The Flamingsword Method of Scent Building
Mar. 11th, 2023 02:44 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
How I build a scent:
• I get an idea of the relative strengths of the components by putting one drop of each base ingredient into a 2ml glass jar and smelling them together over the course of a couple of days while they blend.
• add or subtract any scents that fill in and round out the scent if needed.
• adjust the relative strengths of the ingredients by slowly adding more drops of the same things and writing down changes over the course of a day or two.
• I dip the end of a test strip of paper or paper towel into the blend and smell it every couple of minutes to see if there are any gaps where the scent does not come out as strongly so that I can make sure the notes cover the whole application and dry down process.
• I add alcohol or a carrier oil to the ingredients to get a blend that can be applied to skin, and then apply it, smelling every couple/few minutes for the first two hours to three hours and then every ten minutes after the dry down is mostly into the longer-lasting base notes.
• continue fiddling with the recipe of the blend until there’s better coverage and less strength variance over time.
• I make the final blend of ingredients, let sit in the final container for three days, add the carrier substance, and then either keep it or wrap it in bubble wrap and cardboard for mailing.
• (Some people use plumbers tape around the tops of bottles to decrease the amount of scent particles that escape, which I cannot be arsed to do, bc I can never find the plumbers tape.)
I will today and tomorrow be messing with a scent for
silk_dragon_zen that sounds like it will smell like forestry petrichor, and then messing with a knock off of Bachelor’s Grove for my friends Bat and
sabotabby. I do need to grab some roller bottles and such for finished scents to go in sometime soon.
• I get an idea of the relative strengths of the components by putting one drop of each base ingredient into a 2ml glass jar and smelling them together over the course of a couple of days while they blend.
• add or subtract any scents that fill in and round out the scent if needed.
• adjust the relative strengths of the ingredients by slowly adding more drops of the same things and writing down changes over the course of a day or two.
• I dip the end of a test strip of paper or paper towel into the blend and smell it every couple of minutes to see if there are any gaps where the scent does not come out as strongly so that I can make sure the notes cover the whole application and dry down process.
• I add alcohol or a carrier oil to the ingredients to get a blend that can be applied to skin, and then apply it, smelling every couple/few minutes for the first two hours to three hours and then every ten minutes after the dry down is mostly into the longer-lasting base notes.
• continue fiddling with the recipe of the blend until there’s better coverage and less strength variance over time.
• I make the final blend of ingredients, let sit in the final container for three days, add the carrier substance, and then either keep it or wrap it in bubble wrap and cardboard for mailing.
• (Some people use plumbers tape around the tops of bottles to decrease the amount of scent particles that escape, which I cannot be arsed to do, bc I can never find the plumbers tape.)
I will today and tomorrow be messing with a scent for
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no subject
Date: 2023-03-12 02:41 am (UTC)I collect smellies.
It is very interesting to see more of the work that goes into scents.
Thanks for sharing!
no subject
Date: 2023-03-12 10:04 pm (UTC)What kind of smells do you you like?
no subject
Date: 2023-03-12 11:16 pm (UTC)Do you have favourite smells? I fkn love smells. Well... good smells. I mean, I work in a place where there can be dreadful smells and I have what people think of as a very acute sense of smell, so sometimes it's an unfun job. Imagine having to open cases and cases of fish very literally to smell them and coming across a dud.
no subject
Date: 2023-03-13 01:02 am (UTC)I like sticky, resinous scents like myrrh and Copal, sticky floral scents like orchids and lantana (why has nobody used lantana in a perfume?). I like clean scents like cotton blossom and lemon and clover; I like gourmand smells like chocolate, coffee, vanilla; boozy smells like rum and oak-barrel scented whiskey. I like woodsy smells and green smells and dirt smells. I like aquatic smells like thunderstorms and gardens after rain. I like dark smells like blue yarrow and ravensara, and bright smells like apple and amber. I like so many smells that my brain is tripping over itself trying to talk about the things I love, and the infinite diversity in infinite combinations of those things.
I don’t really like lavender-heavy blends, anything with gardenia, and I only like rose and coconut in tiny amounts.
I should put my recent blends into my smellgoods collection spreadsheet, with the wishlist and scent making stuff. If there’s anything you want a decant of or anything that is marked in red on that list that smells terrible on me, feel free to just ask for it, and next time I send stuff your way, I will put an envelope for you in there.