Showing posts with label Bouquet de L'Exposition c1867. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bouquet de L'Exposition c1867. Show all posts

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Bouquet de L'Exposition c1867

Bouquet de L’Exposition was launched by Guerlain in 1867, created especially for the Exposition Universelle of Paris, the grand World’s Fair that celebrated innovation, progress, and artistry during the height of the Second Empire. At a time when Paris was the undisputed capital of elegance and refinement, Guerlain—already established as the perfumer to emperors and empresses—presented this fragrance as both a tribute to floral beauty and a showcase of the house’s mastery in olfactory composition.

The scent itself was conceived as a “bouquet of exhibition,” a perfume meant to dazzle visitors much like the marvels on display in the pavilions surrounding it. The composition is a graceful floral harmony centered on rose, honeysuckle, and Philadelphus (often called mock orange). The rose, likely sourced from the lush flower fields of Grasse, offered its familiar velvety sweetness and romantic depth—a timeless emblem of femininity. The honeysuckle, with its honeyed, slightly green perfume, lent an air of springtime freshness, evoking the scent of blossoms climbing along a sun-warmed garden wall. The Philadelphus, prized for its radiant, orange-blossom-like aroma, added a sparkling brightness that completed the illusion of a fragrant bouquet just gathered from a Parisian garden at dawn.

Together, these flowers created a tender, luminous, and distinctly French fragrance, one that mirrored the optimism and grace of its era. Worn by ladies in silk crinolines and lace gloves, Bouquet de L’Exposition would have seemed both modern and timeless—a whisper of refinement in a time of grandeur.

Though discontinued long ago, the perfume remains part of Guerlain’s early heritage, a testament to the house’s long-standing tradition of linking its creations to moments of art, culture, and innovation. Bouquet de L’Exposition endures in memory as a fragrant souvenir of the 1867 World’s Fair, a delicate echo of a Paris that perfumed the world with its beauty.

Guerlain's Talc de Toilette

 Guerlain's Talc de Toilette was housed inside of a tin enameled in blue, off white and black.