Joy perfume, perfume center reviews

Found these great joy perfume reviews at the perfume center. See what others are saying:

 

Joy Perfume Reviews
Joy perfume was introduced by Jean Patou in 1930. This fragrance is a rush of jasmine and flowers that comes across as delicious and complete. The floral notes blend in well with the darker base of musk, moss, and woods; providing a feeling of comfort and sensuality that lasts long throughout the evening. Joy perfume is a more feminine fragrance than many from its time and brings a smile to the faces of the men that walk by.
Written by Staff
Rating:  
 
I was looking for something to lift my spirits and thought I would try the old classic, JOY. I liked the story behind its inception, the idea that it is not worn by everyone these days and after a long search I found it in a small but lovely Parfumerie in Aachen. Joy is very special, subtle, and clean yet has that unique complexity found in great perfumes. I love the way it slightly changes through out the day and am really happy when I have it on. Joy is aptly named.
Written by LA
Rating:  
I'll look for more awesome joy perfume reviews to post soon!

Joy Perfume - vintage packaging

I know I've been all about the vintage stuff when it comes to joy perfume, but it's so cool to me because the fragrance has been around and popular for so long. Would you buy Joy perfume if it still came in packaging like this?

 

 

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Joy Perfume packaging

 

A project for Illustration 2 (now known as Concepts + Metaphors). A packaging redesign of Jean Patou's Joy perfume, which is consider the most expensive commercial perfume you can buy. For my redesign I wanted to gear the perfume to a younger crowd, so I thought more fashion editorial. I took one of the definitions of the word Joy (4. a state of happiness or felicity) and made is into a textile.

I then later put the textile one a box template I made.

I found that joy perfume box's image on flickr, just an fyi!

Joy Perfume Harpers Bazaar Ad from 1936

Found the article below from Harpers Bazzar on Joy Parfume. It's an ad from 1936 on "the costliest perfume in the world"!

 

 

 

Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris

From paperdollgirls

Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris
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Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris Harpers Bazaar 1936 Magazine Advertisement JOY Perfume by JEAN PATOU Perfumes Paris
This December 1, 1936 Harpers Bazaar magazine advertisement features a black and white illustration for JEAN PATOU Paris JOY perfume.

The large size ad, which is on slightly heavy paper, is in very good condition and measures 9-1/2 x 13 inches.

You will receive the ORIGINAL advertisement, not a digital scan.

The ad will be shipped to you in a plastic sleeve inside heavy card stock within a cardboard mailing tube so that it will arrive at your home in as good a condition as it leaves mine.

The watermark shown in the photo is not on the original you will receive.

There is no additional charge for posting more than one advertisement together.

The last photo is a suggestion of how you might like to display your Paper Doll Girls. Please note that you will NOT receive the photograph with your purchase. I've just included it in the listing to help your imagination run wild with possibilities!

Joy Perfume- The Patou Legacy

I detail a lot of information on Joy perfume here. But I want to take a moment and talk about the actual person who created Joy perfume, Jean Patou. Jean Patou left a legacy behind that has lived on after death. I went to Wikipedia.com and grabed what they had to say on his legacy:

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Patou died in 1936. His sister Madeleine and her husband Raymond Barbas continued the House of Patou, which remained a family-owned enterprise until September 2001 when it was bought by Procter & Gamble Company. Other designers to have been associated with this house are Jean Kerleo and Karl Lagerfield. Jean Patou has continued to produce perfumes, which have included Eau de Patou, Ma Liberté, Un Amour de Patou, Sublime, Patou Forever, EnJoy, and Sira des Indes. Also three men's perfumes, Patou Pour Homme (a spicy chypre), Patou Pour Homme Privé (not dissimilar to Ma Liberté), and Voyageur (a fresh, much more modern scent) have been available. Sadly recent years have seen the discontinuation of Ma Collection, Eau de Patou, Ma Liberté, Un Amour de Patou, as well as a reduction of the products available in the Joy and "1000" ranges. It can only be hoped that one day all the Jean Patou fragrances will be available again, and that they have not been lost forever. Strangely, since Procter & Gamble's takeover of Jean Patou, Joy has dropped in price: prior to the takeover, 15ml of Joy pure perfume cost £175.00; afterwards it dropped £30.00 to £145.00. Part of the explanation may reside in the fact that since the takeover, many Jean Patou products are now manufactured outside France and probably involve less costly, more industrial, processes.

There you have it, the legacy behind the man who created Joy Perfume!

