tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30643113.post676342983618891516..comments2023-10-21T11:46:32.529+01:00Comments on Madame Arcati: Warhol's idea to make media books pages profitableMadame Arcatihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04823823014493798116noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30643113.post-37786102638350479992008-12-16T15:32:00.000+00:002008-12-16T15:32:00.000+00:00Thank you Robin, most appropriate indeed. I do lik...Thank you Robin, most appropriate indeed. I do like your website, http://aroundrobin.blogspot.com/: elegance itself. Of course, I can't imagine that a vulgarian like Roger Alton will actually reinvent his literary pages with a commercial cosmetic imperative: yet I'd rather read about the sweet air behind an earlobe than an author's latest semi-psychotic confessions dressed up with dialogue.Madame Arcatihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04823823014493798116noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30643113.post-82710915717882755972008-12-16T14:28:00.000+00:002008-12-16T14:28:00.000+00:00From Saturday's Fashion Wire daily:As Ghislaine an...From Saturday's Fashion Wire daily:<BR/><BR/>As Ghislaine and his partner Magali Sénéquier showed off their “library” of scents, a carefully developed series of perfumes, he noted that his concept is to impart each one with a narrative. For instance, “Personnages Principaux,” or main characters, are Ghislain’s odes to the male and female historical figures he admires or who fascinate him – George Sand for the scent “1804,” a spicy, amber-based perfume; a fresh citrus for the Colette-inspired “1873,” which alludes to the author who was “fresh in everything she did,” said Ghislaine. For men, there are scents like the oceanic “1828,” inspired by the work of Jules Verne, and the seductive “1725,” after Casanova, combining woody scents with citrus and lavender. <BR/><BR/>“I don’t have time to write, so I write books with fragrance,” said Ghislaine. “Fragrance is my ink.”Robin Hunthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06731689471696298055noreply@blogger.com