4/22/2012

Ambia Parfume only Rp 50.000

PARFUM
Harga sudah termasuk ongkos kirim ke seluruh wilayah Indonesia. Dengan ukuran botol 25 cc produksi InParfum Bandung, silahkan order jenis parfum yang biasa anda pakai.

ORDER
SMS 085324621825
SMS 085221241828
SMS 085317612527
Pesan langsung di FB


 CARA PEMBAYARAN 

1. TRANSFER VIA BANK

Bank BRI

No Rekening : 0763-01-001171-50-5
Nama : Awan Sutiawan

Bank Bukopin Syariah

No Rekening : 7704003749
Nama : Awan Sutiawan

Bank BTN

No Rekening : 00092-01-50-003029-7
Nama : Awan Sutiawan

BPR KS

No Rekening : 1574115872
Nama : Awan Sutiawan

2. TRANSFER VIA WESTERN UNIOA / WU


Tujukan Kepada

Nunung Yaniliswara
Perum Gading Junti Asri Blok C3 No 41 Rt 009 Rw 005
Desa Sangkanhurip Kecamatan Katapang Kab Bandung 40971

( *SMS kan No Kode transfer, nama pengirim, jumlah nominal, alamat pengirim ke 085324621825 atau 085221241828


CARA PENGIRIMAN


Pengiriman barang dengan menggunakan jasa TIKI JNE (pembeli bisa melacak keberadaan barang yg dipesannya) Masuk ke situsnya,
www.tikijne.co.id, masukan nomor AWB tiki jne ke bagian yang kosong TRACE & TRACKING lalu klik SEACH.

4/19/2012

Dolly Girl Anna Sui for women Perfume


Dolly Girl is miraculous creation of Anna Sui, in floral fruit composition. It is romantic and modeled with the dose of fantasy and memories of the creator, while she was still young, playing with mother's perfumes and trying her clothes on. The designer of the perfume is Benoit Lapouza. Playful and eccentric, this perfume offers juicy fruit cocktail in its top notes made of bergamot, melon, apple, cinnamon, the notes of elaborated floral garden together with accords of magnolia, rose, lily-of-the-valley and jasmine.

Aqva Pour Homme Toniq Bvlgari for men Perfume

Aqva Pour Homme Toniq is an invigorating fragrance that creates long-lasting feeling of freshness, dynamic and clear as sparkling water. The fragrance opens with zesty essential oils of lemon and peppermint. Sharp and powerful influence of crystal ice and Posidonia sea weed, which grows in the seas of the Mediterranean and southern Australia, is gradually transformed into a soothing base of woody-mineral character, made of vetiver and amber notes.
Jacques Cavallier, who created the original editions, also signs these new edition.
It is available as 50 ml EDT. Aqva Pour Homme Toniq was launched in 2011.

Poison Dior for women Perfume

Forbidden fruit from the house of Dior, Poison is the revolutionary fragrance that became a legend since it has been launched in 1985. An unrivalled alchemy; spicy, fruity, woody fragrance of enigmatic profoundness that mesmerizes the senses…forever. Top notes include coriander, wildberries, orange honey, tuberose are at perfume’s heart, while base note features opopanar. This dark, mysterious and elegant perfume, which won a FiFi award in 1987, was created by Edouard Flechier. In 2006, the house of Dior released the Poison Amulets. These are limited edition 15 ml purse sprays available in Poison, Pure Poison, Tendre Poison and Hypnotic Poison; each comes with 2 refills and is packaged in a satin pouch with funnel. The bottles are very elegant while following the style and colors of the originals.

Glow after Dark Jennifer Lopez for women Perfume


It’s a girls’ night out! They are wild, sexy and fun, just like a new fragrance by J.Lo. Glow After Dark, is lavish and charismatic while the original Glow is gentle and innocent. The scent opens with vibrant fruity notes and ozone; lychee, melon, passion fruit, mandarine and white cherry. At its heart, seductive florals, including creamy jasmine, rose, pink peony, and orange flower. The fragrance ends with patchouli musk, and moss. It was created by Gabriela Chelariu in 2006.

4/18/2012

History of Perfume


The word perfume used today derives from the Latin per fumus, meaning "through smoke." Perfumery, or the art of making perfumes, began in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt and was further refined by the Romans and Persians.

Although perfume and perfumery also existed in India, much of its fragrances are incense based. The earliest distillation of Ittar, Arabic meaning scent, was mentioned in the Hindu Ayurvedic text Charaka Samhita. The Harshacharita, written in 7th century in Northern India mentions use of fragrant agarwood oil.
The world's first recorded chemist is considered to be a woman named Tapputi, a perfume maker who was mentioned in a cuneiform tablet from the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamia.[2] She distilled flowers, oil, and calamus with other aromatics then filtered and put them back in the still several times.[3]

In 2005,[4] archaeologists uncovered what are believed to be the world's oldest perfumes in Pyrgos, Cyprus. The perfumes date back more than 4,000 years. The perfumes were discovered in an ancient perfumery. At least 60 stills, mixing bowls, funnels and perfume bottles were found in the 43,000-square-foot (4,000 m2) factory.[5] In ancient times people used herbs and spices, like almond, coriander, myrtle, conifer resin, bergamot, as well as flowers.[6]

The Arabian chemist, Al-Kindi (Alkindus), wrote in the 9th century a book on perfumes which he named Book of the Chemistry of Perfume and Distillations. It contained more than a hundred recipes for fragrant oils, salves, aromatic waters and substitutes or imitations of costly drugs. The book also described 107 methods and recipes for perfume-making and perfume making equipment, such as the alembic (which still bears its Arabic name).[7]

The Persian chemist Ibn Sina (also known as Avicenna) introduced the process of extracting oils from flowers by means of distillation, the procedure most commonly used today. He first experimented with the rose. Until his discovery, liquid perfumes were mixtures of oil and crushed herbs or petals, which made a strong blend. Rose water was more delicate, and immediately became popular. Both of the raw ingredients and distillation technology significantly influenced western perfumery and scientific developments, particularly chemistry.

The art of perfumery was known in western Europe ever since 1221, if we consider the monks' recipes of Santa Maria delle Vigne or Santa Maria Novella of Florence, Italy. In the east, the Hungarians produced in 1370 a perfume made of scented oils blended in an alcohol solution at the command of Queen Elizabeth of Hungary, best known as Hungary Water. The art of perfumery prospered in Renaissance Italy, and in the 16th century, Italian refinements were taken to France by Catherine de' Medici's personal perfumer, Rene the Florentine (Renato il fiorentino). His laboratory was connected with her apartments by a secret passageway, so that no formulas could be stolen en route. Thanks to Rene, France quickly became one of the European centers of perfume and cosmetic manufacture. Cultivation of flowers for their perfume essence, which had begun in the 14th century, grew into a major industry in the south of France. Between the 16th and 17th century, perfumes were used primarily by the wealthy to mask body odors resulting from infrequent bathing. Partly due to this patronage, the perfumery industry was created. In Germany, Italian barber Giovanni Paolo Feminis created a perfume water called Aqua Admirabilis, today best known as eau de cologne, while his nephew Johann Maria Farina (Giovanni Maria Farina) in 1732 took over the business. By the 18th century, aromatic plants were being grown in the Grasse region of France, in Sicily, and in Calabria, Italy to provide the growing perfume industry with raw materials. Even today, Italy and France remain the center of the European perfume design and trade.