Natural Perfumes Blog

Tincturing and Extracting Scents From My Garden

June 17th, 2010 by

I live in Southern California and have a yard and garden that provides me with wonderful flower blooms.

I?use my roses, gardenias, and my flowering trees – lemon blossoms, orange blossoms, and grapefruit blossoms.

This is the process for the flowers. Bring them into the house, separate all of the leaves, twigs, green parts, and petals that are bruised and damaged and discard everything that is not a terrific looking flower. Now
lay the flowers on paper towels to absorb the moisture. Let them air dry for a while until they feel dry. If you tincture wet materials they turn black, mold, or it just doesn’t work.

Fill a clean glass jar with high proof alcohol and put the blooms in and make sure all of the blooms are covered.

Replace the blooms with new ones as often as you can. Repeat until you are satisfied with your results or until your garden stops producing.?You can shake the tinctures and check on the smell daily.

I?have also put gardenias in jojoba oil and once again it is the same process. This method can cause the blossoms to mold. Be careful of this.? If it starts to smell off throw it out.?You can remove the petals after one day or leave for several.? This is your call.? It takes many changes of petals to build up the strength of the gardenia smell.

I also tincture other items like vanilla beans and use those tinctures in my perfumes and custom couture perfumes.? Some of my flower tinctures are only used in my one of a kind bespoke perfumes.

Share

Wordless Wednesday

June 16th, 2010 by
Share

Gardenia Tincture

June 11th, 2010 by
I love it when my gardenia plants start blooming every day.? The first thing in the morning I am out in my garden looking for new blooms to tincture.? The lovely, floral, creamy fragrance is like none other.?
I use organic grape alcohol from wine grapes to tincture them in.? Using a clean glass jar I fill the jar with the alcohol.? It smells fruity and not strong like the grain alcohol.? I then pick my gardenia blossoms and let them sit on a paper towel to dry.? I then remove the petals one at a time and put them into the alcohol.? I do not want any of the grren leaves to go in the jar.? After many days of changing out the petals I get a pleasant gardenia smelling alcohol.? I use this gardenia alcohol in my Madame Pompadour eau de parfum and parfum.? It is also used in my Custom Couture Perfumes I create for people.? They love the “100%?natural” gardenia in the fragrance.? Synthetic gardenia is a very different chemical smell.?
Share

Create Your Own Empowering Essence? – You are so worth it!

June 8th, 2010 by

Create Your Own Empowering Essence? – You are so worth it!

Share

The Mystery of Musk Project

June 2nd, 2010 by

The Mystery of Musk Project

Share

Wordless Wednesday

May 26th, 2010 by
Share

Blooming Jacaranda Trees

May 22nd, 2010 by
I love this time of year with all of the beautiful, flowering trees.? My favorite is the Jacaranda…the purple beauty.? Too bad I cannot tincture the blossoms for a perfume.? It is a flowering almond tree with very little fragrance.?It is lovely to behold and for now that will have to do.? Enjoy!
Share

Wordless Wednesday

May 19th, 2010 by
Share