The
5 Different Ways to Wear a Perfume
Perfumes and
fragrances now are available in 5 different formulations,
to suit your needs and the strength of wear that you
want to create. Historically, pure perfumes, pomades,
elixirs and oils were the only means available of wearing
a fragrance, but as technology has increased edt’s,
edp’s and scented body lotions have become available.
Perfume:
This is the
extract or extrait of a fragrance and represents the
scent in its purest form. This often creates a smooth
and round texture, which is hard to achieve with the
dilution represented in the other concentrations of
fragrance. This makes pure perfumes the most expensive
way to buy a scent. Pure perfumes also contain 20 to
40 per cent of fragrance oils and expensive elixirs,
which are held in alcohol to enable them to bond to
the skin. This is a much higher concentration of oils
than in other types of fragrance. The longer lasting
base notes often dominates the formulation of pure perfumes,
with fifty per cent of the fragrance concentrated at
that end. Perfume is generally dabbed onto the skin
rather than sprayed on as the propellant added can often
damage the oils and decrease their staying power.
Eau
de Parfum: Perfume4u.co.uk
| Slapiton
| Powderpuff.net
Eau
de Parfum:
Eau de Parfum
or EDP is one of the most popular forms of fragrance.
Eau de Parfum contains between seven to fourteen per
cent of fragrance oils and perfume elixirs and is the
second strongest, and longest lasting means of wearing
a fine fragrance. It is estimated that around 70 per
cent of an Eau de Parfum can be lost after several hours
and approximately 30 per cent will remain 24 hours later.
Eau de Parfum’s continue to be popular as they
are an economical and long-lasting means of wearing
a fragrance due to their high quantity of oils.
Eau
de Toilette:
Eau de Toilette
or EDT is fast becoming the most common means of wearing
a fragrance or perfume. EDT’s are not as highly
concentrated in oils and elixirs as an EDP or Perfume
would be and contain one to three per cent of fragrance
oils. This impacts the ability of the fragrance to last
and around eighty percent of the oils in an EDT fragrance
will evaporate within three hours of application. EDT’s
are often expected to last throughout the day, but in
reality they should be used in the traditional sense,
as a toilette water, and splashed all over the body
to refresh and revive the senses.
Eau
de Cologne:
Eau de Cologne’s
or EDC’s were first popularised by Napoleon. These
fragrances are often constructed in a different manner
to the traditional French Model and are formulated in
one single burst. As a result of this process, EDC’s
or Eau de Colognes last the least amount of time on
the skin and can dissolve within a couple of hours.
EDC’s should be worn as a invigorating spray.
Scented
Body Creams:
Fragranced
Body Creams or Scented Body Lotions are an increasingly
popular means of wearing a fine fragrance or perfume.
These fragranced body products contain around eight
per cent of the aromatic oils present in a perfume,
and perfumed body lotions are formulated with around
three to five per cent. These perfumed body products
have a thick cream or lotion base, which allows the
scent to bond with the skin and linger in its more concentrated
form. Perfumed Body Creams and Fragranced Body Lotions
can often be smelt faintly on the body up to twenty-four
hours later. |