The aldehydes will punch you in the face like the olfactory version of a shot of Everclear, but the cinnamon and Gardenia (cinnamon and Gardenia?!) will cushion your fall. (The galbanum made me think of Bandit and Cabochard, but this is infinitely more wearable than those femme-bot perfumes.) Speaking of femme-bots, commenters in other blogs have mentioned that their grandmothers, or certain writers of novels like White Oleander, have tagged Ma Griffe as "the prostitute's perfume." I think really what they mean is that it's the perfume of a woman doesn't give a damn.
Bright, green, soft, comforting, and yet slightly dangerous — the comfort and the danger, I think, come from the same source: cinnamon — this is one of those fragrances that shouldn't work, but does. Perhaps I'm reading into this after the fact, but although Monsieur Carles composed this from his no doubt immaculate scent memory, it does give one the impression of a perfume based on cerebral rather than sensual abstraction, like a robot asking for a kiss.
Check out this ridiculous Ma Griffe ad from 1972 that contradicts every connotation the perfume notes give about the Ma Griffe woman as a firecracker! I can only laugh. (Source: Copy Ranter)
Top notes: Aldehydes, clary sage, galbanum, bergamot
Heart notes: Gardenia, jasmine, ylang-ylang, rose
Base notes: Cinnamon, tonka bean, vetiver.
Wow!! So much to chew on!! And, oh, dear god. That ad.... ALthough I'm of the right age to remember when a lot of advertising was in the business of trying to roll back women's progress. (We want equal treatment!! Whoops! Just kidding!!!!)
I'm gonna have to think about the connotations you've given me with "Ma Griffe," and square them with the one woman I know who does wear it ( the squarest woman like, um, EVER. Her daughter wears "Fracas" because it's "not too over the top." Um, ok, yeah, if you say so....)
And to make a scent without being able to sniff it? Well, I guess Beethoven wrote the 9th when he was completely deaf. (But is that really the same thing...?)
Great post!
-Rita @leftcoastnose
Posted by: Rita Long | December 18, 2009 at 08:37 AM
I love that the mother and daughter you're talking about are inadvertently wearing pretty saucy fragrances, Rita! Or maybe they're wearing the reformulated versions that don't have the same umph. And yes, regarding that ad and its implication that women have to choose either a life of spinsterhood/equality or being desirable/sexism — take your pick — is ridiculous but sadly lives on. THe idea that some loser would say, "Pardon me, miss, you smell so good, can I hold your Women's Lib sign for you?" has me laughing though. It's pretty comical.
Posted by: Perfumaniac | December 18, 2009 at 12:01 PM
Did you try the vintage Parfum yet? I finally got a tiny bottle of it in the original 1946 formmula, still sealed in a box, and it is truly astounding. Much softer and smoother than the lighter concentrations and infinitely better than the current formula. I always like Ma Griffe very much, and now I love it utterly! Green florals and green Chypres are my favorite styles, so discovering this was pure Paradise for me.
Posted by: Flora | January 10, 2010 at 01:19 PM
Flora, I have a 70s formulation of the parfum from one of those coffrets of minis, so its vintage, but I have not smelled the 40s version. I wonder how different they are...
Posted by: Perfumaniac | January 13, 2010 at 12:29 PM
HI, I've been scouting ebay for cheap thrills and have a bid on Ma Griffe EDT in a green and white box.
Beethoven wrote his greatest works when he could no longer hear so the idea of a perfume from someone who can no longer smell is intriguing.
Posted by: julie | November 02, 2011 at 11:39 PM
Got the Ma Griffe. The box lacks a UPC code, so this dates back to the 70s at least, I'm guessing.
I've tried it—twice—and wonder if my purchase had turned or was a bad batch. First smell is a powerful "call the gas company, there's a leak!", which is to say mercaptan; are mercaptans used in perfumery? What follows is sour biscuit dough/ylang-ylang. After a while it joins the Intimate/Bal a Versailles family, though for me it's the relative you hope doesn't show up; she's not just unbathed, she's given up all pretense of hygiene.
Certainly interesting to experience, but I don't think I'll be holding onto this.
Posted by: julie | November 18, 2011 at 01:37 PM
a-Hah! Fragrantica lists asafoetida as a top note, a resin which has as a component none other than methyl mercaptan. I'm a bit pleased with my sleuthing but I still can't stand it? What do you make of it?
Posted by: julie | December 22, 2011 at 12:18 AM
Flora, what did the bottle look like of the 1940s version? I'm looking at two vintage bottles, one is more square, with gold cord rings around the neck and a glass cap. The other is a longer bottle with a picture of a woman and a dress on the label. I'm wondering which is more vintage. My grandmother who was a very stylish and desirable woman in her day (and died tragically young) apparently loved this perfume in the 1950s. Would love to smell what she loved....
Posted by: Natalie | August 15, 2012 at 05:43 AM
Hi Barbara! I just found a sample of this. I hadn't thought of it as dangerous, but come to think of it, you're right. It's also very big.
Also, White Oleander is one of my favorite books. It mentions perfume a few times, come to think of it.
Posted by: Joan | October 02, 2012 at 06:41 PM
My mother used to wear this perfume in the 60s. Then she said they changed the formula - that was back in the 70s or so.
Does anyone know if there is a company that makes the "old" formula?
Posted by: John | December 24, 2012 at 11:52 PM
Hi John,
The vintage Ma Griffe is sold in abundance on various sites: miniatureperfumeshoppe.com and eBay. Good luck!
Barbara
Posted by: Perfumaniac | December 26, 2012 at 12:34 PM
I've quite taken to wearing La Femme for my manual, sweaty, evening job. It's discreet, and not something I feel is likely to challenge my masculinity. Perfume and eau de toilette in the old versions, still a bargain when the quality is considered.
Posted by: Robert | May 29, 2013 at 04:28 AM
I used to love this fragrance.
I read somewhere that Vivien Leigh (of Scarlett O'Hara fame) wore Ma Griffe.
Posted by: Elizabeth Parker | December 18, 2013 at 05:38 PM
I have a small bottle that smells as good as it did 40 years ago. It is the only scent I have ever worn and I love it. Now I can try to find some on the web.
Posted by: Mele Spencer | March 08, 2014 at 05:09 AM
Hold onto it for dear life, Mele! But yes, they exist online...
Posted by: Perfumaniac | March 08, 2014 at 01:47 PM
Ma Griffe
Griffe also signifies in French (Always in Capital) trademark, stamp.
Literally: you nailed IT.
I love your olfactory beguiling wanderings through the forests of time.
I sent your l'Arte to a friend of mine And I've been playing The song ever since. Kylie Minogue is on my musical fan list for the first time in her and my life thanks to you.
Nocturnal SNelly
Posted by: SNelly | November 28, 2014 at 11:57 PM
So glad you are enjoying these, Snelly! I like the idea of wandering through an olfactory forest of time...Very poetic!
Sent from my iPhone
Posted by: Perfumaniac | November 29, 2014 at 07:40 PM
Dear Mistress in the Science And Scintillation of Scents
I have a story to tell about my mother (who has died ) whose perfume it had been.
Until she discovered that the woman my father had fallen in love with, used the same fragrance! She told me that she could and would not share her perfume, let alone her husband.
She divorced from both.
Then she met with Joy from Patou and married again.
It is the truth I'm telling and no fantasy.
Posted by: SNelly | December 02, 2014 at 01:14 AM