Top Notes
Calabrian bergamot essence,
Carrot seed essence
Angelica root essence
French lavender essence
Heart Notes
Bulgarian rose essence
Ambrette seed absolute
Akigalawood™
Styrax
Base Notes
Patchouli (proprietary combination of two fractioned essences)
Spanish cistus concrete
Venezuelan tonka bean absolute
Tolu balsam
Intro
Inspired by the 19th century courtesans and bohemians that embraced the scent of patchouli, MISFIT won the Fragrance Foundation 2021 Award for Best Independent Perfume. A scent balanced between regal and rebel, where cashmere-like ambery notes smooth out the carnal earthiness associated with patchouli and counter-culture. In MISFIT what was once decadent is now made addictively desirable. With main notes of: French lavender, ambrette seed absolute, patchouli, Venezuelan tonka bean and tolu balsam.
7.5 ml / 0.25 fl oz. Portable size.
*Try our travel sprays, then receive a code to enjoy a $40 credit towards your first 100ml bottle.
*Travel sprays not returnable.
History
September 1877, Port of Marseille, France.
In a bedroom in the City of Flesh, a Kashmiri shawl drapes decadently over the bed. Once extremely coveted, the shawls are now out of fashion with the bourgeois, their distinctive patchouli scent a victim of their downfall. Adopted by bohemians and courtesans, the fragrance mixes with French lavender, musky ambers and exotic balsams. With a new edge, and in the hands of misfits with style, the ‘undesirable’ becomes desired again.
Description
Misfit is centered on the idea of things to go in and out of fashion…of fads that go from the mainstream to the fringes of society, and from the outside back in. Of making the undesirable, desirable again. Instead of following a trend, being a misfit and reclaiming the elegance of patchouli in our own terms.
7.5 ml / 0.25 fl oz. travel spray. Portable, convenient and practical.
More
- The scent of patchouli first reached Western noses with the Kashmir-style shawls fashionable in the late 18th century and early 19th The fine wool shawls would have patchouli leaves in its folds to protect them from moths and insects during their journey from Asia into Europe. The distinctive scent became a mark of their artisanal quality and origin.
- Around 1808, the first shawls of this kind were being produced in Paisley, Scotland. Shawls were also produced in other Scottish cities and in France. French manufacturers then asked perfumers to create a scent that could be added to the shawls, to make them pass as authentic.
- The popularity of these shawls with the elites declined in the 1870s, due partly to a reduction in price and increase in availability, and also to a change in women's fashion: the addition of the bustle, meaning that a shawl would no longer drape in the same manner. The Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871) also prevented the export of shawls from Kashmir.
- The shawls then became fashionable amongst courtesans and prostitutes, who would wear them undressed or seductively draped over furniture. Becoming popular in fringe circles, the scent of patchouli, reminiscent of exotic fantasies of odalisques and evocative of earthy pleasures, became the scent of decadence, of ‘taste professionals’ of dubious reputation.
- Later on, in the 20th century, hippies would re-appropriate patchouli for its connection to India, its association with European misfits, and for a potency that would mask cannabis. It became the olfactive signature of counter-culture.
Bio
– Irwin, John, The Kashmir Shawl, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1973. ISBN 0112901646.
– Levi-Strauss, Monique, The French Shawls, 1987 Dryad Press Ltd 1987. ISBN 0852197594.
– Maxwell, Catherine, Scents and Sensibility: Perfume in Victorian Literary Culture, Oxford University Press, 2017.
– Genders, Roy, Perfume through the Ages, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, New York, 1972.– Pillivuyt, Ghislaine Histoire Du Parfum – De L Égypte Au Xixe Siècle: Collection De La Parfumerie Fragonard, Denoël Editions, 1988.
– Classen, Constance, Howes, David & Synnott Anthony, Aroma: The Cultural History of Smell, London; New York: Routledge, 1994.
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