problems with these oldies. Zino was an excellent fragrance in its own right, a very brisk lavender/rosewood extravaganza that smelled dark, mysterious, sexy, a little dirty. All good things, but look out! Here it comes: it's dated. I wore Zino on a weekend in Prague with a woman very dear to my heart, and she hated it. She didn't have the heart to tell me. She wasn't one of these "I Love Pink" bubbleheads, either. She loved the darker things in life, and she was extremely intelligent, and a very modest dresser. But this fragrance made her wrinkle her nose and walk out of the room every time I put it on. One has to wonder what she would have said if she hadn't been more polite, but I think it would have gone something like this: "Bryan, your cologne is not good. I mean, okay, it smells like maybe good for an older cologne, but today? No. Just wanted to tell you that, dear." Ouch. I've included Zino in this list not as an example of a perfume that now commands ridiculous prices, but to show that even a decent, inexpensive oldie had a reason for being axed, and that reason applies to many of the old ones that are now gone.Updated thoughts, 2/15/15: I may have been a bit harsh on Zino here, as I personally think it's lovely, but I still believe it is dated - people around me tend to react negatively to it. When I read that it's discontinued, it doesn't surprise me at all. However, when I say it's dated, I'm beginning to wonder about the date in question. Is Zino still being manufactured and distributed by Coty? Are they operating under the pretense of "Lancaster," a long-defunct brand association from the nineties? Is this another "By Mennen" situation, as with Skin Bracer? In any case, pending further evidence, I'll have to keep this filed as a discontinued classic, but if availability continues to be as good as it's been for another year or two, I may have to remove this from the list. Right now the confusing aspect to Zino is that it's been, by all appearances, cut loose by Coty. Yet it continues to swamp Amazon search results at ridiculously reasonable prices. Very strange.3. Derby, Guerlain (1985) Maybe it's my opinion of Derby. Maybe it's the fact that I don't cow to other people's bullshit when it comes to how "great" certain perfumes supposedly are. Maybe it's just that Derby really doesn't smell all that good. To this day, I'm mystified by how anyone could think this perfume is worth hundreds of today's dollars. There's one on Ebay right now, a 3.4 ounce square-bottle, for $800. This is an okay perfume. It smells fine, in a very safe, conventional, no-frills guy sort of way. The nutmeg was done before by Cacharel. The woody citrus thing? Done by many others, and most of them better. Guerlain's own Vetiver, in the older formulation, is but one example. But it's Guerlain, so shouldn't it be worth a gazillion dollars? Guerlain is notorious for having been mismanaged over the decades, as many of these older French concerns seem to be. Perhaps the discontinuation of Derby was one of those bad managerial decisions, but I think people really didn't like it. I'm amenable to this sort of breezy, Warren Beatty-esque old-school masculine, but I don't like Derby. Why don't I like it? I don't think it's very good. If I had to guess - and with its discontinuation in my corner - I'd say I wasn't alone in my assessment. Even the reissued version smells better. If not enough people were buying it in the eighties, and old stock doesn't smell very good now, why in the living fuck would I shell out $800 for it? You tell me.4. Jules, Dior (1980) Reading the reviews of this one tells me all I need to know (I've never smelled it). People can't mention Jules without mentioning Kouros by YSL. A common meme in the world of vintage perfume fantasy is that the extinct species closely resembles a living specimen. In this case, the survivor was clearly the better perfume. Why does the world need a proto-Kouros? Every pre-war wetshaver masculine had already filled those shoes, but Jules tried and failed to win hearts with nostalgia. The Kouros family resemblance continues to bear out in the survivors with the lowest price tags, things like Lapidus PH and even smaller bottles of Balenciaga PH. Jules was always pricy, originally just under Kouros' price-point, before Ebayers ratcheted the costs up to $270, $350, and $500, as can be seen on there today. You'd be better off buying vintage Kouros for the same amount. At least you're getting the genes that nature perfected in that one, all of which are traceable to Creed's Orange Spice, if Bourdon is the author of that scent as well.5. KL Homme, Karl Lagerfeld (1986) Prices for this one have been steadily rising over the last twelve months, which tells me that people are beginning to weed through their perfume collections to find things they can "bank" on, and make room for the shit they'll actually wear on a regular basis. I paid less than $40 for my 2 oz bottle a little while ago at a store here in CT, but the same size is going for around $75 now on that awful Bay, and larger bottles are over $100. This is a clear case of a perfume existing for no reason, other than to make money. KL Homme is a very well made, very likable powdery oriental, with a robust amber accord and very competent citrus elements on top. Yet it does nothing new, truly adds nothing to conversations about orientals, and isn't very memorable. It's just a nice fragrance to wear. But $75 - $100 nice? No. There's no doubt in my mind that KL Homme lost market share to Calvin Klein's Obsession for Men, which used to be a very