Tuesday 4 January 2011

Makila

The other day, I was digging for something I don't know what exactly on Fleabay. I spotted a miniature of Jean Patou's Makila. I had never heard about that one so I used uncle Google to check, found only a link to Octavian's blog... and then the miniature sold for something like 130 euros.
I thought something about idiotic collectors and half forgot about it. Some time later, I just randomly checked for Makila... and got a big bottle, around one-third full, for something like 20 euros. I never made it a secret that I'm cheap.

Makila is green. Dry and green as it can get. It should be a jasmine fragrance but having sniffed living jasmine for too long, I'd say it's more like crushed leaves of one of the Rumex species plus some dry hay. (1)

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(1) Do you think that I've been living with too much nature?

5 comments:

  1. One cannot live too much with nature. Now, people...that's something else! ;-) Thanks for bringing Makila to my attention--another vintage frag to add to an impossibly long wish list. Sigh.

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  2. Well, from the viewpoint of an art historian you possibly could live with too much nature, or at least with less culture/art as needed...

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  3. queen_cupcake: I scheduled a post and forgot to finish it. There'll be an update. Gah, I'm writing a book, editing another and I don't have time, energy and willpower enough to do something about my blog.

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  4. A wonderful acquisition!! Supposedly it has a leather background, so your deeming of green is actually correct: it's the quinolines that appear as harsh green.
    Enjoy and hope you're feeling well. :-)

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  5. trivia says that Audrey Hepburn used Makila in a scene from Breakfast at Tiffany's.

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