L’Air De Panache Eau De Cologne from The Grand Budapest Hotel RARE

 

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RARE Perfume From the Movie "Grand Budapest"

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Vogue Magazine


In Wes Anderson’s new film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, the formidable concierge Mister Gustave H.—played with charming flair by Ralph Fiennes—doesn’t leave his room without a spritz of his favorite L’Air de Panache cologne. The result is a telltale trail of his scent, which wafts throughout the pink halls of the famed fictional hotel. Hoping to turn some of that whimsy into reality, Anderson approached several perfumeries to create a real L’Air de Panache before ultimately settling on the new Paris-based fragrance boutique, Nose, for the amusing assignment. “It’s our way of bringing fiction to life,” says Nose president Nicolas Cloutier, who worked with perfumer Mark Buxton to create an original scent that would fit right into Anderson’s quirky universe. The result is a blend that includes aldehyde top notes, which, Cloutier laughingly admits, traditionally appeal to the older women who are Gustave H.’s most beloved guests; there’s also bergamot, mandarin, amber—and a splash of green apple (if you’ve seen the film, you’ll know why the fruity ingredient made it in). Conceived as a labor of love rather than a commercial project, the scent was primarily gifted to the film’s actors. For those who are dying to know precisely what Gustave H.’s favorite fragrance really smells like, however, the scent is available to sample at Nose and a limited-edition batch of bottles are available to win on the company’s website.

GQ Magazine

As any self-respected maitre'd of an internationally renowned hotel knows nothing says refined sophistication like L'Air De Panache. That's right: to mark the release of The Grand Budapest Hotel, director Wes Anderson has teamed up with Paris-based fragrance boutique Nose and perfumier Mark Buxton to actually produce Gustave H's scent of choice. In the film, Fiennes' character can't go without his favourite "musk"; it alerts his guests (and staff) long before his arrival.

As a result, the real L'Air De Panache is a suitably potent mix, with heady top notes of mandarin, bergamot and patchouli, while there's also a hint of green apple - a note to the film's focal painting. The bottle even comes with its own retro spritzer. Alas, while the scent won't be going on sale (Anderson reportedly gave it to the cast and crew as a gift, as well as press) Nose is giving away bottles on its website if you apply today. Best worn with a purple blazer and outlandish moustache