Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Style and beauty

Looking for style advice? Chat all about it here. For the latest discounts on fashion and beauty, sign up for Mumsnet Moneysaver emails.

Want to know what perfume from 1800 smells like?

51 replies

TheOwlChronicles · 03/08/2023 22:56

Bloody strong, that's what!

I collect antiques with a particular interest in miniatures such as jewellery, ring boxes and perfume bottles from the Georgian / Victorian era

I recently picked up this little bottle on my travels and it's still got perfume in it.

It's approximately 220 years old. These bottles were generally known as lachrymatory bottles or 'tear catchers' and have quite an interesting history.

This bottle has been wax sealed somewhere on its past travels,
Probably due to a cracked lid, but my god - the smell coming off it!

Think the strongest, most powdery, floral, catch in your throat smell - and you'd be in the right ballpark!

Want to know what perfume from 1800 smells like?
Want to know what perfume from 1800 smells like?
OP posts:
WelcomingGnome · 03/08/2023 22:59

Wow that's interesting, thank you for sharing. Where did you find it, and how did you know how old it is?

TheOwlChronicles · 03/08/2023 23:01

@WelcomingGnome I've got about 25 and have been collecting for years so I know what to look for now. I used to take them to my local antiques guy who'd date them for me but don't need to now.

I buy all over! EBay, charity shops, online auctions. They generally come from estate sales too.

OP posts:
TheOwlChronicles · 03/08/2023 23:03

Oh and the age of this one is apparent when you look closely at it.. it's typical cut glass Georgian.

Alas, it has to live in the garage Grin

OP posts:
APurpleSquirrel · 03/08/2023 23:05

If you visit the Florence Nightingale Museum, they have an exhibit with her perfume in it so you can smell what she smelt like!

BunnyBetChetwynnd · 03/08/2023 23:08

Thank you so much for posting this. I have a huge fascination for 'what the past smelled like. When I see an old photo or painting I always wonder. Imagine what the East End of London smelled like on a dark, misty night in Victorian times?!? Or Bath in the 1750s?

I bet 1800s scent had to be strong to cover up the smell of unwashed clothes and bodies.

BunnyBetChetwynnd · 03/08/2023 23:09

@APurpleSquirrel What did she smell like? I'd imagined she would smell of disinfectant and starch.

Franticbutterfly · 03/08/2023 23:12

I always wonder what the past smelt like too. Thanks for sharing.

TheOwlChronicles · 03/08/2023 23:14

@BunnyBetChetwynnd if you're that interested, I'll pop a little square cloth round it for 24 hours and send that to you 😀

There's no vinegary smell and it hasn't gone off. Well, it probably has of course but although the smell is unpleasant that's due to how overwhelming it is

OP posts:
BunnyBetChetwynnd · 03/08/2023 23:18

@TheOwlChronicles Imagine what the post man would make of that in the back of his van😁

TheOwlChronicles · 03/08/2023 23:20

Handling it with tweezers at a distance!

OP posts:
APurpleSquirrel · 04/08/2023 10:57

@BunnyBetChetwynnd you can still buy it apparently - it's by Floris - White Rose or Night-scented Jasmine:

www.florence-nightingale.co.uk/white-rose-fragrance-from-floris-london/

ArabeI · 04/08/2023 11:55

How interesting! Thank you for sharing @TheOwlChronicles

Gridhopper · 04/08/2023 19:16

This is fascinating! I’m gobsmacked to think it’s possible to smell perfumes from so long ago. Also intrigued about the tear catcher name for the bottles if you have any more insight please?

Given how nuns’ piss-ish so many of today’s extortionately priced scents are, I wonder what the sillage and longevity secret is!

TheOwlChronicles · 04/08/2023 19:30

@Gridhopper see below for a simplified version of what they were!

Tear bottles reappeared during the Victorian period of the 19th century, when those mourning the loss of loved ones would collect their tears in bottles ornately decorated with silver and pewter. Special stoppers allowed the tears to evaporate. When the tears were gone, the mourning period would end.

OP posts:
TheOwlChronicles · 04/08/2023 19:32

They were however more for perfume I believe. They're all very small indeed and not designed to stand upright - they tend to lay down on their side.

And I can confirm that the smell is completely overpowering

Someone more ageist than me might describe the smell as something an older lady from the past might wear - powdery, heavy and musky!

OP posts:
Gridhopper · 04/08/2023 19:33

@TheOwlChronicles

wow - thank you for the info!

bryceQ · 04/08/2023 19:36

Wow love this!

Feel like it's a topic they would cover on Betwixt the Sheets podcast

Gridhopper · 04/08/2023 19:38

I’m on another thread where people are complaining about having been ‘influenced’ into buying a cheapo little bottle of ‘grandma’ perfume (baby powder by Arabian Opulence). I was one of those who bought it and it was highly flipping toxic - maybe yours is the early 19th C equivalent

WunWun · 04/08/2023 19:40

Wouldn't it have degraded by now though? So it might not smell exactly the same

WhenIWasAFieldMyself · 04/08/2023 19:45

That's wonderful, thank you for sharing.
I collect vintage perfume but my earliest is from the 1940s.

CheerfulBunny · 04/08/2023 19:51

I have a bottle of Heliotrope Blanc by LT Piver which I believe was first manufactured in the 1800s. It was following a recommendation on MN and it's lovely, almond scented and delicate. Did I see somewhere that leather gloves used to be perfumed with an almond scent?

lozrox90 · 04/08/2023 19:52

I went to the Titanic exhibition about 15 years ago and the artefacts there included some little vials of perfume they'd recovered from the sea bed. They'd put the vials in a clear box with little holes in and the smell of them was still so strong, despite the fact they'd sat at the bottom of the Atlantic for about 90 years. Fascinating!

Doesanyoneknowwhattheyaredoing · 04/08/2023 19:56

@Gridhopper I bought that too! Everyone at work complained - I had to throw it away in an outside bin and my handbag still smells of it even though I got rid of it months ago

Beurla · 04/08/2023 19:58

Ooooh this is great! How interesting. I wonder if the smell 'concentrates', or if they did want to smell so strongly

TheOwlChronicles · 04/08/2023 19:59

Here's a clearer view.

And yes, I'm sure it has to have degraded over the years but the smell is 'recognisable' as a perfume and there's no vinegar or totally rank scent. Just ... overpowering

I'd like to melt off the wax seal which has clearly been out there by someone from years past. I can only assume the bottle stopper is cracked or missing so I'm hesitant to try and remove it

Want to know what perfume from 1800 smells like?
OP posts:
Swipe left for the next trending thread