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Welcome to my unique perfume blog! Here, you'll find detailed, encyclopedic entries about perfumes and companies, complete with facts and photos for easy research. This site is not affiliated with any perfume companies; it's a reference source for collectors and enthusiasts who cherish classic fragrances. My goal is to highlight beloved, discontinued classics and show current brand owners the demand for their revival. Your input is invaluable! Please share why you liked a fragrance, describe its scent, the time period you wore it, any memorable occasions, or what it reminded you of. Did a relative wear it, or did you like the bottle design? Your stories might catch the attention of brand representatives. I regularly update posts with new information and corrections. Your contributions help keep my entries accurate and comprehensive. Please comment and share any additional information you have. Together, we can keep the legacy of classic perfumes alive!

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Spencer Perfume Co

Spencer was established by George C. Spencer in South Bend, Indiana around 1910. Spencer had several subsidiary brands: Mai Ton, Veritas, La Main and Merice.


Soap Gazette and Perfumer - Volumes 13-14, 1911:
"The Spencer Perfume Co of South Bend, Ind. has been incorporated in Indianapolis. The concern which will engage in the manufacture of perfumes and toilet articles is capitalized at 10,000. The directors of the new association are George C Spencer HM Spencer and Dr FG Conklin." 

The American Perfumer and Essential Oil Review, 1912:
"Spencer Perfume Co South Bend Ind has been incorporated with 10,000 capital stock to manufacture perfumery and toilet articles by George C Spencer Harriet M Spencer and Dr FG Conklin." 


The Dry Goods Reporter - Volume 43, Issue 2,1913:

"The Spencer Perfume Co. formerly located at 565 W Washington street, Chicago. has moved to much larger quarters at 9 South Clinton street. This company was situated in South Bend,Ind. until about a year ago when it came to Chicago. The frequent moves are indicative of a rapidly growing business." 


Drug & Chemical Markets - Volume 16, 1925:

"GC Spencer Spencer Perfume Co. South Bend, Ind. Regardless the standardization of bottles, so far as perfume and toilet articles are concerned, this can never be accomplished, as practically every manufacturer desires to have something more or less individual. We, ourselves, buy practically no stock shapes, using only those designs we create." 


In 1932, George C. Spencer, founder and president, Spencer Perfume Co., South Bend, Ind., died in that city April 10, aged 54. 

The perfumes of Spencer of South Bend:

  • 1919 Vadis (Oriental Bouquet)
  • 1921 Albemarj
  • 1921 Allah
  • 1922 L'Odeur 
  • 1922 Eulav
  • 1922 Rajah
  • 1922 Glendora
  • 1922 - Exquisite (a line) included Violet, Rose, Lily of the Valley and Lilac
  • 1924 Maiton (a line)
  • 1925 Emir
  • 1925 Salkih
  • 1926 Narcissus
  • 1926 Chypre
  • 1926 Jasmin
  • 1926 Mira
  • 1926 Pyrma  
  • 1930 Le Main
  • Sweet Pea
















































c1929 Perfume Bottle and Vanity Accessory Ad

Ads from a 1929-30  N. Shure publication, showing various perfume bottles, crowntop figural perfume bottles, bathing beauty powder jars, and other vanity accessories.












Vintage 1937 Irice Czech Perfume Bottles Advertisements

Vintage Irice Czechoslovakian perfume bottle advertisements from a 1937-38 McKesson's publication.


Irice stubby perfume bottles.




Saturday, September 7, 2013

The Tale of a Glove c1920


Theatre Magazine, 1920


The tale of a glove...Is it? Or shall I call it the tale of a perfume. Read and take your choice.

 I received a luncheon invitation from the nicest man recently. Happening to be Father. 

"Hello stranger!," he called as I ran into him on the stairs one night on my way out for the tenth time that fortnight. "Where do you keep yourself? Graciously condescend to lunch with me some day next week and let me get acquainted with you." 

So I consented to arrange a rendezvous for Monday at one thirty at the Fifth Avenue restaurant where I arrived quite punctually on the dot. Father said my promptness was most flattering and that it encouraged him to believe I might even come to care for him in time. 

