A Mixture for Winter

I wanted to make a new fragrance by blending essential oils.  I realised that I’ve posted several “recipes” for fragrances, but I haven’t said much about how I select and blend the ingredients.  What follows is a description of how I made a fragrance called Winter.  It blends essential oils with some science, some experience, some guesswork, some inspiration, some process, and just a hint of magic.

The First Step

“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step”

Lao Tzu (Sixth Century Before Christian Era)

There has to be a first step, something that prompts a creative process.  It could be a theme, a memory, a mood.  You might want to re-create something that you’ve encountered.  Smells are strongly connected with memories, so you may want to create something that invokes a memory.

There may be an ingredient that you want to use.  I’ve picked ingredients at random as the starting point for fragrance blends.  On other occasions I’ve picked an ingredient because it connects with a theme I’ve chosen.  I might pick an ingredient for it’s therapeutic properties.  Most often, I’ll start with an ingredient just because I like the way it smells.

Over the course of a couple of years I worked up blends of essential oils, and sometimes other ingredients, to reflect the changing seasons.  I created eight blends and named them for the eight pagan festivals.  During the second pass through the year I created an alternate blend for Litha.  I did that because someone convinced me that Litha “Is all about the Roses”.  That left me without a name for my first Litha blend, so I called it “Summer”.  My slightly obsessive-compulsive mind was disturbed by the idea of Summer without the other three seasons, so I’ve committed myself to creating blends for Autumn, Winter and Spring.

(Those who know me are sniggering now at the idea that my mind is only slightly obsessive-compulsive.)

Inspiration

I had a theme for my new blend.  It would be Winter.

I had taken the Winter celebrations as my inspiration for a fragrance I called Yule.  That combined the traditions of “bringing in the green” with the spices used in festive fare.  I wanted to make Winter a celebration of other aspects of the season.

The Winters where I live are cold and dark and damp.  (The photo at the top of this post was taken in Alaska.)  It’s very rare that we get snow that reflects the natural light, but we do get frosts.  Sometimes standing water freezes over.  It’s a time to wrap up and go out and walk.  You can see further through the trees when the leaves have fallen.  Returning home to make things in a warm kitchen, or to curl up with a good book, adds to the joy of venturing out.

The bitter Seville oranges that are used to make marmalade start to become available in November.  They can normally still be bought in early February.  Making marmalade is one of the delights of Winter.  It calls for two sessions of activity, each about an hour long, with a couple of hours between while the prepared fruit simmers.  It’s a great social activity, because the two hours in the middle can become a long lunch while the house is filled with scent of oranges.

I had my first ingredient for Winter – Orange.

Guesswork

I already had a second ingredient because I wanted to use Wintergreen.

I didn’t want to create a fragrance in which Wintergreen dominates.  It’s a very assertive smell.  Wintergreen is the dominant smell in the Surgical Spirit sold in the US, and in many liniments and muscle rubs.  It’s medicinal, sharp and penetrating.  Any concoction that majored on Wintergreen would smell like the start of the London Marathon.  However, I had a suspicion that Wintergreen could be a dosing ingredient.

There are some perfume ingredients that smell vile if you encounter them in isolation.  Often they include indole, which is a chemical commonly associated with fecal matter.  Civet is one such ingredient. Ambergris is another. Their value in perfumery is that they work a kind of magic when very tiny amounts are added to a blend of other fragrances. These ingredients are sometimes called fixatives. The process of adding one of these ingredients is called dosing.

Process

Now that I had selected two ingredients, I needed to determine the proportions in which to use them.  There are a couple of ways to work this out.

The first way is to use perfume test strips.  These are strips of absorbent paper that are typically around 150mm long and slightly less than 10mm wide.  The process starts with writing the name of a different ingredient on each of two test strips.  It’s a good idea to add the time of day as well as the ingredient name.  Then add a single drop of each ingredient to its named tester strip.  If you bend the scented end of the test strip upwards slightly, you can put the strip down without the scented end touching anything.

