Perfumes, Cosmetics and Soaps: Volume II The Production, Manufacture and Application of Perfumes

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Springer Science & Business Media, 31.10.1992 - 379 Seiten
During the past decade there have been many changes in the perfumery industry which are not so much due to the discovery and application of new raw materials, but rather to the astronomic increase in the cost of labour required to produce them. This is reflected more particularly in the flower industry, where the cost of collecting the blossoms delivered to the factories has gone up year after year, so much so that most flowers with the possible exception of Mimosa, have reached a cost price which has compelled the perfumer to either reduce his purchases of absolutes and concretes, or alternatively to substitute them from a cheaper source, or even to discontinue their use. This development raises an important and almost insoluble problem for the perfumer, who is faced with the necessity of trying to keep unchanged the bouquet of his fragrances, and moreover, to ensure no loss of strength and diffusiveness. Of course, this problem applies more especially to the adjustment of formulae for established perfumes, because in every new creation the present high cost of raw materials receives imperative con sideration before the formula is approved.
 

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Inhalt

Historical Sketch
1
The Production of Natural Perfumes
16
The Purchase and Use of Flower Absolutes
41
Odour Classification and Fixation
46
Monographs on Flower Perfumes
68
Miscellaneous Fancy Perfumes
217
Toilet Waters
246
Soap Perfumery
268
Tobacco Flavours
321
Floral Cachous
332
Incense and Fumigants
339
Sachets and Solid Perfumes
344
Fruit Flavours
351
Appendix
361
Index
371
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