Wearing the smell of old books
A legendary bookstore says they’ve captured the smell of old books — in a perfume! Our prayers have been answered! Right?
Well… I don’t know about that.
I inhale the old-book scent regularly, as I rummage through my paper stash for collage materials. Lucky for me, my friends and collectors enable my habit; I just received a delicious haul from Tess the other day. Perfect timing to find out how “Powell’s by Powell” unisex fragrance holds up to The Real Thing.
You might be familiar with the chemistry behind old-book scent: it’s even been formally studied in a lab. But this quote from “Perfume: An A-Z Guide” is far more evocative:
Photo credit: Patrick Tomasso/Unsplash
And yes, the Powell’s fragrance does smell like vanilla, with some woody notes — but not like a favorite old book. It did, however, bring a vivid image to mind. This must be what it’s like to chew an overflowing mouthful of vanilla-scented sugar crystals, followed by a shot glass of wooden splinters. It doesn’t transport me back to libraries I’ve loved, or books I’ve read until they fell apart in my hands.
I want to love this fragrance… I really do. But it would be more satisfying to drive a few hours and then walk into the actual Powell’s Books, just to hyperventilate the air inside. The perfume is missing something. Maybe a hit of printer’s ink?
Work-in-progress: lots of little steps
I'm tackling four big ol' collages (36" x 48" each) simultaneously. Which means lots of little bitty steps that have to be done four times over.
I've had the images printed out on a large scale at the copy shop...
They know me a little too well here. Surprised they don't run and hide. ©Lisa Myers Bulmash
then I age the paper...
and realize some of them won't work for what I have in mind...
aaaand go back to the print shop. Aaaggghhh. Fortunately, the fun part is yet to come. It involves railroad spikes!