Joy Perfume - Created With Care

I know I've talked about the history of joy perfume frequently but I found some new tid-bits to add. Some of the information is reduntant to an older post but I think it's important to realize this isn't just a fragrance, it's history! Found this lil description on fragrantica.com (cute I know):

JOY was created with a lot of care, just like the most expensive Haute-Cotture dress, and thus it was extraordinary and timeless. It was presented by Jean Patou as 'the world's most expensive perfume' right at the time of The Great Depression in 1929, when the market of luxury fashion crushed and Jean Patou's house could survive only through the perfumes.

JOY is created of rare flowers in unique concentration of 10600 flowers of jasmine and 28 dozens of roses which adorn the exceptional heart of this perfume. With the time JOY attains enormous success and became the second best selling perfume of all times (the first best-selling is the legendary Chanel N°5).

Intense and luscious with alluring floral composition, JOY was created by Henri Alméras, who made its top notes irresistibly delightful. The composition starts with fragrant jilt tuberose, luscious rose, ylang-ylang blossom, aldehydes, sweet and mouthwatering pear, and green notes. The heart beats passionately in pure and sweetly fresh jasmine notes, seductive and balmy spicy and darkened iris root. The base whiffs with sensual musk, warm and milky-powdery sandalwood, with mild musky civet tones.

The bottle, of simple and straight lines with a golden thread around its neck, was designed by the architect Louis Süe in 30ml, 50ml and 100ml sizes for Eau de Parfume and 30ml and 50ml sizes for Eau de Toilette. Regardelss of its simplicity, the bottle leaves an impression of luxury and hints that its content is one of the best perfumes of the world. In 1932 Jean Patou designed a small black and red bottle in which this perfume is also presented.

Ahhh yes, the joys of Joy perfume!

Joy Perfume - a cute story

I found a really cute story on Joy Perfume yesterday and decided to share it with ya'll. It's from nstperfume.com and the blog is called "now smell this" which I thought was also cute. Here is Angela's first encounter with the awesome joy perfume:

When I first smelled Jean Patou Joy, I thought, “What’s the big deal?” Here was an iconic fragrance, reputedly the most expensive perfume in the world (this was before Clive Christian hit the scene), and Jackie O’s favorite. To me, though, Joy smelled ho-hum. Sure, it wasn’t offensive, but it didn’t excite, either.

Well, I was crazy. Now I recognize Joy for what it is: a classic, womanly, gorgeously balanced scent. It is the olfactory equivalent of a 1950s Dior dinner suit — flattering, adaptable, and luxurious down to its hand-basted seams.

Henri Alméras created Joy in 1930, just after the stock market crash that launched the Great Depression. The story goes that in response to the dark mood that settled over the western world, especially the United States, Jean Patou directed Alméras to create an extravagant perfume. Alméras complied, and Joy’s hallmark is the 28 dozen roses and 10,600 jasmine flowers that go into every ounce of extrait. Architect Louis Süe designed Joy’s emerald-cut bottle.

According to Osmoz, Joy’s top notes are aldehydes, peach, and leafy green. Its heart is rose, jasmine, ylang ylang, and tuberose; and its base is sandalwood, musk, and civet. In the Eau de Toilette and the Parfum, the notes unroll differently. The Eau de Toilette starts with a fizzy, stemmy neroli, then a few minutes later bursts into roses tangled with full-bodied but fresh jasmine. The Eau de Toilette stays close to the skin once it dries down and fades into dull roses and a vague warmth after a few hours. But overall, Joy Eau de Toilette feels bright and, well, joyous.

The Parfum, on the other hand, builds on the Eau de Toilette’s lighthearted theme to remind us that real joy is beautiful, calm, and lush, and may be most deeply appreciated by people who know that true pleasure isn’t as simple as it seems. The Parfum’s opening isn’t as crisp as the Eau de Toilette’s, and its heart of luscious roses and jasmine is richer. But the biggest difference between the Eau de Toilette and Parfum is in the dry down. The Parfum’s base is surprisingly spicy and animalic. Joy Parfum seamlessly morphs from a complex floral explosion to something darker, and unless you already knew Joy, you might not recognize the dry down and the heart as the same fragrance.

Despite closing in on 80 years old, Joy doesn’t smell particularly retro. In fact, although Joy might be a natural for a woman who knows her way around a Ferragamo, I’d love to smell it on a tattooed cocktail server in a smoky bar. Joy has a depth that complicates its otherwise straightforward beauty. Modern takes on Joy’s theme, such as Lorenzo Villoresi Donna, smell thin and simple in comparison.

