Rose petal perfume Perfume through the ages Easy soap making
Transcription
Rose petal perfume Perfume through the ages Easy soap making
Cameo glass fragrance bottle (1884) SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2013 By Laurie Triefeldt Easy soap making This soap-making process is very easy, but adult supervision is recommended. What you need: • Clear glycerin soap blocks (found at craft stores) • Liquid food coloring • Stir sticks • Essential oil (optional) • Petroleum jelly or cooking spray • Microwave oven and microwavable container • Ice cube tray or candy mold or soap mold Step one: Coat an ice cube tray or mold with petroleum jelly or cooking spray. The earliest soaps are thought to have been used more to clean wool and textiles than for personal hygiene. Some people preferred smelling good to actually being clean and thought perfume did the trick nicely. Through the ages, the medical benefits of cleanliness were well-known to many cultures, but forgotten or ignored by others. It has been suggested that modern society is too clean and that an excessive use of soaps, detergents and sanitizers may lower our immune systems and could be responsible for a rise in allergies. Soap basics Perfume basics Soap can be made from a variety of ingredients. Animal fat, called tallow, and vegetable oils such as castor, olive or coconut oil are combined with chemicals called alkalies. The most common alkali used to make soap is sodium hydroxide, also known as lye. Step two: Place glycerin in a microwavable container. Heat in microwave oven. Time varies depending on microwave wattage. Stir every 10 to 15 seconds until completely melted. Step four: Pour the melted glycerin into the tray or mold, fill almost to the top. Perfume through the ages What you need: • Clean bottle for finished perfume • Essential rose oil (optional) • Red food coloring • Measuring cup and strainer • Cooking pot with lid • 2 cups of fresh rose petals • Glass bowl and spoon Step one: On a stove top, bring 2 cups of water to bowl. Turn off heat. Step two: Add rose petals and let steep until water is cool. Essential oils can be natural (from plants or animals) or synthetic. These oils are very strong and must be combined with alcohol or water for use in a perfume. The concentration or dilution level of essential oils is an important characteristic of a perfume. A true perfume is the costliest form of fragrance with 22 percent essential oils. Eau de parfum has between 15 and 22 percent essential oils. Eau de toilette is made with 8 to 15 percent oils. And Eau de cologne uses 4 percent essential oils. There are many kinds of soap. Some are liquid, others hard or shaved into flakes. Personal soaps are made to wash our skin or hair. Soaps made for bathing are called toilet soaps. Detergents are designed to clean dishes or laundry. Household cleansers often have mild abrasives that can clean a variety of surfaces. Step five: Cool for an hour or so before removing from the mold. Placing them in the freezer can speed up this process. They should just pop out. This perfume recipe is gentle and nontoxic, but adult supervision is recommended. Perfumes are made of many components, sometimes hundreds. Soap manufacturers add fragrances, colors, germicides, builders and active agents to their soaps, depending on the purpose of the soap. The industry is always working to improve and create new formulas. Step three: Carefully remove the melted glycerin from oven and stir in a small amount of food coloring. If you wish, stir in a drop or two of scented oil. Rose petal perfume Step three: Add a drop of red food coloring. If you wish, add a drop of essential rose oil to the mix. Stir. Step four: Strain the cool water into a glass bowl. Squeeze as much liquid out of petals as you can. Perfumes are designed to unfold their scent over time. What you smell initially is called the top note, it lasts 10 to 30 minutes. The middle note follows as the top note evaporates; it lasts 10 to 45 minutes. The base notes are heavier, and some last 24 hours. Step five: Pour the mixture into a clean bottle and label your perfume with a name of your choosing. Stored in a cool, dark place, the perfume should keep for about two weeks. Perfume has been used since ancient times. It has also played an important role in the religious ceremonies of many cultures. Scholars believe that the use of perfume began in ancient Egypt. The Persians used scent as a sign of rank. The Romans began to use perfume around 750 B.C. to celebrate the goddess Flora. Attractive scents go hand in hand with attractive containers. Perfumes in the form of burning incense are used in religious ceremonies. The use of perfume spreads to Greece, Rome, Persia and the Islamic world. 2000 B.C. Egyptian scent bottles (c. 5000 to 3050 B.C.) The first alcoholbased perfume is made for Elizabeth of Hungary in 1370. Roman green glass scent bottle from the second or third century A.D. Ancient Egyptian glass perfume bottle from the New Kingdom period 3000 B.C. Arabian physician Avicenna is the first to extract attar, an oil from flowers. Diluted with water, this became the first modern perfume, rose water. 1000 B.C. A.D. 1000 1100 “Eau de Cologne” is invented by the Farina brothers in Cologne, Germany. The scent is used in everything from ointments to mouthwash. Irish-cut crystal with mushroom stopper (1820s) Semiprecious stone perfume flasks (1860-70s) 1200 English engraved silver-gilt bottle (c. 1690) Corinthian Greek terra-cotta Fragrant ointments are terra-cotta bottle scent bottle used in toiletries and (650–550 B.C.) (610–650 B.C.) cosmetics. Cinnamon and honey scents are The use of perfume declines Lavender water popular and the fragrant with the fall of the Roman is distilled by myrrh was more Empire, but continues in a German precious than gold. Muslim communities. Benedictine nun. 1300 1400 Chanel No. 5 hits the market in 1920. Joy, one of the most expensive perfumes ever made, is created in 1926. Charlie becomes a modern marvel of perfumes in the 1970s. Joy bottle (1926) 1500 1600 1700 1800 2000 Wedgwood jasper ware bottle (1785–90) Perfume becomes very popular in the 17th century. Louis XV’s court was nicknamed “the perfumed court” because scent was used on everything. The town of Grasse in Provence, France, becomes a major source for fragrant raw materials. Celebrities Lalique glass for begin to L’ Air du Temps by have their Nina Ricci (1947) own scents created. LEARN ABOUT BREADS IN THE NEXT INSTALLMENT OF WORLD OF WONDER Perfume makers search the globe for new scents. SOURCES: World Book Encyclopedia, World Book Inc.; www.soaphistory.net; www.soapmakingfun.com; www.perfumers.org; www.perfumeandfragrances.com; www.pbs.org; www.ehow.com; http://www.soaphistory.net; www.scentiments.com; www.fashion-era.com Get sneak previews and chat with the creator of World of Wonder on our Facebook page — www.facebook.com/worldofwonder2014 © 2013 Triefeldt Studios, Inc. Distributed by Universal Uclick for UFS 1900