The latest in the Aqua Allegoria line of Guerlain fragrances is Nerolia Bianca, a fresh take on the whole orange blossom tree, composed by in-house perfumer Thierry Wasser.
With a release date at the end of March 2013, this new Aqua is the annual addition to the "introductory Guerlains" as the Aqua Allegorias are known among perfumephiles. Nerolia Bianca contains extracts of orange, bitter orange, neroli, eau de brouts, orange blossom and petit-grain (if you don't know what some of these notes mean, please click on the link for their origin and differences), aiming to give an olfactory impression of the entirety of the bitter orange tree.
The concept isn't new (several niche brands have ventured into the bigaradier tree -i.e. citrus aurantium- transliteration), but Guerlain might be trusted to offer the completist one, judging by the very lovely latest Aqua Allegoria fragrances, namely Jasminora and Lys Soleia. The upcoming fragrance reminds me of the much lamented discontinuation of a previous Guerlain take on neroli which was Flora Nerolia, a delightful white floral with fresh accents, built on the freshness of neroli essence on a bed of jasmine and a smidgen of incense. Let's hope that the substitute is no less beautiful than the predecessor.
Nerolia Bianca will be offered in the standard 75ml bottles with gold honeycomb of the Aqua Allegoria range.
May I remind you that from the original line-up of Aqua Allegorias, only Herba Fresca and Pamplune remain, the rest being ephemeral editions.
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Thank you for the heads up on this one. Will be interesting to sniff it on my skin. Floris Special 127 has a lot of neroli in it, and it smells lovely on my skin, but sometimes, I can wear a neroli based scent and it turns quite sour.
ReplyDeleteI guess this will quench the Guerlain cravings until the Champs Elysee boutique exclusive comes out in August and the new men's scent in 2014.
I Love this image!
ReplyDeleteAgree with solanace. It makes the juice in the bottle look like liquid sunshine.
ReplyDeleteWell!
ReplyDeleteThis is cheerful news on a snowy monday. I really enjoy the AA line of Guerlain. I can still find Jasminora and Flora Nymphea. These are both limited production items? Lys Solis disappeared as soon as it arrived-i am so glad I have one bottle of it!
Sincerely,
Carole
It does seem it could be lovely & sunshiney, but it always confuses me that orangey-type scents are summery, when oranges are at their best in winter.
ReplyDeleteIt's like the sunshine that we have when not having sunshine, so to speak, but it actually works, whereas I find some things one finds summery in winter are never as good in summer.
Now this is delightful news!
ReplyDeleteB,
ReplyDeleteneroli and all the citrus-derived essences CAN turn sour, you're not the only one.
Guerlain is issuing a lot of things and they sometimes need to slow down (though this is a regular annual issue). Better few and stellar than lots and...
Solanace,
ReplyDeleteit's like a grotto of delight!
B,
ReplyDeletelove your description!
Carole,
ReplyDeletethey phase these out regardless of sales, it seems (though it appeared that sales were determining the ephemeron of the collection, since Pamplue and HF are mainstays); I know Lys Soleia was selling well, for instance (which you confirm by its being out of stock so soon). Jasminora was good and Flora Nympea not bad at all (though not my personal cup of tea).
But according to one shop-owner I talked to, there is an initial enthusiasm on Guerlain by consumers and then it soon deflates, as opposed to other brands with a steadier sales flow, which led him not to stock the brand in his store :/
[Guerlain PR and Sylvaine, please hear this out!]
C,
ReplyDeletegood observation!!
It's not really orange the fruit, but (bitter) orange tree (in its entirety). Since the bitter orange tree blooms in spring, it's more spring-like than anything else. Both orange blossom absolute and neroli are derived by the blossoms, petit-grain by the twigs and young leaves, as is eau de brouts. (refer to my linked article).
I think we associate orange as a scent with winter not only due to oranges being in season in winter (logical since it takes months from blossom to fruit), but because of pomanders around Christmas and because of so many wintertime fragrances (for instance spicy orientals) featuring resinous-citric orange rind essence. ;-)
30 Roses,
ReplyDeleteas I said elsewhere, if it's half as good as Flora Nerolia, I'm sold :-)
Lys Soleia never even got to South Africa! Herba Fresca, however, is one of my summer favourites and I am hoping to add Pampelune eventually, since it is the only grapefruit fragrance I adore.
ReplyDeleteThank you for mentioning me in your Tweet E :)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteM,
ReplyDeletereally??? I wonder. It should be a best-seller, especially in Oz, since it utilizes familiar and well-loved elements.
Hmmm!
I too love Herba Fresca for the summer, so fresh, but not boring.
B,
ReplyDeleteyou're most welcome. Credit where credit is due.
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