Murasaki shiseido3/19/2023 The new version is a typical "contemporary Japanese style" scent, light green floral, bit watery, with kind of zen-ish and minimal characters. The new&old versions share lots of notes, but rather have different characters. It's still in production in Japan, with a relatively low retail price - a 60ml splash edp bottle costs about 3500 yen (less than 40 dollars), and you could get it easily at the shiseido counter. Murasaki got lighter, less woody or mossy, and the deep purple bottle is replaced by the current clear glass with purple cap. Later in the 90s, Shiseido got lots of its scents reformulated and repackaged. 1980 might be the year it launched in North Amarica/Europe. it's among the several big hits Shiseido got in the 60s. This particular plant blooms everytime it puts up a new shoot, which is really great.Murasaki actually launched in 60s, in Japan only then. But only use the distilled if you use the fertilizer too, so that it gets the right minerals. Piece of cake! The distilled water really is important because in the wild this type of orchid is an epiphyte (grows in a non-parasitic way on trees), so it only gets rain water. I use the “grow” one when it’s just “growing” and the “bloom” one when it is, you guessed it, “blooming”. West is good! The only other secret to this plant is watering it with distilled water with Dyna-Grow liquid fertilizer, which is specially designed for orchids. I keep my orchids in a south facing garden window but I’m realizing that I do have it shaded with a sheer curtain in the summer so they don’t fry. Cattleyas actually need to dry a little between waterings. Other types of orchids (like the kind you can buy at the grocery store these days) really usually don’t like bright light, and also require more water. I’m glad you’re pleased! At last I can make YOU buy something! It turns out that Cattleya orchids really need sun. Unless you’re in Japan, the only place I know of that these can be purchased is on eBay there is a seller from Japan who carries these, mostly in the mid-$40s. This might be my favorite: an exotic smell that is simultaneously more weightless and more sophisticated than your average mid-level American fragrance, but with excellent lasting power à¢â‚¬” mine is still there going strong eight hours later.įinally, here’s a link to an excellent review on Perfume Smellin’ Things of Shiseido’s gorgeous Chant du Coeur. An ethereal melding of jasmine and muguet that together represents a completely different floral smell (presumably the orchid). Notes: jasmine, oakmoss, lily of the valley, musk, and amber. Shiseido Tentatrice, French for ‘temptress’, was developed by Katsuhiko Tokuda, senior perfumer for Shiseido, and is a tribute to Chinese Cymbidium orchids. I prefer the regular Saso, which is somewhat greener, considerably lighter, and reminds me in the drydown of the slightly herbal, jasmine-ish smell of the flowers of my beloved Russian olives. Patty and I nicknamed Myth of Saso ‘MoSaso’ because it’s stronger and sweeter. Shiseido has two versions of this I have tried, and I think there might even be a third version. The name Saso literally means “Date Palm of the Desert,” but it actually belongs to the oleaster family and smells somewhat like osmanthus (Osmanthus fragans). Shiseido Saso and Myth of Saso I wrote about the Saso flower and the legendary Chinese beauty Xiang Fei in an earlier post. But that initial half-hour is a slog, especially since the drydown only sticks around for a couple of hours, and reapplying is painful. However, if you can suffer through that, half an hour later you are rewarded with an exotic, dry oudh-incense accord. Let me be honest, it’s a musty, bitter, old-fashioned smell at first, like a bottle of Dioressence that’s gone off after being left too many decades in the sun. Shiseido Murasaki has notes of galbanum, hyacinth, fern, ivy, rose, lily of the valley, marigold, agarwood, sandalwood, Cedar of Lebanon, oakmoss, vetiver. My younger children call it flower snowing, which I think is a perfect description and which prompted me to write something about a few non-export Shiseido perfumes I have tried, which are constructed in a way that smells, well, foreign and lovely to me, like flower snow: I love standing underneath them while the petals drift down. They are spectacular this year, owing to the warm weather and lack of rain recently. The cherry blossoms are at their peak we got up shortly after dawn on Saturday to see them.
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