Home
Women's Fragrances
Men's Fragrances
Skin Care
Hair Care
Gift Sets
Hard to Find Fragrances
Men's Top Sellers
Women's Top Sellers
Gifts under $25
Gifts under $50
Clearance Specials
Shop for your favorite discount fragrances, perfumes and colognes online for yourself or that special someone at discount prices up
to 70% off retail prices. We offer over 10,000 designer name brand men's and women's fragrance, perfume and colognes.
We are committed to satisfy our customers. If for any reason, you are not completely satisfied with your order, you will immediately receive a 100%
refund. Satisfaction is "Guaranteed"
Fragrance Tips
For a long-lasting effect, fragrance should be layered all over the body, starting with toilet water or eau de parfum, next in strength to
perfume, to build the fragrance foundation. Because fragrance rises, spray or smooth fragrance onto skin from the feet to the shoulders. If fragrance is
applied only behind the ears, it will eventually rise and disappear.
Fragrance Tips
Skin type will also affect the way a fragrance smells on a person. Fragrance wearers with oilier skin should remember that fragrances
interact with the oils in their skin to create a more intense scent. Dry skin does not retain fragrance as long as oily skin, requiring the wearer to re-apply
the fragrance more often.
100% Genuine Brand Name
Designer Perfume
Designer Cologne
Designer Fragrance
Fragrance
Designers











|
|
Perfume / Fragrance / Cologne Information
|

|
Over 10,000 brand name fragrances, perfumes
and colognes, skincare and hair care products. 100% Genuine name brand
fragrances.
FREE U.S. SHIPPING
on all orders over $60.
|
Featured Fragrance
Giorgio Perfume
 |
Perfume and its history
Perfume is a mixture of fragrant essential oils and aroma compounds, fixatives, and solvents used to give the human body, objects, and living spaces a pleasant
smell. The amount and type of solvent mix with the fragrance oil dictates whether a perfume is considered a perfume extract, Eau de parfum, Eau de
toilette, or Eau de Cologne.
Description of a perfume
It is impossible to describe a perfume according to its components because the formulas are kept secret. Even if the formulas are known, the ingredients are
often too numerous to provide a useful classification. Cognoscenti can, however, generally get a handle on the principal ingredients. On the other hand, it is
possible to group perfumes into olfactive families and describe them through the notes that appear as they slowly evaporate. Perfumes can also be classified
according to their concentration.
Olfactive families
Fragrances can be classified into several olfactive families, by the themes, or accords, of these fragrances.
* Floral: Fragrances that are dominated by the scent of one or more types of flowers. When only one flower is used, it is called a soliflore (as in Dior's
Diorissimo, with lily of the valley).
* Chypre: Fragrances built on a similar accord consisting of bergamot, oak moss, pachouli, and labdanum. This family of fragrances is named after a perfume by
François Coty by the same name. Meaning Cyprus in French, the term alludes to the inspiration behind the original creation.
* Aldehydic: Fragrances that incorporate the family of chemicals known as aldehydes. Chanel No 5 was the first aldehydic perfume (created by the French
perfumer Ernest Beaux in 1921). Others include Je Reviens and Arpege. Aldehydic perfumes have the characteristic "piquant" note produced by materials like
Aldehyde C12 MNA.
* Fougère: Fragrances built on a base of lavender, coumarin and oak moss. Many
men's fragrances belong to this family of fragrances, which is characterized by
its sharp herbaceous and woody scent.
* Leather: A family of fragrances which features the scents honey, tobacco,
wood, and wood tars in its middle or base notes and a scent that alludes to
leather.
* Woody: Fragrances that are dominated by the woody scents, typically of
sandalwood and cedar. Patchouli, with its camphoraceous smell, is commonly found
in these perfumes.
* Orientals or ambers: A large fragrance class featuring the scents of vanilla
and animal scents together with flowers and woods. Can be enhanced by camphorous
oils and incense resins, which bring to mind Victorian era imagery of the Middle
East and Far East.
* Citrus: An old fragrance family that until recently consisted mainly of
"freshening" eau de colognes due to the low tenacity of citrus scents.
Development of newer fragrance compounds has allowed for the creation of
primarily citrus fragrances.
Fragrance Notes
A mixture of alcohol and water is used as the solvent for the aromatics. On
application, body heat causes the solvent to quickly disperse, leaving the
fragrance to evaporate gradually over several hours. The rate of evaporation
(vapor pressure) and the odor strength of the compound partly determine the
tenacity of the compound and determine its perfume note classification.
