Mother's Day Perfume Shoppin in 7 (Short) Easy Lessons

May Day! May Day! Mother's Day is May 11!

For many of us, even avid and intrepid shoppers, Mother's Day poses a special challenge. That's why perfume is a favorite gift. It's luxurious, appreciated, and most women love it (and rarely buy it for themselves).

But navigating the perfume counter can be a challenge for newbies and people who don't know much about fragrance to begin with can find themselves completely intimidated.

Here's how you can own the fragrance counter, even if you've never shopped for perfume before. There are seven main guidelines to follow.

1. Perfume never goes on sale. It is never cheap. It hasn't been on sale since the days Marie Antoinette suggested peasants eat cake, and it most likely will not go on sale in our lifetimes. It is important to frame the search properly.

2. The people at the perfume counter may try to tempt you with carefully packaged gift sets that combine fragrance and shower gel or spray cologne and lotion. They will assure you this is the deal of the year. Don't laugh, it's true. It's as close as the fragrance industry is going to come to offering you a bargain.

3. Perfume comes in several "grades" from the most potent (perfume) to the least potent (cologne) and a couple of levels in-between (eau-de-parfum and toilette water, in that order). However, there are no official standards in the perfume industry so these gradations are a bit blurred. You are pretty safe buying "eau-de-parfum" (pronounced oh-duh-par-fahm, sorry there is no English word) since it's high-quality, very strong, luxurious, and what most perfume mavens prefer. If your mom likes a lighter touch, you can move down to toilette water or cologne but know that they wear off quicker.

4. The way a perfume smells fresh out of the bottle is not the way it will smell on your skin. It is designed to have something called "top notes" or deceptive little fragrance molecules that come buzzing out of the bottle when you get your first whiff. Top notes disappear in about four minutes. What you really smell over the long haul are the "heart notes." For that reason, it is not really that useful to sniff at a bunch of perfume bottles.

5. There are many rough groupings of fragrance families. The big ones to know are florals, fruity-florals, Orientals (spice), woodsy (which replaces the older family name of "chypres" which nobody could pronounce anyhow), and fresh. Orientals include spicy smells but don't think "hot." Think vanilla, cinnamon, cloves. Woodsy smells include "green" scents which have nothing to do with being environmentally friendly; they include things named for plants and trees (which fragrance mavens call "botanicals"), and moss. A brand-new trend to hit the fragrance world big is a group of fragrances called "fresh". It smells very mild, almost like soap or fresh air. As a rule of thumb: Orientals and florals are considered "more mature" and stronger; fruity-florals and fresh scents are sporty, athletic, and suitable for young women (and women who think of themselves as young); woodsy scents are sophisticated.

6. Things to tell the perfume counter person about your mom to help pick a scent: known perfume preferences, general taste and dress (is your mom sporty? Youthful? Dramatic? Business type? Soccer mom?), and whether or not she follows fashions. If she's into fashion, get the sales person to steer you toward the latest arrivals at the perfume counter. Believe it or not, the perfume industry has more fads than the shoe industry and new perfumes hit the market more frequently that news blips about the Democratic primaries.

7. Try something new. It's tempting to go for your mom's favorite scent (the one that's sitting half-unused on her dresser) or older fragrances you know she likes. Perfume is more fun when it's a bit of an exploration. Most mature women regard perfume like cats. The kind of woman who likes one cat generally likes a whole range of cats, perhaps even all cats. That's the same with perfume. Perfume people like all kinds of perfume.

In the end, you have to make a choice. Contrary to your instincts, smelling every scent is not going to help you much and, unless the perfume counter person is really savvy, empathetic, and underworked, asking for help is not going to be much of a solution, either. You just have to pick. Pick a fragrance family, find a deal (usually a gift set), and make your choice. It's hard to go too far wrong.

By: Joanna McLaughlin

Article Directory: http://www.itechnoworld.com

Source: Click on www.Letters2Mom.com to find out how you can quickly and easily write a short, meaningful, personal note to your mom. Imagine how thrilled she'll be to get a heartfelt note along with her gift! She'll cherish it forever. You can do it, even if you hate to write ... with this step-by-step guide.

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