If, like me, you tried Joy once a long time ago and weren’t overly impressed, it’s time to give it another go. The good new is that with all the ultra-luxe perfumes coming out these days, Joy is no longer even close to the most expensive perfume on the market.

Jean Patou Joy is widely available in department stores and at discounters online, and it comes in bottles as varied as thousand dollar Baccarat crystal to 6 ml purse sprays.

 When I read this the last thing I thought about was "I wonder what that thouand dollar Baccarat crystal bottle looks like?" So I did some reasearch and found a picture of it to share:

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Pretty crazy to think this little bottle of joy perfume costs a thouand dollars!

Joy Perfume - History

As promised of Joy Perfume, I found another great discription of Joy perfume. This great article from ezinearticles.com gives a better discription of the smell and history of Joy perfume:

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Known as the most expensive perfumes in the world, Jean Patou has left an indelible mark on the fragrance market with Joy Perfume. From his humble beginnings after World War I and the Wall Street Crash, he raised the bar of luxury in spite of difficult times and inspired the women of America with his Joy perfume. Although from French descent, he reveres his American clientele too well that he created a perfume that contains double of the required essential oils, thus doubling or even tripling the price of perfumes of his time.

Joy perfume celebrates the floral purity of its composition without compromising on the number of flowers used to create every drop of this luxurious merchandise. Ten thousand jasmines and twenty eight dozen of May roses are required to produce 30mL of this highly revered perfume. It opens up with Bulgarian Rose, tuberose and ylang-ylang. The heart sinks with jasmine and Grasse and dry down with May rose. An exceptional taste only for those who can afford it, it became a parody and a light of hope to the difficult times of the World War and the crashing economy.

There have been many other fragrances that have been released under the Jean Patou name and have lived up to the expectations of its loyal clientele. After the success of Joy and other fragrances, Ma Liberte was released in 1987 as an oriental floral fragrance. Opening with citrus notes and heliotrope; heart of lavender, jasmine, rose and cloves and base with sandalwood, spicy nutmeg, cinnamon and vanilla and blends with vetivir, cedar, patchouli and musk.

Standing out from the crowd is a woman that is offered with Sublime by the Jean Patou House. A mixture of the most delicate yet sensual notes, the top notes are of bergamot, tangerine and coriander with green accords to give you a fresh and sweet tinge. Middle notes go floral with ylang-ylang, rose, jasmine and neroli oil while it dries down with vanilla, sandalwood, civet, and cedar. Packaged in an elegant bottle that whispers elegance, it is crowned with a gold stopper to exude luxury.

Apparently I'm not the only joy perfume lover around. There is so much information avaliable to share on all of Jean Patou's fragrances. Thanks Nadine VanKurk for the quick, easy to read history and overview of Joy Perfume!

Joy Perfume - Welcome

Joy perfume has been my most favored fragrance for years. I've dedicated this to the perfume and information on it. I've see tons of great information on the web and will share it here with you. I'll also be sharing information on other Jean Patou fragrances and other personal fave's I find along the way. Now, to give you some background information on Joy perfume. I got this from Wikkipedia.com and it gives a pretty good high-level overview of the history.

Joy is a perfume created for Parisian couturier Jean Patou by perfumer Henri Almeras in 1929. It is considered to be one of the greatest fragrances created and is a landmark example of the floral genre in perfumery.

Joy was created as a reaction to the 1929 Wall Street Crash, which had diminished the fortunes of Jean Patou's wealthy American clientele. Despite its elevated price and the depressed economic environment, Joy became an instant success and has remained Jean Patou's most famous fragrance.

At the heart of Joy is a luxurious combination of jasmine and rose. 10,000 jasmine flowers and 28 dozen roses are required to create 30ml of the parfum, hence its very high selling price. Joy also contains other flowers such as Ylang ylang, Michelia Alba and Tuberose. Despite its many ingredients, Joy does not smell like a specific flower. According to Luca Turin, "the whole point of its formula was to achieve the platonic idea of a flower, not one particular earthly manifestation." The bottle was created by French architect and artisan Louis Süe and was designed to have a simple, classical feel.

In 2002, the House of Jean Patou created Enjoy, a contemporary take on Joy meant for younger women.

 

That is a very short history but there are tons of other resourses online I'll share with you as time goes on. Thanks for checking out Joy Perfume today

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