How to Make Perfume like Terre d’Hermes
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- 게시일 2024. 03. 21.
- Today I blend a formula from a 2011 patent that could be a classic masterpiece for men.
Firmenich Patent:
patents.google.com/patent/US9...
Check out Perfume Archaeology on Instagram:
/ perfume.archaeology
Formula:
2000 - ISO E Super
400 - Hedione
140 - Patchouli
130 - Bergamot
130 - Cedarwood, Virginia
120 - Linalyl Acetate
100 - Vetiver, Haiti
80 - Coranol
80 - Hydroxycitronellal
70 - Citronellol
70 - Hexyl Cinnamaldehyde
70 - Lemon
70 - Magnolan
60 - Ambrox Super
60 - Cedrol
50 - Benzoin 50%
50 - Exaltolide Total
50 - Florol
50 - Pink Pepper
40 - Cedarwood Atlas
40 - Lilial
40 - Rose de Mai Abs
20 - Elemi Oil
20 - Orange
20 - Veramoss
10 - Dodecanal 10%
10 - Geranium
10 - Rhubofix
10 - Styrallal Acetate
TOTAL - 4000
#Perfumer #Perfumery #Perfume #Cologne #FragComm #DIYPerfume
I love watching these! as a fragrance collector its fascinating to see them broken down into its individual ingredients and have you describe what those singular elements are like! The videos also have an amazing calming and soothing nature to them, wonderful stuff!
Dear Ryan hope u put all ur social link in description and mention viewers to subscribe and follow ur channel.coz u disservice more ❤
These are fascinating to watch and very well put together!
I do love how you take your time line by line AND showing your formula too. Thank you, very generous.
Tried this out didn't have the cedrol so substituted it with cedramber ...it took away the sharpness of the formula but close enough...thank you keep up the great work 👍👍👍🌟🌟🌟
Interesting! I wonder how the Cedramber smells in the formula!
Not long ago it was hard to find channels like this the only close was Peter. Maybe someday something from cdg?? I know those white bottles
Keep the great content coming,cheers
I will keep an eye out for a formula :-)
@@RyanParfums that would be amazing Kyoto incense series cough cough hahaha anything from cdg would be awesome. Again amazing job with your channel.
Loved the video, thank you, Ryan! Did you try the Synarome formula?
Yes I did. I made it back in September of 2023. It opens very much like Terre d'Hermes. However, as it has aged, it has changed a bit. The formula in this video is amazing.
I am a total newb, thinking of maybe getting in perfumery - so one question. Why did you say you don't want a 20% concentration but would like to dile it down to 15% (in the beginning)? Wouldn't 20% mean the fragrance smells the same but more intense, with higher projection and with better longevity - which for a fresh/summery fragrance like TdH would be awesome? Or do these formulas only work for a certain concentration and if it's too high the whole composition smells off?
When I’m working with an EDT fragrance (Terre d’Hermes was and remains an EDT), my default is 15% concentrate. Higher projection, longevity… maybe. But what’s the consequence? Take it to a more extreme level: what would happen if we did a 50% concentrate? It might last a long time, but we’d get choked out, overpowered by the fragrance.
To your point, formulas tend to work with a specific concentration. This is often why an EDP flanker of an EDT is reformulated to work at the higher concentration.
why do you use 10% dilutions of all your materials?
For a few reasons. But the main one is that it’s more cost effective when experimenting. Some things I have dilutions at 1%. And some (like Methyl Octine Carbonate) I have diluted as low as 0.1%. It just depends on how easy the material is to work with, and what the typical usage amount for that material is for a 5g - 10g sample.
So those are essential oils? I know vetiver, lavender, patchouli, but the other ingredients don't seem to be organic or just a synthetic fragrance? Like most perfumes are synthetic. Just wondering
This formula is a mix. There are some natural materials (e.g. cedarwood, vetiver), some individual molecules that are found in naturals (e.g. cedrol, citronellol), and some molecules that are not found in nature (e.g. florol, magnolan).
Most perfumes are majority synthetic. Some are entirely synthetic. A minuscule number of perfumes (mostly done by independent artisan perfumers) are created 100% from essential oils and extracts.
Aldehyde c12 isnt in your formula that wrote in your caption but you add...
Good catch!
Pop quiz: what’s another name for Dodecenal?
😀
Right, sorry 🫣