Smell of Success (continued from page 93) Si-100NA KIDS 2454 Orchard Lake Road at the Loadin8 Dock sylvan lake 810 738 0579 - - "' (Sizes infant. - junior 16 cloLhing for boys and girls. Now Open Monday - (Saturday 10:00 3.111. - 6:00 p.m. (Sunday 12:00-5:00 Laurie Sall, agent for Equitable Life, wears 'Lunoru frames available at Shades M A P L E E AS T 205 MI BIRMINGHAM, 0- 6 4 5 - 0 0 7 5 8 1 1 00 • WINTER 1995 • STYLE Elizabeth Taylor's popular White Dia- monds, which made its debut in 1991, al- ready brings in $60 million a year. According to Perfume 2000 magazine, last year alone, 90 new perfumes made their de- but in the United States and 115 came out in France — in a market that already boasts 900 scents. The most popular scents for women and men are Calvin Klein's CKOne, Escape and Eternity. Rounding out the top choices are White Diamonds and Givenchy's Amariage for women and Davidoff's Cool Water and Ralph Lauren's Safari for men. Annually, fragrance sales in the United States are around $5 billion, two-thirds of which are women's perfumes. That's quite auspicious for an item that has its roots in burned wood and resin. The word "perfume" comes from the Latin per fumum, or "to smoke," a refer- ence to incense used in religious ceremonies. Ingredients both for incense and fragrant oils used by women in biblical times initial- ly were quite rare. Cinnamon, for example, was imported from China and Ceylon; rose and jasmine also were imported, though these were later introduced to and cultivat- ed in Israel. They were used in liquid form, contained in bags worn about the neck and mixed with other oils. King Tutankhamen was buried with fra- grant scents, and a formula for an ancient Egyptian perfume (of cardamom, myrrh and juniper) was discovered in the pyramid of Cheops. The ancient Greeks and Romans often wore garlands of rosemary, mint and thyme. But it wasn't until the 10th century that a physician created what most consider the first modern perfume. Avicenna, of Arabia, made rose-scented perfume by distilling oil from the flower's petals. This was followed some 200 years later by lavender water, and 1370 saw the first cologne using alcohol (with a composition of 92 percent alcohol and 8 percent oil of rosemary). By the 19th century, "Society went into a frenzy over perfumes," according to a guide from the International Museum of Per- fumery, published in Grasse, France. Located just west of Nice, Grasse is the perfume center of the world. It is home to some of the finest fragrances and has pro- duced some of the best "noses" (perfume designers) in the world.