rich citrus/incense fragrance, made with materials that I find to be of equal, if not better quality. I still have my vintage bottle of Obsession, and though its notes are no longer separable (time has ravaged it), the basic premise serves memory well: exciting, sexy, worth owning. KL Homme? Smells nice, but not as complex, and more than a little dull. Did guys agree back in the day? Without a doubt. Does it smell more complex and interesting in 2014? Only barely. Hey, if you want to spend three or four times more than the perfume is worth because you think it's "aged well," I can't stop you. Personally I'd wait until I spot it at a real market price ($25 - $35) in a brick and mortar, but that's just me.6. Joint Pour Homme, Roccobarocco (1993) I almost forgot to mention Joint! Funny story: once upon a time, as in a year ago, Joint was on Ebay for astronomical prices. You couldn't get an ounce without spending at least $100, and 3.4 ounces were priced at $200, easy. At least, that's what they were asking. Then a funny thing happened - nobody bought it. Why? Because nobody's ever fucking heard of Joint, that's why. So in round six of dumbass perfume economics, let's break it down. A perfume is made. A perfume is barely marketed, if at all, and then nobody buys it because nobody knows it exists, and the few who do only buy it once because once they wear it, they realize it's just another eighties clone holdover, this time mimicking Zino, but with civet and heavy, vanillic castoreum. It has an impressive dusky, burly, animalic/woody structure for about three hours, and then the cash runs out and it fuzzes into nothing, a surprising and disappointing end, even for a clone. Come full circle twenty years later, and for whatever reason a few guys on Ebay decide to try to put the chicken before the egg, and jack the prices on Joint. They hope that people will happen upon it, find it to be very expensive, research it, and think, "Okay, this one is for 'aficionados,' and I am an aficionado, because I will spend two hundred dollars on a three ounce bottle." But no, it doesn't happen. Why doesn't it happen? Because people in 1993 didn't know Joint existed, so why the hell would they know it exists in 2013? A year later, all those greedy buggers on the Bay realized that it's better to make a little money than no money at all, and the prices were corrected down to $38 an ounce, something that only happens with discontinued perfumes that LITERALLY NOBODY HAS EVER HEARD OF BEFORE, EXCEPT MAYBE SEVEN OR EIGHT GUYS ON BASENOTES. One or two of those guys might argue, "But Bryan, don't you think that what really happened is that a 'secret stash' of Joint was discovered and disseminated to the Ebay merchants somehow, and that's the reason for the price reductions?" My very wordy, drawn-out, Woody Allen-esquely intellectually stimulating answer? No. See the above.7. Red for Men, Giorgio Beverly Hills (1991) Last but not least is my favorite old-school frag to criticize, and for good reason, as it's a very mediocre offering. Some have said they think it's a marvel, beautifully complex, relatively natural, and one of a kind. "Better than Niche." Yeah, right. First of all, the same people who say this often follow it by saying something like, "If you want something similar to vintage Red but without the synthetic aspect of the reformulation, try Preferred Stock by Coty." This comparison cracks me up. Actually, it's the statement that "Preferred Stock smells like vintage Red for Men" that cracks me up, to be specific. Why is that funny? Because it's exactly backwards: Red was released AFTER Preferred Stock. If anything, vintage Red smells like Preferred Stock, not the other way around. So why even bother with Red? Okay, I'll be fair enough and say that Red's older formula apparently smelled a bit more complex and textured than Preferred Stock ever did, but then why was it discontinued? This brings me back to the Jules/Kouros problem - fragrances competing with themselves. When two frags smell very similar, the better smell is bound to survive, even if it came second, as Kouros did. Red for Men was never worth any more than its standard retail price, but somewhere along the way people started thinking that its demand was sizable enough to warrant doubling, even tripling the asking price for 3.4 oz bottles. In recent years there was quite a bit of conversation about it on Fragrantica and Basenotes, and indeed I believe that there was a pool of consumers who remembered Red and wanted it back. Nostalgic pinings, one might say. That was enough for manufacturers to reissue the fragrance, but only at the hilariously discounted price of $20, roughly $6 an ounce. This makes it cheaper than its template, the still going, going, going energizer bunny Preferred Stock! The irony. In the end, I think the original Red was probably very nice, because Preferred Stock is very nice, and I'm sure it warrants its reissue, although the new version is not as nice as Preferred Stock ever was. The guy on Ebay right now asking $99 for a 3.4 oz bottle of the original formula can sit and spin, although I applaud him for taking a $50 fragrance and only trying to double his money, unlike the merchant blitz that went on five years ago, with guys trying to jack prices up to $500. Unlike Patou PH, you don't see those insanely-priced bottles of Red on Ebay anymore. Why? People bought the reissued Red, remembered why they stopped buying it in the nineties, and were "Reality-Checked." The fan club learned that it doesn't pay to view the past through Red-rosy colored glasses.
