Flaconneur
Flaconneur's Blog
13 years ago - 11/11/2012
7 1

Skin Types and Fragrances

There are two basic skin types, dry and oily. Most fair-skinned and light haired people tend to have drier skin. This skin type can have trouble with fragrance longevity and generally they need to reapply after a few hours. This is because the fragrance is absorbed by the skin due to the skin's dryness.

On the other, hand brunettes generally have oilier skin with more natural moisture. Oiler skin will hold fragrance for many hours without any longevity issues. Generally, brunettes should be careful of this and apply less fragrance.

Acidity or alkalinity, otherwise known as pH levels, are different from person to person. The amount of acidity in you skin will also effect how a fragrance's ingredients will react with your body chemistry. A healthy normal skin pH is slightly acidic at pH 4 - 6.4, a neutral pH is pH 7 and an alkaline pH is usually pH 7 or above. Fragrances can smell differently on skin that is alkaline (pH 7 or above). They can be directly effected or altered by this alkaline pH in the skin. This is one reason that testing fragrances directly on the skin is the best evaluations to whether you truly like the scent. When testing on paper, you are not experiencing the fragrance's interaction with the pH of your skin.

There is a non-medical reason that skin can have an alkaline pH. Some bar soaps are actually alkaline. There are a few manufacturers that offer non alkaline soap such as Cetaphil, which is specifically made for people with dry skin. Alkaline bar soaps can upset your skin's natural balance. Medical conditions such as eczema, dermatitis and diabetes are the most common conditions that can lower the pH of a persons skin.

One method to make a fragrance last longer, especially for fair-skinned people, is to moisturize the skin before applying your fragrance. It is suggested that you choose a moisturizer that is unscented. This way you will not layer too many different scents on top of one another and subsequently combine your fragrance unintentionally. This method can be used by anyone that has an issue with fragrance holding to their skin.

One way to keep everyone happy about your zest for wearing fragrances is to practice the Perfume Bubble theory. People should not be able to smell your fragrance before they actually see you. If people can smell your fragrance in less than an arm's reach, you've applied too much.

7 Comments
CincyCincy 12 years ago
Interesting read. Thanks Flac.
FlaconneurFlaconneur 12 years ago
You add an interesting perspective to this topic, DutchSniffer. Thanks.
DutchSnifferDutchSniffer 12 years ago
apart from actual skin chemistry like you explain above, there is also a thing such as 'your own unique scent' as is currently being explored. We all have major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins attached to each cell of the body and apparently we are (like most animals) able to discern between the MHC-types that are our own and those that are from another person. When choosing a mate for life, animals prefer a different MHC-type which genetically speaking is favourable due to less in-breeding problems. They think this explains why we may like 1 smell on other people but not on ourselves. That is at least the gist of the article I've now read a few times: How people smell themselves. There's been a few references to it on Parfumo already: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/01/how-people-smell-themselves/
SensualSensual 13 years ago
New or experienced - this is simply well written, understandable and informative. :) There are sometimes even heated argues about "Skin-chemistry", but this explains it pretty well. For me it has been very interesting to test perfumes together with opposite sex - many times the most striking differences has been between male/female-skin, so I suppose that estrogen/testosteron-levels have somethng to do with it as well.
And on a darker-haired female-friend the ncense in "Artek Standard" came out way better than on me. Sometimes it seems to me, that I can easily pick up the sweetest perfumes without them appearing too sugary, but then again, I actually prefer spices over flowers, except for Annick Goutals which I find just marvellous...And curiously, "Un Matin d´Orage" stays on me for hours and hours - definately inside the perfume-bubble, however ;) - especially the ginger for some reason. Curiously, ´cos with many others it seems to disappear immediately - but sometimes I wonder, if I just have greater sensivity towards the ginger and flowers ? Especially flowers, for before Goutals I just could not stand them, some flowery-orientals were just on the border.
FlaconneurFlaconneur 13 years ago
I just thought this would be useful information for anyone new to fragrances. Sometime even experienced people like us need to review. Thanks, Sherapop.
SensualSensual 13 years ago
I´m fair-skinned, even pale, so I have practically never any trouble with Perfume Bubble theory. ;) Luckily, many perfumes do last longer than just 4 hours, but with some I use neutral moisturizer before applying perfume.
SherapopSherapop 13 years ago
Fascinating--thank you so much! Love the "Perfume Bubble theory"... (-;

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