"Southern charm" in perfume embodies a blend of warm, sweet and floral notes, often featuring magnolia, peach, vanilla and magnolia. These scents evoke Southern hospitality and nostalgia, ranging from fresh garden florals to rich, comforting, or sophisticated fruity florals. Magnolia, rose, jasmine and citrus are often used to mimic a Southern garden while peach nectar, raspberry and honeysuckle are sometimes combined with cognac or tea for depth.
You will receive a 1/2ml sample (1ml sample vial filled half full) of each of the fragrances in this sampler:
- CocoaPink Georgia Perfume - The unmistakable scent of spring and summer in Georgia that has endured for many generations past. Beautiful, white magnolia blooms, sweet lemon, ripe watermelon and the subtle yet gentle aroma of freshly picked garden herbs and an extra hint of pure southern charm.
- Sixteen92 Only Children Weep Parfum - Inspired by the book To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Frequently banned or challenged in school districts across the US and Canada, usually due to "use of racial slurs, inappropriate content, adult themes, and objectionable language." They’ve done it before and they did it tonight and they’ll do it again and when they do it – seems that only children weep. It is a sweet warm-weather fruity-floral with southern charm with notes of sweet tea, azalea, red clay, rhubarb, dry wood and cement.
- Strange Charm Nectar Perfume Oil - A sticky southern summer: sweet drops of nectar squeezed from wild honeysuckle, a bushel of ripe peaches, sweet black tea, bergamot, hints of honeycomb and orange blossom and the velvety musk backdrop of a million thrumming cicadas.
- Vintner's Reserve Mint Julep Perfume Oil - A Kentucky staple that will completely immerse you in the Derby experience. Muddled fresh mint and sugar, bourbon, and a splash of seltzer water make up this classic Derby cocktail.
- Snowy White Owl Perfumery Carolinas Perfume Oil - This scent has fruits of blackberry and peach, popular in the south, sugar and lemon, because you can’t have sweet tea without, at least, sugar, and that beautiful southern floral note of heady magnolia. Mint tobacco is thrown in for a gourmand but the real diamond in this scent is reminiscent of the scent from Charleston, South Carolina, home of the sweetgrass. For many years, beautiful baskets have been made by the Gullah peoples living in these regions, their cultural knowledge coming from West Africa. The original baskets were made from bulrush but, later in the early 1900’s, sweetgrass came into the picture. With notes of sweetgrass, blackberry, juicy peach, breezy aquatic notes, mint tobacco, magnolia, sugar and lemon.