From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chanel N° 5 is one of the best known
perfumes in the world. It was the first fragrance from
Parisian
couturier,
Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel.
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Contents
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1
History
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2
Style
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3
Notes
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4
Cultural influence
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5
References
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6
External links
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History
Coco Chanel commissioned
Ernest Beaux to make six perfumes. They were labelled No. 1,
No. 2, etc. through No. 6. It was bottle No. 5 that was to
Chanel's liking and became the chosen formula.
Chanel introduced it first to some of her friends on
May 5,
1921.
Initially, it was given to good clients for free at her
boutique.
In 1924,
Pierre Wertheimer partnered Coco Chanel in her perfume
business. He owned 70%, Coco owned 10%, and her friend Bader
owned 20%. Today, the
Wertheimer family still runs the perfume business.
Style
"I want to give women an artificial perfume," said Chanel.
"Yes, I really do mean artificial, like a dress, something that
has been made. I don't want any rose or lily of the valley, I
want a perfume that is a composition."[citation
needed] No. 5 is famous for being the first
perfume to heavily rely on synthetic floral
aldehydes as a
top note. Before synthetics, perfume either had to be
applied very very heavily before going out to ensure that the
fragrance would last, or frequently throughout the night.
Chanel applied the French aesthetic theory that "ugly" placed
next to "beautiful", by contrast, makes the beautiful object
more so. In this era almost all perfumes were floral and
"pretty" - designed to enhance a woman's beauty with more
beauty. Instead of the scent of flowers, Coco wanted a perfume
that "reflects my personality, something abstract and unique".
She believed that a perfume should serve to spotlight a woman's
natural beauty using contrast - i.e. the artificial perfume
would make the woman's natural beauty more evident.
Notes
Chanel No. 5 is classified as a
chypre, and within that was the first floral aldehydic. Its
top notes include
ylang ylang,
iris
and aldehydes; its mid notes
rose
and
jasmine; and its
base notes
sandalwood,
vetiver and
vanilla.[1]
Laboratory tests have shown that Chanel No. 5 contains
secretions from the
perineal glands of
civet
cats. Civet is a powerful fixative, making the scent last a long
time. Animal rights groups such as the
World Society for the Protection of Animals express concern
that civet is harvested in a method cruel to animals. The Chanel
company claims that, starting in 1998, natural civet has been
replaced with a synthetic substitute.[1]
Cultural influence
Sales increased in the 1950s, especially after the perfume
was introduced in the United States. Movie star
Marilyn Monroe's endorsement of the brand is said to have
contributed to its popularity. In
1953,
when asked what she wore in bed, Monroe famously replied, "Two
drops of Chanel No. 5". Chanel herself is quoted as saying that
one should put perfume only where one wanted to be kissed.
Andy Warhol sealed Chanel No. 5's status as cultural icon
when he made nine
silk screens of the perfume, elevating it to
Campbell Soup status. And in 1959 the packaging itself made
it into the collections of the
Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Famous spokesmodels for the fragrance have included
Marilyn Monroe,
Catherine Deneuve,
Estella Warren, and
Nicole Kidman (who in 2004 played along
Rodrigo Santoro in a
Baz Luhrmann-directed multi-million-dollar commercial titled
No. 5 The Film).
The first advertisement shown on British TV's
Channel 5 was for Chanel No. 5.
References
- ^ See
"The story of No. 5" at
Chanel's website
External links
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N° 5 the Film as 17
MB mov
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N° 5 the Film on
YouTube
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long making of N° 5 the Film
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short making of N° 5 the Film
Categories:
Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007
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Perfumery |
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1921 introductions