Hold the test strips so the fragranced ends are close together, but fanned out slightly so they don’t touch.  Wave the test strips around for a moment, then bring them close to your nose and smell them.

If one of the ingredients overpowers the other, make up another strip with the ingredient you want to increase.  Add that to the fan of test strips, and smell them again.  Adjust the number of strips of each ingredient until you are happy with the balance.

There is a time dimension to perfumes.  If you leave the scented test strips for a while and then return to them, you may find the balance has changed.  Then you have to decide whether you want your blend to be balanced at the first encounter, or to mature into a balance later.

Another process

I like using test strips for sampling perfumes, but I don’t use them for working out the proportions of ingredients when I’m blending essential oils.  It can be difficult to put consistent quantities on test strips, and (in my opinion) they don’t always represent the way ingredients will interact.  My favoured approach is to mix up small samples of ingredients in different proportions.

I started mixing samples in test-tubes.  It resonated with studying in chemistry laboratories, and with the mad scientist ethos.  Test-tubes have their own challenges.  You can’t put them down unless you put them in a rack or put a stopper in them. Glass test-tubes are expensive. Laboratory grade plastic test tubes don’t react well with neat essential oils. If you have any doubts about whether you should ingest undiluted essential oils or apply them to your skin, take a look at what they did to a plastic test tube:

I use glass vials now. They are relatively inexpensive, and as stable as essential oil bottles.

As the starting point for working out proportions, I label 5 vials with the proportions I’ll put in them. Using Orange and Wintergreen as an example, I mix up the oils as follows:

1 drop Wintergreen, 5 drops Orange
2 drops Wintergreen, 4 drops Orange
3 drops Wintergreen, 3 drops Orange
4 drops Wintergreen, 2 drops Orange
5 drops Wintergreen, 1 drop Orange.

You can smell each of the mixtures to see which you think is balanced.  It sometimes helps to add a little perfumer’s alcohol to each vial, screw down the cap and shake the vial to mix the oils and alcohol.  Dipping the end of a test strip into a vial is a good way to sample the mixtures.  It’s best to wave the test strip around for a moment to reduce the alcohol fumes before you smell it.

It’s quite possible that one ingredient still overpowers the other in a 1-to-5 mixture.  In that case you might want to mix up some more samples with proportions of, say, 1 to 10, 1 to 15 and 1 to 20.

I was reasonably content with a mixture of 1 Wintergreen to 12 Orange at this stage.

Experience and more Guesswork

In Patrick Süskind’s novel Perfume, his character Jean-Baptiste Grenouille blends 12 ingredients as the basis of his perfume. Then he doses the mixture with a thirteenth ingredient. Although the total number of ingredients is not a hard and fast rule, professional perfumers will typically blend about a dozen ingredients.  I’m not a professional.  My blends typically contain 5 – 8 ingredients.

I could systematically work out the proportions of 2 ingredients, then having fixed the proportions the first two I could repeat the process to determine the amount of a third ingredients to add to them.  Then I could fix the proportions of the three ingredients and work out how much of a fourth to add.

Life is too short.  I’m sure some apprentice perfumers go through the extended process to work out a blend.  I’m equally sure that most perfumers, professional or amateur, cut some corners based on experience and guesswork, and then make some final adjustments to their blend.

THE PLAN COMES TOGETHER

I liked the combination of Orange with a small quantity of Wintergreen. But both Orange and Wintergreen are Head notes. They are volatile, fading rapidly. A more balanced blend needs some ingredients that are more persistent, that will linger when the Head notes fade and disappear.

Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock

Returning to my chosen theme of Winter, I wanted my blend to be comforting.  I wanted it to bring to mind dark evenings curled up somewhere warm with hands wrapped around a mug containing a favourite hot drink.  There is an essential oil of Coffee, which is a Heart note and smells much as you would expect concentrated coffee to smell.  To add a Base note that would contribute sweetness to the blend, I chose Oakmoss Resin.