He does you awf'Ily well, Father when we go on jaunts together. As I think I've mentioned and is most entertaining. I wish I saw more of him. Luncheon was rather interrupted. Several men Father knew came in and over to the table to speak to him and one of them Father invited to sit down. He was the head of the perfumery department in that wonderful establishment of Geo Borgfeldt & Co down on Irving Place and just back from France. Father is in the import business you know and they had things to say to each other. "This will interest you Angelina," said Father. And it did immensely. We ended by all getting into a taxi and going down to Borgfeldt's to look it over. 

You've never seen such a place. It occupies three quarters of a block and contains specimens of even known imported commodity you can lay tongue to assembled from the four corners of the globe. It would he simpler to say what they didn't have than what they did. Well then they don't have lawn mowers. No. Nor men's clothing. No again. And they don't stock coal. Outside of that... tout ce que vous voulez.

My real interest however lay in the perfume department. First I had to greet my old friends, the perfumes Rigaud --"Mary Garden" and "Un Air Embaume." Then an introduction followed to the famous d'Orsay perfume "Chevalier" in his enchantingly quaint crystal bottle. Also to his d'Orsay brother and sister perfumes. And then I was further introduced to several other very wonderful imported odors those of Jaspy, of Fioret, of which I had been strangely ignorant. Thrilling exotic perfumes I had a beautiful informal chance to sniff long and luxuriously at each such as one doesn't get around the average busy shop counter. I indulged in an orgy of perfumes... 

One of the essences was so intoxicating that I drenched the middle finger of my white silk glove with it. Whereby hangs the tale....

At the end of a perfect hour we said farewell to the Borgfeldt caravanserai and the First Lord of the Perfumes and Father and I went our respective ways. Mine eventually led home where I tossed my (no longer) white gloves in the basket for the maid to wash.

 A few days passed. The gloves came back from Rosa's ministrations washed and fresh ready to be worn in their proper rotation and I bore them off for a dinner engagement. "You have a marvelous new perfume Angelina," said my escort after he had kissed my hand in the taxi. 

"No," I said surprised. "Just the one you know. And I haven't even that on tonight." He uttered the usual banal fol de rol about my own natural sweetness which I didn't bother attending. For I was discovering that I did have a new perfume. Where could it come from? Suddenly I remembered Borgfeldt's and the intoxicating perfume and my glove. But the perfume couldn't have lasted through the washing. I sniffed my glove finger. Yes. How extraordinary! It had. Fainter but still unmistakable. What a perfume! And the end was not yet...


We dined. We danced. As we came away very late a gay party was breaking up at the entrance, among whom I was properly thrilled to recognize a certain visiting Crown Prince and his suite. In the crowd someone is shoved against me. I turn to hear a beautifully enunciated "Beg your pardon," and to look straight up into the eyes of a tall extremely good looking person. No not the Prince. You anticipate. One of his suite.... and far more intriguing even if it is le sa majeste to say so.... with smooth olive skin and the high cheek bones of the Slav. Also the merriest dark eyes... but dazzlingly brilliant like the sun shining on little pieces of mica...Foreign men alone seem to have such shiny eyes.... I am afraid I am becoming weak and susceptible in my old age. Only he really was adorable.

 Anyway I happened to drop one of my silk gloves. Was it an accident also that it happened to be the right hand one with the perfumed finger. The psycho-analysts say that nothing happens by chance. Walking with "level fronted" eyes down the steps and into the taxi, I yet saw through the back of my head women can do these things you know-- my Slavic gentleman pick up the glove hold it a moment hesitatingly and then dash down the steps after us.

"Quick, quick, driver!" I cried excitedly and the taxi leaped forward almost before my escort had time to close the door I looked back. My Unknown was standing on the curb, gazing after our disappearing car and holding the glove. I saw him examine it under the light, and hold it up to his face for a long minute. Then he turned and went into the hotel.

How romantic to be trailed by a perfume I thought. There is besides a white peacock surrounding my initial, embroidered in the margin of the glove. And if He should chance to speak to Teodoro, maitre d'hotel. He might... Teodoro knows that the white peacock is mine. He has found and returned to me on several occasions handkerchiefs that I have dropped marked with this, my emblem. If the Unknown keeps the glove... 

My escort rudely interrupts my miraging.

"Angelina, you rascal, I believe you did that on purpose."

"Don't say purposely," I murmur, say "subconsciously." 

"Never mind," he adds, cruelly, "they are sailing tomorrow." 

But I am not disturbed. Never mind also on my own account. If he keeps the glove --and something tells me that he will --the perfume will remind him for a few short, sweet days anyway..... I fling a kiss to Borgfeldt!

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