Friday, July 9, 2010

A parfum, a woman


How and why does one use perfume ?
It's very personal . Some wear a perfume to seduce , others to feel good, others for a particular event . There are no rules , only the pleasure and emotion count .
Loyalty to a perfume depends also really people .
When you think some women , imagine you have a particular scent with notes ?
I often imagine floral notes such as lily , jasmine, pink for women romantic, for they are sweet notes , voluptuous , both sensual and fragile.
For a seductive affirmed , I think of notes as woods, chypre that bring strength and courage.
A woman reminds me more reserved over construction of perfume on edge , like a musk .
When choosing a perfume , how to be sure not to make mistakes , not to be disappointed after a few days ?
Do not listen to others ... It is to be advised but the final choice must be personal and intuitive . Must assume their tastes and wear what you like.
Have we the right to advise a perfume based on a personality ?
This would classify people by groups , yet the choice is the first one.
You can not put women in cabinets , can not give them special function in relation to their purchases .
And can I emphasize or avoid certain notes according to his mood ?
Would anyone seriously the same question to a musician?
No, it is impossible for me to consider the scent in this way , just as it is not conceivable to design fragrances blondes , brunettes , redheads of ...
He must let go to their wishes , the fragrance is our point on the "i ".
What are the mixtures that we can dare to perfume ?
Can dare all. Everything is more a question of play was needed to make classes as a matter of discourse, to put words to feelings, but there were no codes at the start.
Some people mix their own several fragrances , creating their own perfume . It's great fun to run across budding perfumers around . Our ideas are the starting point and become scalable to infinity.
Similarly , mixed gender are conventions , what 's interesting is the relationship of each with the smell .
Are there any major trends that can be utilized for perfumes ?
Of course , this definition is neither exhaustive nor absolute , nor arrested for everyone but if you want to do families , we can say that there are two: the introvert and extrovert . For the former , there is more to citrus notes , fresh , with floral.
The tuberose and peony are very powerful, they tend to exclude from this category.
For outgoing, it is moving more towards the East, the chypre .
But we can pass from one to another depending on his mood, his desires , his diary ...

{translated from Elle-france}

Summmer Recipe: Croque-Monsieur

{Found all over France today, the Croque Monsieur - casually referred to as a Croque - has as many recipes and variations as it has cooks. The crunchy sandwich is served as an appetizer, snack, or casual meal.}

I made these for dinner last night to the joy of the husband and kiddos. I usually serve this over a bed of fresh Spring Greens which makes it the perfect summer meal.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Must See Film: "Ponette"





{Heartbreaking and beautiful}

Friday, July 2, 2010

French sugar tablets



These French sugar tablets look so glam at coffee time. Check them out here

Photo {mine}

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

What is it about french girls?


What is it about French girls?

What is it that gives Gallic girls that je ne sais quoi

THE SEXY MAMAN: Vanessa Paradis

Her life story is a perfect study in what makes French girls so different from the rest. There are strong similarities between the 36-year-old Vanessa Paradis and Kate Moss (both had a gap-toothed innocence at the start of their careers, both dated Johnny Depp), but then Kate chose the hard-living lifestyle, whereas Paradis had more self-respect, and a plan. She knew when to say no, how much to hold back (something you feel we Brits will never be good at) and at what point to cast aside the leather jacket, slip into Comptoir des Cotonniers, and start baking tarte aux pommes.

Signature look Red-carpet vintage flapper-style dresses. And those teeth.

THE ARTIST: Marion Cotillard

The combination of a very thin skin and an artistic temperament is, we think, quintessentially French, and nobody epitomises this more than the Oscar-winning actress and Dior model Marion Cotillard, 33. If she were British, you’d call her a neurotic drama queen. As it is, she’s French and beautiful, and we just take it for granted that emotions will run high. For her, acting is an intense vocation and real life is a series of fabulous highs and terrible lows, which made her perfect in the role of Edith Piaf. A fierce bundle of childlike energy and adult passion, she makes the rest of us feel as if we live life on autopilot.

Signature look Full-on glamour that still manages to look unexpected. Remember that Gaultier mermaid dress she wore to collect her Oscar?

THE F-IT GIRL: Clémence Poésy

This 26-year-old actress (Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, In Bruges) originally got noticed for her style. The darling of cool fashion mags, she is the epitome of a French It girl — pretty and hip, but never to the point where it could compromise her pouty brand of sex appeal. French F-it girls differ from their British counterparts in that they don’t have the self-destruct gene when it comes to drink, drugs and men.

Signature look Don’t expect her in anything truly avant garde (ie, man-scaring). It’s all about skinny jeans, shrunken jackets and a bowler hat.

THE INGENUE: Audrey Tautou

Tautou gets the prize for looking like the archetypal ingénue in the 2001 film Amélie. For ever seared on our hearts as the angel with the haircut that spawned a thousand wannabe kooky French girls, Tautou, 32, has since appeared in a Chanel No 5 ad and is now starring as Madame herself in Coco avant Chanel. The movie’s director, Anne Fontaine, says she chose Tautou because of her “little black bull” side. This is the other aspect of French girliness that eludes many women of other nationalities — their sheer determination. Even ingénues know exactly what they want and grow up to be contemptuous of those who don’t.

Signature look Directional tailoring, petite millefeuille dresses. And that hair. It’s all about the hair.

THE INTELLECTUAL: Eva Green

Never has any great beauty gone to such lengths to hide her assets on the red carpet. High-minded Eva Green (who first grabbed our attention in Bertolucci’s The Dreamers and then somehow got mixed up in Casino Royale) is that other kind of French girl who likes her make-up noir, her clothes noir, her men noir and her work choices challenging (with a few exceptions). Green, 29, is devilishly exotic and talks very intensely on intense subjects, just the way a French girl should.

Signature look Goth make-up, the pale skin and plenty of high-drama, high-fashion, statement outfits.