10/18/14
Green Generation Him (Parfums Mavive)
10/13/14
Eau des 4 Reines (L'Occitane)
10/10/14
"Getting" Turin's Opinion On Cool Water
The Good Doctor took considerable flak for his now-famous reviews of Green Irish Tweed and Cool Water, and in 2009, I had little sympathy for him. After all, Green Irish Tweed is beloved by many—a masterfully crafted masculine fragrance with historical significance that only the most entrenched industry insiders truly understand. (Ironclad confirmation of its creator remains elusive to this day.) Many in the fragrance community, including Turin, believe that Pierre Bourdon is the nose behind Green Irish Tweed, and I agree, though Bourdon himself has never publicly claimed credit.
In a recent interview discussing his work for Malle, Bourdon remarked that his best work was not realized through his commercial efforts, suggesting his niche portfolio was far superior. This view puts many at odds with him, especially considering Creed’s status as a commercial perfumery, rooted in tailoring traditions and now heavily focused on mass-market profits. If Green Irish Tweed, a Creed creation, isn’t an example of Bourdon’s best work, I, along with many others, am left puzzled as to what is. His assessment is further complicated by the fact that he authored Davidoff’s Cool Water.
Turin faced backlash when he awarded five stars to Cool Water in Perfumes: The Guide, while giving Green Irish Tweed only four. Many saw this as a slight against Creed, especially since Turin’s disdain for the brand is palpable in his writing. Others speculated that Turin’s technical appreciation for synthetic perfumery may have led him to overpraise Davidoff’s innovation. Here’s where I diverged from those discussions. While I agree that Turin takes a derisive stance toward Olivier Creed’s firm, I disagree with the notion that Cool Water is the lesser fragrance. In fact, this post marks my official stance: Cool Water, in both its vintage and current formulations, is superior to Green Irish Tweed—and, for me, the more desirable perfume. Despite owning several bottles of GIT, I can confidently say I enjoy it far less than Cool Water for a few key reasons. Before diving into those, let me explain why Creed has lost some of its allure for me.
I’ve worn Green Irish Tweed off and on for five years, though I only developed a passing appreciation for it in 2011. On the other hand, I’ve been familiar with Cool Water for at least twenty years, having owned a small bottle at one point. Back in high school and college, I didn’t care much for Cool Water. It was too soapy, too strong, too strange—like shampoo turned up to eleven, with extra emphasis on green apple and peppermint. As a teenager, those notes did little for me. Since then, however, I’ve grown to appreciate this fragrance and others like it. My enjoyment now stems from recognizing that few fragrances for men balance masculinity and femininity as well as Cool Water does—and even fewer do it with such bright, cheerful notes. Fizzy mint and green apple, blond driftwoods and violets all come together in what should be a mess, but Bourdon masterfully made something special. (To see how this genre can go wrong, take a whiff of Wings for Men.)
