Parfums de Rosine - Ballerina No. 1

A rose bush with a fleeting fragrance, a thorny bush that opens up all possibilities to the sense of smell and conjures up a ballerina of flesh and blood in the nose – with the means of perfume – in Marie-Hélène Rogeon's imagination, a cheeky and delicate dancer.

Like the flower, the perfume begins with rose blossom and is embellished in its heart with pale, almost white shades.

The first notes, peach and pear, have the grace of a leaping cat, shiny and spotted. The rose and peony, the floral centre of the delicate heart, exude their soft, pastel-coloured facets wherever the dancer's arabesque carries them. Like a waving, milky-white veil, this final harmony envelops the skin and surrounds it with the transparent touch of a porcelain figurine.

Ballerina No. 1

The rose enchants us, whether as an essence or an absolute. Its versatile character gives perfumes a backdrop of adventure stories and the depth and feeling of a romance.

Each new creation from Parfums de Rosine is an attempt to tame the queen of flowers and let her tell stories full of sophistication and enchantment. Roses are an endless source of inspiration for Marie-Hélène Rogeon and her son Louis.

The ballerina and dance – nature as a metaphor

When arranged in a bouquet, the compact and simple rose blossoms evoke the graceful ballerinas: just as the roses sway to the rhythm of the wind, the dancers glide in absolute harmony with the rhythm of the orchestra. With the choreographic skills of nature, these beauties merge into a powerful and harmonious whole.

This is exactly how Marie-Hélène Rogeon, in her search for harmony, sees a connection between the arts of dancers and perfumers. Composing, orchestrating and refining.

In this first opus, ‘Ballerina No. 1’, dance and perfume come together and set off on a pas de deux inspired by the pale pink grace of the ballerina rose.

 

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Regular price
145,00 €
Sale price
145,00 €
Regular price
Unit price
1,450.00 € / 1 l
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Les Parfums de Rosine
15 rue du Mail
75002 Paris
France


Warnhinweise:
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Alcohol Denat-Parfum/Fragance-Aqua/Water/Eau. Hydroxycitronellal. Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone. Geraniol. Citronellol. Limonene. Linalool. Coumarin. Cinnamyl Alcohol. Benzyl Benzoate. Citral. Farnesol. Benzyl Salicylate-Fugenol. Innamal-Benzyl Alcohol

Les Parfums de Rosine
15 rue du Mail
75002 Paris
France


Warnhinweise:
Entflammbar. Augenkontakt vermeiden.

Alcohol Denat-Parfum/Fragance-Aqua/Water/Eau. Hydroxycitronellal. Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone. Geraniol. Citronellol. Limonene. Linalool. Coumarin. Cinnamyl Alcohol. Benzyl Benzoate. Citral. Farnesol. Benzyl Salicylate-Fugenol. Innamal-Benzyl Alcohol

Les Parfums de Rosine
15 rue du Mail
75002 Paris
France


Warnhinweise:
Entflammbar. Augenkontakt vermeiden.

Alcohol Denat-Parfum/Fragance-Aqua/Water/Eau. Hydroxycitronellal. Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone. Geraniol. Citronellol. Limonene. Linalool. Coumarin. Cinnamyl Alcohol. Benzyl Benzoate. Citral. Farnesol. Benzyl Salicylate-Fugenol. Innamal-Benzyl Alcohol

Les Parfums de Rosine
15 rue du Mail
75002 Paris
France


Warnhinweise:
Entflammbar. Augenkontakt vermeiden.

Alcohol Denat-Parfum/Fragance-Aqua/Water/Eau. Hydroxycitronellal. Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone. Geraniol. Citronellol. Limonene. Linalool. Coumarin. Cinnamyl Alcohol. Benzyl Benzoate. Citral. Farnesol. Benzyl Salicylate-Fugenol. Innamal-Benzyl Alcohol

Mehr über Parfums de Rosine

The boutique, with its wall paintings and subtle decorative objects, is tiny, decorated in shades of fuchsia, black, gold and cream white. ‘It's a tribute to the couturier Paul Poiret,’ explains owner and perfume expert Marie-Hélène Rogeon. She spent 15 years launching fragrances for major brands before setting up her own perfume boutique in Paris's Palais Royal. Her aim was to reintroduce Paul Poiret's forgotten perfumes in her own unique way.

Poiret, the son of a cloth merchant, was the most sought-after couturier in Paris at the beginning of the century. The most famous women of the time, such as Sarah Bernhardt and Isadora Duncan, were his clients. Poiret liberated women from corsets and was the first to use printed fabrics in haute couture. He is also considered the inventor of women's trousers, and is said to have been the first to advise his elegant female customers to wear their hair short. In 1913, he achieved record sales with his fashion and earned a fortune, but spent it all twice over.

He later tried his hand at painting and acting, even touring France with the French writer Colette, and finally died in 1944, completely impoverished. His once great name was already all but forgotten.

But a trace of his work has been preserved: in the perfume collection of Marie-Hélène Rogeon's family, a clan of perfumers. Marie-Hélène's grandparents had produced the perfumes for Paul Poiret. Poiret was the first fashion designer to launch his own perfumes in addition to accessories and decorative objects. His first perfume, ‘Rosine’, named after his daughter who died in childhood, came onto the market in 1911.

He had a total of over thirty fragrances produced. He had the bottles designed at his own design school. He wanted to use the proceeds to pay off tax debts that had accumulated during his heyday. However, by the 1930s, Poiret perfumes had almost completely disappeared from the market. ‘His fragrance creations were never known as Parfums de Paul Poiret, but always as Les Parfums de Rosine,’ reports Marie-Hélène Rogeon. That is why they are still sold under this name today, a piece of cultural history that has been saved from oblivion.

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