As Hillary noted previously, I have been pretty unwell since Saturday - some annoying virus, which tricked me into thinking I was okay to go to work yesterday, then made me shoot lentils through my nose last night in a crafty move designed to mow me down. And with that attractive image in your head, you can perhaps empathise with how I've been feeling. "No fun" pretty much sums it up.
There was one bright spot on Saturday, though, when I was first getting sick: A big box full of samples of Lily Lambert fragrances from our friend Lisa James, proprietor of the fabulous b-glowing.com. If ever I needed the power of the aromatic arts to whisk me away to another time, another place, and another mood, this was it.
Lily Lambert lives in Hillary's hometown - Portland, Oregon - and was a longtime jewelery designer before she turned to perfumery. This, the first line she has released under her own name, is full of fragrances that Lisa describes as "very wearable scents, but very signature". They come as 100 per cent oil samples - no alcohol - so you get fully concentrated product.
That said, referring to her work as 'product' almost seems insulting to Lily Lambert, who is clearly something of an artist when it comes to the olfactory senses. I can't tell you what a pure pleasure - a real escape - it was to sit up in my sickbed and take turns smelling all seven of the samples I was sent. Even ones which did not strike me as 'me' still made me want to keep smelling them. My favourite? Lily Lambert No 66, which is described as "a top note of fresh cotton, resting on the rich, sweet depths of mystical sage".
As I may or may not have noted here previously - I have said it to her in so many words, though - Hillary is much better at describing and writing about fragrances than I am. My analysis usually amounts to "I like that one!" or "Smells like a wet dog wearing grandma's socks!" I'm not that great at identifying all of the component scents, apart from the most obvious (such as cotton, strawberry, and musks). So I really enjoyed the whole experience of being able to smell each fragrance, 'liner notes' in hand, and try to sniff out each element.
So, how long before Lily Lambert comes out with a sampler pack - beautifully packaged, perhaps a black and white box lined in black velvet, fragrance notes on exquisitely textured cards - to satisfy my urge to give the gift of this smorgasbord of scent to all of my friends?






