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The Myth of Fragrance by Gender (and Why Women Can
Wear Men's Cologne and Vice Versa)
Neil Morris is a Boston perfumer who sometimes wears
Chanel No. 5. I love it when people compliment
me on the scent and I can tell them what it is.
In his own perfume line, he labels all of his scents
shared scents for men and women.
While this may sound terribly modern, it is quite the
opposite. Back in Europes early perfume heyday
(in the 18th century), there was no notion at all that
any scent might be reserved or more appropriate for
one gender rather than another. The most powerful men
wore perfume back then, including kings, dukes, and
generals. These were mostly heterosexuals and they wore
perfume at some of their most solemn official occasions.
The dividing line for perfume back then was based
more on social class and economic buying power: the
rich and famous smelled better than the poor and downtrodden.
Among those who could afford perfume, there were no
masculine versus feminine fragrances.
You can still see that in the worlds oldest
cologne, 4711 made in Cologne, Germany. This ancient
concoction is still on the market and claims to be the
product that gave lighter cologne its name. Its
a citrus scent; mild and strangely contemporary despite
the fact that its been around for centuries. Although
Europeans, in particular Germans, consider 4711 to be
a bit old-fashioned, it is a gender-spanning fragrance.
Men use it for aftershave, little old ladies dab it
behind their ears, and American girls in Europe spray
it in their hair.
The notion of fragrances for gender gained traction
in the early 20th century as perfume and fashion, in
lockstep, ceased being the private reserve of the privileged
few and became at least accessible to the middle classes.
This is, not coincidentally, around the time that modern
advertising started influencing consumer choices. As
new fragrances came to market in the 1920s, advertisers
identified women as the target demographic rather than
men.
Coco Chanel marketed both her fashion line and her
signature fragrance to females. Other perfumes of the
era did or were already doing the same thing, whether
the scents were Joy by Jean Patou, My Sin by Lanvin,
Nuit de Noel by Caron, Muguet de Bois or Emeraude by
Coty and on and on.
Fragrance was promoted mostly by fashion enterprises
and the fashion world targeted female customers. While
there is nothing inherently masculine or feminine about
products like sunglasses or watches or clothing, Chanel
and other big couturiers quickly spun out a line of
products exclusively for females. Perfume just went
along for the ride.
These fragrances were largely cast in very feminine
and elaborate containers, designed to fit well on the
dressing table of a chic woman. Chanel used the clean
simplistic lines of the No. 5 bottle to pay homage to
the classic, un-frilled female (which mirrors her approach
to clothing design). So whether the bottle was bejeweled
or colored (like the glorious cobalt blue bottle of
Evening in Paris) or clean-lined, the bottle was also
part of the appeal to the modern woman.
It is not coincidence that the great era for movie
stars followed the upsurge in fashion. Marilyn Monroe,
who dominated the cinema world in the 1950s, became
an unpaid spokeswoman for Chanel No. 5 when asked what
she wore to bed. (The answer, which is sometimes quoted
as Two drops of Chanel No. 5 still ranks
high on the famous quotation lists today.) Thus, it
did not take long for perfume to be linked to fashion
and glamour. (Even today, celebrities like to lend their
name to line of fragrance products but perhaps the interest
nowadays is more mercantile than image.)
It would be hard for men to reach for that bottle
of Chanel No. 5 once Marilyn cooed over it. And yet
the idea of fragrances for one gender only was a relatively
new concept.
For centuries before that, kings and noblemen wore
perfumes (including floral scents). But a couple of
years worth of hardcore advertising turned the perfume
world into a womens only party.
The emergence of products like after-shave and mens
cologne (note its never called mens perfume)
were studied attempts to try to capture the attention
of modern men who somehow got the notion that fragrances
were not for them. These first efforts to win men
back to perfume (Old Spice, Burma Shave, Aqua Velva,
English Leather) embraced a utilitarian theme. These
werent fragrances, they were products related
to shaving.
Eventually, mens colognes hit the market and
more and more scents appeared on the scene. Yet the
dividing line was in place in that certain fragrances
were considered suitable for menand they were
definitely not florals. Men wore scents that were spicy,
leathery, woodsy, light and fresh, or even musky.
Again, that is a modern notion, not some venerable
old tradition. The scents that wowed the men of the
French court in the 18th century were florals and citrus
brews.
Meanwhile, in our own day, the scents that were
reserved for men only found some resonance among females.
In fact, most perfume manufacturers today recognize
that women have an interest in a lot of masculine
types of scents and vice versa.
The emergence of the so-called fresh scents
may have been an attempt to try to harmonize those worlds.
Many fragrance products today are deliberately light
and ambiguous, as if trying to woo women who are not
thrilled with the sometimes more complex and/or flowery
perfumes in the womens section.
A recent landmark in the notion of male-vs.-female
fragrance occurred with Calvin Kleins CK One.
CK One is specifically intended to be used by men and
women. It was marketed as the one fragrance
for both men and women. Since so many people know so
little about perfume, this concept was considered revolutionary.
(By the way, CK One is a citrus scentlike the
original 4711 Cologne, likewise a gender-spanning fragrance,
albeit from the 18th century.)
The perfume company Bond No. 9 in Manhattan offers
many eau-de-parfum products it labels simply for
him or her. One of my favorite of their both-gender
scents is Gramercy Park, a peppery fresh fragrance.
Most women like the scent but then ask cautiously, Is
this for women? Its not a typically girly-girl
aroma. Fortunately, for the faint-hearted perfume-wearer,
the manufacturer gives permission for men and women
to put on this scent.
Of course, maybe what the manufacturer says should
not matter so much. After all, perfume products are
marketed by people interested in selling them, not by
the people who wear them. In other words, marketers
are always reaching out to a target, but
that target is not necessarily the entire universe of
people interested in the product.
Apparently, it makes good marketing sense to keep the
genders distinct in the perfume aisle. Right after Calvin
Klein offered CK One, he came out with a scent called
In2U which exists in two versions: one for each gender.
The idea here is that men and women can wear the
same fragrance family, but the products, of course,
would have to be different.
There is really no traditional or fashion-based reason
for doing that, other than the fact that it seems to
make some of us feel more confident in our perfume choices.
While urban dwellers, the tragically hip, and unbearable
perfumistas may be deemed the most likely to cross gender
lines in perfume, the fact is the line we have now is
not only moving and blurryit is largely artificial!
There is no reason why women cant wear fresh,
woodsy, or leathery scents or why men need to shy away
from some of the great classic perfumes.
A good deal depends on how well we like the fragrances
were wearing and how the fragrance works
on our skin. Beyond that, most of the people around
us cannot even begin to tell whether the scent weve
put on was manufactured and labeled for men or for women.
Besides, that label doesnt mean a thing anyway!
Author: Joanna McLaughlin
Love perfume but feel intimidated about buying it?
Want to know more about the right perfume for you? Get
your free Perfume Profile at http://www.thePerfume-Reporter.com
. This article is by Joanna McLaughlin whose favorite
perfume today is Neil Morris' Afire.
Keywords : perfume, fragrance, cologne, perfume
for men, perfume for women
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