"With winter coming, her perfumes offer an exotic pick-me-up, she says. The definitive lack of scents in chilly Canada pushes Moriel to keep surrounding herself with rich aromas formed in her early memories. She says that the warm, humid climate in Israel contains more fragrances than colder countries, and besides coming to see her growing family in Israel every year she is drawn to the odors.
“I am sensitive to the smells in Vancouver now and can pick up the cherry and linden blossoms. But it’s really the Middle Eastern heat that brings out the best in plants and flowers,” she says.
“And in the spring … there are orange blossoms in full bloom. I try to time my trips back to Israel around this time.”
From an interview of Ayala Moriel conducted by Karin Kloosterman on Israeli21c.org. You can find the link here.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
"Always looking to her Middle Eastern home for inspiration"
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
This Month's Popular Posts on Perfume Shrine
-
In my previous post I elaborated on what constitutes art in perfumery and what criteria must apply for it to be defined as such. Some perfum...
-
Andy Tauer, enfant gaté of the niche universe, and deservingly so, excells in three things in his fragrant sonatas: hesperidia, rose and res...
-
There is a huge market of marketing all things French to Anglosaxons and in that respect the title of today's post is in part taken off ...
-
It's unusual in perfumery for the start of this century to encounter a modern composition which focuses on that loaded term which is dre...
-
Listening to the deep baritone of Thorsten Biehl’s voice confirms what I suspected from wearing his perfumes: he does not take fools gladly,...
-
Ask any aspiring perfumista about aldehydes and you will hear that they are synthetic materials first used in Chanel No.5 , that thanks to t...
What a lovely read! I did not know that Ayala has an autistic daughter. I strongly feel that natural essential oils can be used for calming all of us, including the developmentally disabled and autistic population. So it comes as no surprise to me that she channeled her energy into the worthy endeavor of becoming a natural perfumer.
ReplyDeleteAnd I am also partial to the scent of citrus and orange blossom. A simple combo of orange blossom absolute and vanilla essential oil can make me so happy with just one whiff :)
B,
ReplyDeleteshe has been quite vocal (and fighting in good cases) about it over the years.
It's nice to see someone who channels her energy into doing something that is so very giving to both herself and to others. :-)