* Top notes: Scents that are perceived immediately on application of a perfume.
Top notes create the scents that form a person's initial impression of a
perfume. Because of this, they are very important in the selling of a perfume.
The scents of this note class are usually described as "fresh," "assertive" or
"sharp." The compounds that contribute to top notes are strong in scent, very
volatile, and evaporate quickly. Citrus and ginger scents are common top notes.
* Heart notes or Middle notes: The scent of a perfume that emerges after the top
notes dissipate. The heart note compounds form the "heart" or main body of a
perfume and act to mask the often unpleasant initial impression of base notes,
which become more pleasant with time. Not surprisingly, the scent of heart note
compounds is usually more mellow and "rounded." Scents from this note class
appear anywhere from 2 minutes to 1 hour after the application of a perfume.
Lavender and rose scents are typical heart notes. Top notes and heart notes are
sometimes described together as Head notes.
* Base notes: The scent of a perfume that appears after the departure of the top
notes. The base and middle notes together are the main theme of a perfume. Base
notes bring depth and solidness to a perfume. Compounds of this class are often
the fixatives used to hold and boost the strength of the lighter top and heart
notes. The compounds of this class of scents are typically rich and "deep" and
are usually not perceived until 30 minutes after the application of the perfume
or during the period of perfume dry-down. Musk, vetiver and scents of plant
resins are commonly used as base notes.
Concentration and composition
Perfumes oils, or the "juice" of [perfume] composition, are diluted with a
suitable solvent to make the perfume more usable. This is done because undiluted
oils (natural or synthetic) contain high concentrations of volatile components
that will likely result in allergic reactions and possibly injury when applied
directly to skin or clothing.
Although dilutions of the perfume oil can be done using solvents such as jojoba,
fractionated coconut oil, and wax, the most common solvents for perfume oil
dilution is ethanol or a mixture of ethanol and water. The percent of perfume
oil by volume in a perfume is listed as follows:
* Perfume extract: 20%-40% aromatic compounds
* Eau de parfum: 10-30% aromatic compounds
* Eau de toilette: 5-20% aromatic compounds
* Eau de cologne: 2-3% aromatic compounds
As the percentage of aromatic compounds decreases, the intensity and longevity
of the scent decrease. It should be noted that different perfumeries or perfume
houses assign different amounts of oils to each of their perfumes. As such,
although the oil concentration of a perfume in eau de parfum (EDP) dilution will
necessarily be higher than the same perfume in eau de toilette (EDT) form, the
same trends may not necessarily apply to different perfume compositions much
less across different perfume houses.
To complicate matters more, some fragrances with the same product name but
having a different concentration name may not only differ in their dilutions,
but actually use different perfume oil mixtures altogether. For instance, in
order to make the EDT version of a fragrance brighter and fresher than its EDP,
the EDT oil may be "tweaked" to contain slightly more top notes or less base
notes. In some cases, words such as "extreme" or "concentrate" appended to
fragrance names might indicate completely different fragrances that relates
only because of a similar perfume accord. An instance of this would be Chanel‘s
Pour Monsieur and Pour Monsieur Concentrate.
more on the history and make-up of perfume
Featured Online Discount Specials
Fragrance / Perfume / Cologne & Skin Care
|
Popular designer perfume and fragrances:
Allure Fragrance for Men |
Armani Perfume for Men |
Armani Code for Men |
BOSS Fragrances & Cologne |
Calvin Klein Designer Perfume for Men |
Chanel #5 Perfume |
Chanel #19 Perfume |
Chloe Women's Designer Perfume |
Cool Water Fragrance for Men |
Cool Water Game for Men |
Cool Water Fragrance for Women |
Curve Crush Women's Perfume |
Christian Dior Fragrance |
Diva Perfume |
Escada Cologne |
Fendi Fragrances |
Fragrances by Paul Sebastian |
Gucci Designer Perfume |
Gucci Rush 2 |
Givenchy Fragrance & Perfume |
Giorgio Armani Cologne |
Hugo Boss Fragrances |
Jessica McClinock Fragrance |
Realm Fragrance |
Passion Cologne for Men |
Perry Ellis Fragrances |
Narcisse Women's Fragrances |
Obsession Cologne for Men |
Giorgio Armani Fragrance |
Ralph Lauren Perfume |
Tommy Girl Perfume |
Tommy Girl Summer |
Sun Moon Stars |
Venezia Perfume |
Versace Fragrances & Perfumes |
White Diamonds Designer Perfume for Women
Home
Women's
Men's
Skin Care Hair Care
Gift Sets
|