Showing posts with label Stilboide Bottle 1922. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stilboide Bottle 1922. Show all posts

Friday, January 27, 2017

Stilboide Fluide

Stilboide Fluide was one of Guerlain’s early grooming preparations — a refined liquid hair and beard groom that combined practicality with the elegance of perfumed luxury. Introduced as early as 1875, it exemplified Guerlain’s ability to merge beauty and function, transforming even the simplest of daily rituals into an act of sophistication. The name Stilboide itself evokes a sense of sheen and fluidity, fitting for a product designed to give hair a healthy luster and polished finish. In texture and purpose, it was much like brilliantine, a fashionable hair dressing of the late 19th century, prized by both men and women for its ability to add shine, tame frizz, and impart fragrance to the hair.

 "For that satiny sheen which a dash of brilliantine gives..."


The formula of Stilboide Fluide was primarily an alcohol-based mixture combined with perfume oils, which gave it both a grooming and an aromatic function. Over time, the alcohol component evaporates more readily than the dense aromatic oils — which explains why, in surviving vintage bottles today, the two substances have often separated, with the clear alcohol resting below and the golden oils rising to the top. When freshly mixed, however, the liquid would have glistened like pale amber and released a fine veil of scent when applied to the hair or beard.

1875 ad


What set Guerlain’s version apart was not merely its formulation but the fragrances that perfumed it. Depending on the period, Stilboide Fluide was offered in various Guerlain scents — a mark of refinement and personalization. Whether it was the powdery sweetness of Jicky, the floral charm of Eau de Cologne Impériale, or another house creation, each version subtly perfumed the wearer’s hair with a fragrance that lingered throughout the day. This scented grooming product reflected a time when perfuming one’s hair was considered an intimate form of luxury — an invisible halo of refinement and allure.

 The Delineator, 1935
"To pick up a wave with unexpected swiftness there are Yardley's Setting lotion, lavender-scented, has more convenient atomizer, and Guerlain's Water Lustrale. For that satiny sheen which a dash of brilliantine gives, I offer you Guerlain's Stilboide — perfumed with your favorite "Shalimar" - glamourous."

A fascinating detail from period advertisements notes that the product was made “to maintain the curl of the so-called English papillotes.” Papillotes referred to a hairstyling technique in which small strips of paper were used to wrap sections of hair before curling — a method popular among both fashionable women and men of the 19th century. When the hair was released, it formed soft, defined curls that framed the face. The Stilboide Fluide, lightly brushed through the hair or applied to fingertips before styling, would have enhanced the curl’s shape, adding gloss and flexibility while delicately scenting the coiffure.

In its time, Stilboide Fluide represented more than a grooming aid; it was an embodiment of the Victorian and Belle Époque ideals of personal elegance. The ritual of applying it — much like using pomade or scented powder — spoke to an age in which grooming was an art form and fragrance was part of one’s social presence. Today, surviving bottles of Stilboide Fluide not only reveal the technical sophistication of early Guerlain formulations but also tell a story of a bygone world where even hair care was touched by perfumed artistry.

Scents:



Some of the earliest Stilboide Fluid scents were:
  • Bouquet
  • Chypre
  • Coq Gaulois
  • Derniere Cri
  • Des Pages
  • Fragrans
  • Heliotrope
  • Jicky
  • Makis
  • New Mown Hay
  • Pepita
  • Rex
  • Simplex
  • Sornette
  • Violette
  • Ylang Ylang

Stilboide Fluide was available in the following scents:
  • Apres L'Ondee
  • A Travers Champs
  • Bouquet de Faunes
  • Candide Effluve
  • Chypre
  • Chypre 53
  • Coque d'Or
  • Cuir de Russie
  • Dawamesk
  • Djedi
  • Eau de Cologne Extra Dry
  • Fleur de Feu
  • Fol Arome
  • Guerlarose
  • Guerlilas
  • Guerlinade
  • Hegemonienne
  • Jasmin
  • Jicky
  • Kadine
  • L'Heure Bleue
  • Liu
  • Mitsouko
  • Muguet
  • Parfum des Champs Elysees
  • Rue de la Paix
  • Shalimar
  • Sillage
  • Sous Le Vent
  • Une Rose
  • Vague Souvenir
  • Vega
  • Violette
  • Vol de Nuit


 





 

Pola Negri, c1920s, holding a Guerlain atomizer (spraying her coiffure with brilliantine).

Bottles:


The Stilboide Bottle as we recognize it, was first used in 1922. It was created by Pochet et du Courval in two moulds:

  • Mould #13349 = 10.6cm - 60cc
  • Mould #13561 = 13.5cm - 120cc

These had various ground glass stoppers and were housed in the blue banded cardboard box.







Guerlain's Talc de Toilette

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