My Winter fragrance was coming together. After mixing up a few test samples, the blend comprised:

12 Orange
1 Wintergreen
4 Coffee
6 Oakmoss.

There’s still something missing. It’s time to take a SWAG (Scientific Wild-Arsed Guess) and try something completely random. I add a drop of Camphor …

Camphor is another of those very difficult ingredients, a little like Wintergreen. It’s rarely used in perfumery, like Wintergreen. It just might work …

With the addition of Camphor, I’m almost content with my blend. I eventually conclude that the Wintergreen is just a little too dominant.  I cut the proportion by half (and because there’s only one drop in the original blend, that means doubling the quantity of all the other ingredients).

Wrapping up

Now I can write up the final recipe and rinse out my trial mixture vials into my latest bottle of Frogs Breath.

I can’t use my blend as a perfume until I have diluted the essential oils with a carrier.  In this case I plan to use perfumer’s alcohol and make a perfume at Eau de Cologne strength (1-5% essential oils in perfumer’s alcohol).  I can make an Eau de Cologne at just under 5% by using one measure of the blend and topping up to 50ml with alcohol.  The mixture needs to be left for a few days to macerate.

The final test is to wear the blend, and try to persuade a few other volunteers to wear it too. Perfume works slightly differently (sometimes very differently) with each individual’s skin chemistry.

Perfume doesn’t have to be worn on a body.  It can be sprayed onto fabric or used as a room spray too.  I’ve recently discovered these refillable sprays.  I keep one with my mask to freshen it up between wearings.  Isn’t that a very 2020 thing to do?

Darkness and Light

“Lighten our darkness, we beseech Thee O Lord. “

– Evening Prayer, the Third Collect, for Aid against all Perils,
The Book of Common Prayer and administration
of the sacraments and other rites and ceremoniesof the Church
according to the use of The Church of England.

No, NO, NO!

I’d like to keep my darkness, thank you very much!

It’s early December. The sun set a couple of hours ago. It’s been a day of drizzling rain driven by a cold breeze. The rain has held off since sunset, but the temperature is around 5C. Four people sit around a small wood fire in a patch of woodland. The surrounding woodland softens the breeze, but it’s still brisk enough to make the embers glow. Eyes glisten in the firelight. Soft voices and gentle laughter barely rise above the crackling of the fire. The trees seem to converge above us, just slightly darker than the overcast sky.

Dave Porter Photography/Shutterstock

At this moment, there is nowhere I’d rather be than in this darkness. Darkness sharpens my appreciation of the light of day. The daylight deepens my appreciation of the night.

A rambling story

Route 65M, the road along the Western bank of the Red Sea in Egypt, goes from Hurghada in the North to the Sudanese border in the South. Inland of the road there is desert. On the other side there are beaches and coves, and the Red Sea. About 140 Km South of the airport at Hurghada you can find Roots Dive Camp. The nearest town is El Qoseir, another 14 Km further South.

Roots offers wonderful SCUBA diving in the Red Sea. Other than that, the camp is simple and comfortable. The food is similarly simple, but the chef worked out the causes of Pharaoh’s Revenge a long time ago, so this is one place in Egypt where there is no fear of tummy upsets. Evening meals are normally taken in the camp, but about once a week everyone makes the short trek across the road to the beach for a barbecue.

After one such barbecue, L and I made our way across the road and back to the camp. L looked up and gasped:

“What’s THAT?”

“It’s the Milky Way.” I said. I just managed to stop myself from saying: “It’s the Milky Way, Silly!” because it really wasn’t a silly question at all.

inigocia/Shutterstock

After gazing at the sky in wonder until our necks were sore, we made our way back to our room. Along the way I worked out that this was the first time I’d seen the Milky Way since camping out in Northern Europe in the 1980s. Before that, it had been a common sight in the rural Midlands of England when I was a child. L was brought up in a town on the South coast of England and she had never seen the Milky Way. During our lifetimes, our darkness has been lightened.

