So what is it that makes handmade products so special? What makes people seek out products from handmade businesses over big name brands mass produced and sold using truly mind-blowing marketing budgets? One reason is the extra time, care and quality these handmade business owners put into their products. Look at the growing number of handmade perfume businesses out there.
A growing number of people are creating beautiful artisan perfumes that are made entirely of essences extracted directly from plant materials. These ingredients include precious oils taken from delicate neroli flowers and rose petals, along with a few extracts that will surprise you — like coffee beans, butter, and even beeswax! Here’s how some better known handmade perfume makers distinguish themselves, their brands and their products from all others.
Sweet Smelling Handmade Perfume Businesses
Aftelier Perfumes: Mandy Aftel, California
Mandy is an author and teacher who is considered by many to be one of the most talented and sought after perfumers in the world. Her perfumes contain oils she has sourced from the four corners of the earth. In addition to a custom in-studio (Berkeley) perfume consultation, you can purchase perfumes and other personal care products including face, hair, and body elixirs and fragranced organic teas. She even offers a set of the six essences that are used in things like candy, chocolate, and ice cream: clove, coriander, lavender, peppermint, ylang ylang, and wild sweet orange.
Says Mandy:
I love remaining small, and work with awe and passion for the alchemy that transforms rare essences into gorgeous perfumes. They are sold exclusively on my website and are not available in stores.
Visit Aftelier Perfumes.
Charna Ethier: Providence Perfume, Rhode Island
Charna is a supremely talented perfumer. Providence Perfumes are Fifi award nominated, which is the highest honor in the industry. I personally cannot say enough about Charna’s perfumes. I have sampled several of them, and while they are all wonderful, I have a special fondness for Ginger Lily and Cocoa Tuberose. If you ever needed a reason to visit Rhode Island, our tiniest state, you now have one.
Visit Providence Perfume Company, drop in at Charna’s boutique and take a class or have a perfume party or customize a perfume at her perfume bar at 13 South Angell St. Providence, Rhode Island.
Briar Winters: Marble & Milkweed, New York
Briar is a professional pastry chef turned apothecary Maker. In addition to skincare products, she also creates artisan perfumes enveloped in one-of-a-kind perfume compacts. Using botanicals like tuberose, ambrette seed, saffron, tonka bean, and roasted seashells (yes, you read that correctly), Briar’s liquid creations are in a base of jojoba oil which Briar says makes the perfume slide onto your skin like “nectar.”
Visit Marble & Milkweed, and enjoy what I think is one of the most beautiful Instagram feeds online.
Alexandra Balahoutis: Strange Invisible Perfumes, California
Alexandra Balahoutis is the creative mind behind every original Strange Invisible Perfumes fragrance, which is composed of organic, wildcrafted, biodynamic, and hydro-distilled essences. These small-batch scents are hand-mixed and set into a base of distilled cognac, then aged for at least six months. The cognac is distilled from non-GMO, pesticide-free grapes by a twelfth-generation master distiller in Napa Valley, California.
How can a perfume not be awesome when it’s made with such care?
Visit Strange Invisible Perfumes.
JoAnne Bassett: JoAnne Bassett Perfumes, Texas
JoAnne is a luxury natural perfumer who makes perfumes with only essential oils, absolutes, botanicals, infusions and tinctures she makes herself from flowers lovingly grown in her own garden. I have had the pleasure of trying one of her perfumes, Le Voyage, made with citrus, jasmine and vintage Mysore sandalwood — three of my favorites. JoAnne will customize a perfume for you based on your favorite scents, your personality, and even a particular time or experience in your life. JoAnne also hosts perfume and bridal parties, corporate events, and “perfume play shops” where you and your friends can get together and make your own perfumes.
Visit Joanne Bassett Perfumes.
Jennifer Botto: Thorn and Bloom, Massachusetts
With names like Savage Garden and Stranger and the Cherry Grove, this perfumer is known for her support of the farmers and processors of raw materials and a commitment to ensuring that the fruit of their harvest is not forgotten. One of her fragrances, Bird of Paradise, was a finalist in the 2016 Artisan Art + Olfaction Awards held in Los Angeles just a few days ago. Says Jennifer:
Reveling in scent can be the perfect way to escape; it can bring you full blooms in a frozen tundra, fresh grass in a sea of pavement, or a lover’s musk when you’re all alone.
Visit Thorn and Bloom.
Hall Newbegin: Juniper Ridge, California
Hall has been called the “bushwhacking perfumer” because he and his team create fragrances entirely from essences that they personally distill themselves … on site … in the woods. Many of the oils used in the fragrances are distilled using a campfire distillery in the back of a van. It takes weeks to collect enough plant material to distill enough fragrant oil to a limited number of products that Juniper Ridge sells out of very quickly. In addition to perfume, Hall and his team also make a small selection of tea, smudge sticks, incense, and candles.
With names like Winter Redwood, Topanga Canyon, and Cascade Forest, each Juniper Ridge product transports you to the spot in nature where the natural oils originated. Says Hall:
“We take an olfactory snapshot of a place, and put it into a bottle.”
Support Handmade Perfume Businesses
The ingredients used in over-the-counter perfumes are a mysterious cacophony of aroma-chemicals created in fancy laboratories and designed to be placed in a fancy bottle with a celebrity’s name on it. Why settle for that when you can scent your body with ingredients that are infused with the love and care of an artisan perfumer?
Have you tried any of the perfumes made by the artisans? Which ones intrigue you the most? I’d love to hear what you think in the comments below.
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