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Article: Rules for Perfume Wear

April 1, 2008

Article: Rules of Perfume Wear 
by: Patricia Bowe 
 
The sensual practice of wearing perfume has been around for 
thousands of years. Oils, resins, juices and nowadays 
alcohol based fragrances entice and stimulate our senses.  
Here are a couple of guidelines to help you wear your 
favorite fragrance. 
 
#1. The #1 rule of wearing perfume...don't wear too much. 
You want a slight aura of fragrance about you, one that 
leaves the ones you pass by spellbound and curious, not 
retreating out the back door looking for a gas leak. If 
they can smell your perfume and you are more than two - 
three feet away from them, or worse yet, if they can smell 
you on the wind 5 minutes before they actually see 
you...chances are you've used too much. 
 
#2. Your sense of smell can be deceiving. Just because 
you can't smell the fragrance on you after 10 minutes or 
so, does not mean that you need to reapply. Reapplying 
every two minutes because you can't smell it can cause you 
to be in violation of rule #1. Simply put, your sense of 
smell naturally becomes desensitized to the scent after a 
couple of minutes but rest assured that others can smell it 
just fine. 
 
#3. Spray or apply your Eau de Toilette, Eau de Parfum 
or perfume oil to strategic pulse points: wrists, 
cleavage, nape of the neck, behind your ears.  
 
#4. Don't apply perfume to your clothing, pearls, jewelry 
or your hair. Alcohol and oils in the perfume can ruin 
your clothing and strip the color from your pearls and 
jewelry if you are not careful. Alcohol and oils can dry 
your hair or react negatively with your hair care products. 
I usually apply fragrance to my skin first, let it dry a 
bit then dress. If you wish, you can reapply in the 
evening.  
 
#5. Layering. A good rule of thumb is layering. If you 
want a single fragrance to stay with you, try showering or 
bathing with a perfumed shower gel or soap, following with 
a body powder(optional), lotion, then perfume. That helps 
a lot with the fragrance staying with you longer without 
having to reapply copious amounts of scent. 
 
#6. Know your skin chemistry. I know for a fact that 
there are some fragrances out there that smell heavenly 
when they are sprayed into the air, but once they settle on 
my skin, I smell like I haven't showered in a couple of 
months. Always test the perfume against your body 
chemistry. I usually go to the perfume counter first, 
spray on a fragrance I am interested in on my hand, then 
walk away and do my other shopping, returning to the 
perfume counter last. This gives the perfume a chance to 
mellow and react with my skin and to test it's staying 
power. Ask a friend to sniff your hand and tell you if 
they can still smell the fragrance. Smell the scent 
yourself at intervals and see if it has changed any and if 
it is still pleasing to you. You may love floral 
fragrances, but if they smell like a compost heap on your 
skin, you may want to try another fragrance group.  
 
#7. Change fragrances with the seasons. An overly sweet or 
spicy scent in the summer can actually smell stifling and 
cloying, in some cases, even sickening (ever smell roasted 
sweet peanuts or cotton candy in 90 degree weather?). On 
the flip side, lighter scents in the winter can get lost in 
the cold. Try to use fragrances that will complement the 
season, eg. light florals, greens and fresh water type 
scents are great for the spring and summer seasons, while 
heavy spices, musks and sweet foody scents are best left 
until the autumn and winter months where they carry better 
in the cooler temperatures.  
 
To me perfumes should enhance, bring out your beauty, your 
handsomeness, the sensuality and sexiness in you. They 
are supposed to leave the ones you pass by with an air of 
mystery, a sense of seduction, curiosity. The bottom 
line...finding and applying the perfect fragrance is a 
quest. It's what you like, how you want to smell, how you 
want others to recognize as being you. I wish you lots of 
fun in your search. 
 
 
 
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