In the 2000s, I took a break from this type of fragrance, distracted by other interests, yet ironically wore Allure Homme—a scent inspired by Cool Water and Green Irish Tweed—daily for nearly ten years. I remember smelling Green Irish Tweed for the first time and thinking, “That’s it?” It was familiar, ordinary, and synthetically spiky, eventually settling into a smooth woody-musky base that was excellent but hardly exciting. I liked it, but the dry-down grew on me slowly, and there were times I wondered if I might be falling in love with it. Let’s be honest: few brands do fresh and crisp accords better than Creed, and GIT is nothing if not fresh and friendly. The fragrance sparkles from the atomizer, full of violety esters and ambery richness. Yes, I noticed its similarity to Cool Water, but I forgave that because of how smooth and rich it smelled.
Then, just for fun, I revisited Cool Water, expecting it to pale in comparison—designer-grade, perhaps, but not genuinely comparable. To my surprise, the cheaper scent smelled remarkably similar to GIT, especially given the price difference. Rather than fade over time, that similarity became more pronounced, until I found myself reaching for Cool Water more than GIT. After three years of this, I finally reassessed both fragrances. My enthusiasm for the more expensive Green Irish Tweed had waned, while my appreciation for Cool Water had been resurrected. After extensive side-by-side comparisons, discussions with friends and relatives, and even some road-testing for reactions, the results were fascinating.
Among the most telling reactions came from my girlfriend at the time, Danielle. Without diving into our relationship, I’ll share her thoughts on the two fragrances. On one of our early dates, I wore Green Irish Tweed. She mentioned I smelled good, and that was that. Later, I switched to Green Valley for a few months, to which she seemed indifferent. When I returned to GIT, she remarked, “It’s nice, but why do men’s colognes always smell like deodorant?” Later that night, she added, “Your cologne is giving me a headache—it’s so strong, I can almost taste it.” Not the most flattering feedback, especially while eating Thai food. I didn’t wear it around her again. However, I did wear Cool Water. One night, Danielle recalled how much she had hated the colognes worn by boys in high school, specifically mentioning Drakkar Noir, Acqua di Gio, and Brut. She then singled out Cool Water, saying, “That was the worst. I don’t know why guys couldn’t wear something like what you’re wearing today—it smells amazing.” Bitter irony: I was wearing Cool Water. After I told her, she backtracked, saying, “It smells good on you, though.” Naturally, I launched into an explanation of Cool Water’s relationship to GIT, but her eyes glazed over.
Every time I wore Cool Water after that, she complimented it. I struggled to understand—how could she find GIT too strong but love Cool Water, which isn’t exactly subtle? It wasn’t until last year that I finally reconciled my thinking. Though I had worn GIT sporadically and never received compliments, Cool Water garnered positive remarks every few months, almost always from women. Despite being a cheaper fragrance, Cool Water was winning the compliments battle, hands down. Last week, I wore Green Irish Tweed to celebrate October’s arrival, hoping for a different reaction. In closer quarters with more people around, surely someone would notice. On day three, a younger woman remarked that she could smell my fragrance as she entered the room—but from thirty feet away, in a very large space. It wasn’t exactly a compliment, more an observation of how far it projected. That left me questioning GIT once again.
When I reapplied Cool Water after work today, I realized the issue. Green Irish Tweed, often praised as the more natural of the two, is not. While GIT is undeniably richer, smoother, and louder, it is just as synthetic as Cool Water. Neither scent has a counterpart in nature but are more like the FDA's "natural flavors." Once the “natural” argument is off the table, the questions begin: Why is Green Irish Tweed so much more expensive? What justifies choosing it over Cool Water? For me, the answer is simple: I still enjoy GIT for its subtle differences, but I now find Cool Water more complex and refined. While GIT came first and deserves recognition for its originality, Cool Water has proven to be the more timeless, versatile scent.
10/6/14
Jimmy Choo Man (Jimmy Choo)
"The author has an extremely immature, overly-romanticized notion of sex. Sure, sex within a loving relationship is great, just like any fun activity can be enhanced by enjoying it with someone you love. But that isn't the ONLY way to enjoy . . . practice makes perfect. That is, sex is usually better after two people get to know each other sexually. The first time might be just fine--IF both parties know what they're doing. But it usually gets better over time. It simply isn't going to be 'glorious!' the first time. And the only thing 'life-changing' isn't the act itself, but just going from being a person who doesn't have sex, to one who does."