Black and White

It’s nice to have certainty. It’s nice to be able to say: “This is good” or “This is bad”. It’s nice to be able to take any set of polar opposites and assign them as good and bad. It’s nice to see things as black and white. White is good; black is bad. Light is good; dark is bad. Positive is good; negative is bad. Four legs good; two legs bad. Right is right; left is wrong. I’m right; you’re wrong. East; West. Female; male. Continue ad absurdum…

“Without darkness there’s no light”

Peter Sarstedt.

He had a point. We could not imagine white if black did not exist. I’ve tried to define white without reference to black, and it doesn’t really work. The easiest definition, and the first that comes to mind is “the opposite of black”.

So black and white are different. They depend upon each other for their existence. In the symbol of Yin and Yang they are equal, opposite, interconnected, and each contains a little of the other. There’s so much concentrated in a simple, familiar symbol.

Navitas/CleanPNG
Darkness and Light
Yayayoyo/Shutterstock

The cartoon image of a burglar resonates with us. He wears a striped sweater and a mask across his eyes. He carries a flashlight and a swag bag. He comes in darkness.

Real burglars don’t wear striped sweaters or carry bags labelled “swag”. They realise that wearing a mask or waving around a flashlight is the quickest way to signal their ill intentions. They are more likely to telephone you or send you an email than to attempt to enter your home in person. And if they do intend to break and enter, they’ll probably do it in daylight when there’s plenty of other activity to distract from what they are doing.

We buy Security Lights and use them to surround our property. The association of words, “security” and “light” resonates with us because we still believe in the cartoon burglar. We think the (good) light will dispel the (bad) darkness and all the bad things we associate with it. To a real burglar the security lights say: “Look, I’ve got something you might want to steal. Come back when there’s no-one around, and you won’t trip over anything when you approach.”

More rambling stories – (1) Bonaire
frantisekhojd/Shutterstock

For anyone who has dived on a tropical reef and marvelled at the diversity of life it supports, it’s a real treat to dive the reef at night. The reef takes on a different character at night. Corals bloom, and a different population of fish venture out in darkness. The beam of a torch focuses attention on a relatively small area, and it reflects rich colours that are muted by sunlight during the day. Many of the nocturnal creatures venture out under cover of darkness to escape the predators that hunt in daylight.

Tarpons are large fish, growing to lengths of up to 2.4 metres. They bear some resemblance to mackerel, but on a much larger scale. Two tarpons lived around the dock at a dive resort in Bonaire called Cap’n Don’s Habitat. Nicknamed Charlene and Charlie, they were 1.5 metres and 2 metres long. They would shadow divers on the reef at night, holding position slightly above and behind where the divers couldn’t see them. They used the light of divers’ torches to hunt. It’s a little disconcerting when a fish that’s as big as you speeds past your shoulder in the dark.

Yes, there are predators in the darkness. They pay little attention to other creatures in the darkness. They are looking into the light to identify their prey.

More rambling stories – (2) London

On 24 Nov 17, a Friday at the height of the Christmas shopping season in London, reports of terrorist attacks threw London City Centre into a panic. The stories of attacks centred on London Underground stations. They were all too plausible, especially for those who remembered the attacks that took place on 07 July 2005, the so-called 7/7 attacks. In a mass panic people fled the area around Underground stations and the stores in London’s West End.

L and I were in London on that Friday evening. We heard the news while we were on Piccadilly. Our train home was scheduled to leave Paddington station a couple of hours later. Our route by Underground would have taken us through the areas affected by the supposed attacks, so we elected to walk. We planned a circuitous route avoiding the prime shopping areas of Regent Street and Oxford Street, Liberty’s and Selfridge’s.

Image by Winter Wonderland

Our route took us through Hyde Park. Part of the park was accommodating Winter Wonderland, a combination of funfair and a Christmas market. Winter Wonderland was brightly lit. As we skirted round the market, I stepped off the wide pathway into the shadows of the trees that lined it. Crowding in the light didn’t feel safe. If there was anyone about with ill intent, I didn’t want to be an illuminated target. From the shadows, I could see without being seen. I was with the predators, not their prey.

“Hello Darkness, my old friend”

– Paul Simon