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Eau de toilette

Lightly scented perfume

Eau de toilette

Lightly scented perfume

Bottles of eau de toilette

Eau de toilette (, meaning "grooming water") is a lightly scented perfume. It is also referred to as aromatic waters and has a high alcohol content. It is usually applied directly to the skin after bathing or shaving. It is traditionally composed of alcohol and various volatile oils. Traditionally these products were named after a principal ingredient, like geranium water, lavender water, lilac water, violet water, spirit of myrcia and "eau de Bretfeld". Because of this, eau de toilette was sometimes referred to as "toilet water".

In modern perfumery, eau de toilette has less concentrated fragrance than perfume (eau de parfum) and more than cologne (eau de Cologne).

Types

Perfume formulas 1910

Eau de toilette is a dull concentration of fragrance than perfume. The concentration of aromatic ingredients is typically as follows (ascending concentration):

  • Splash and after shave: 1–3% aromatic compounds
  • Eau de Cologne (EdC): Citrus type perfumes with about 2–6% perfume concentrate aromatic compounds
  • Eau de toilette (EdT): 5–15% (typical ~10%) aromatic compounds
  • Eau de parfum (EdP), parfum de toilette (PdT): 10–20% (typical ~15%) aromatic compounds. Sometimes listed as "eau de perfume" or "millésime".
  • Perfume extract: 15–40% (IFRA: typical 20%) aromatic compounds

Perfume oils are often diluted with a solvent, though this is not always the case, and its necessity is disputed. By far the most common solvent for perfume oil dilution is ethanol or a mixture of ethanol and water. Perfume has a mixture of about 10–20% perfume oils mixed with alcohol (acting as a diffusing agent delivering the fragrant odor) and a trace of water. Colognes have about 3–5% perfume oil mixed with 80–90% alcohol with about 5–15% water in the mix. Originally, eau de cologne was a mixture of citrus oils from such fruits as lemons, oranges, tangerines, limes, and grapefruits. These were combined with such substances as lavender and neroli (orange-flower oil). Eau de toilette has the least amount of perfume oil mixture among the three main liquid "perfumery" categories. It has only about 2–8% of some type of perfume oil and 60–80% alcohol dispersent with water making up the difference. Eau de toilettes are a less concentrated form of these above types of alcohol-based perfumes. Traditionally cologne is usually made of citrus oils and fragrances, while eau de toilettes are not limited to this specification.

History

Hungarian eau de toilette, an alcohol based perfume that is the predecessor of eau de cologne, was first produced in the fourteenth century, supposedly by a Hungarian man for Queen Elisabeth of Hungary. This was called "eau de la reine de hongrie" or Hungary Water, and contained the herb rosemary, which allowed the scent to evaporate slowly on the skin. However, some early scientists, including Johann Beckmann, doubt that it was created for the Queen of Hungary.

The King of France Louis XIV (1638–1715) used a concoction of scents called "heavenly water" to perfume his shirts; It consisted of aloewood, musk, orange flower, rose water and other spices.

Some eau de toilette were once considered restorative skin toners with medical benefits. The journal Medical Record reported in 1905 that a toilet water spray restores energies lost in business, social, and domestic situations. During the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries a type of eau de toilette called "plague waters" was supposed to drive away the bubonic plague.

Varieties

  • Carmelite Water – a water of lemon balm, orange flower, angelica root, and spices prepared for Charles V of France, first made in 1379 by the nuns of a Carmelite abbey.
  • Carnation Toilet Water – floral extracts with tincture of vanilla.
  • Creole Toilet Water – orris root in brandy with floral oils.
  • Eau de lavand ambre – used by Spanish women in their hair and on the skin after bathing.
  • Florida Water – based on the nineteenth-century formula for a commercially prepared toilet water that mixes floral essential oils.
  • Geranium Toilet Water – with herbal oils, rosewater and alcohol
  • Heliotrope Toilet Water – heliotropine, with other oils, water and alcohol.
  • Honey water – an old-time English toilet water.
  • Jasmine toilet water – made with spirits of cologne, jasmine, and alcohol.
  • Kananga Water – used for purification in revival ceremonies.
  • Lavender water – a formula called "upper Ten" consists of lavender oil, alcohol, rose water, and carbonate of magnesia.
  • Nosegay – distilled honey water with cloves, lavender and neroli.
  • Oriental Toilet Water
  • Rose water toilet water – with other extracts and tincture of civet. Popular in the Middle East especially Egypt and called 'Maward'.
  • Viennese Cosmetic Toilet Water – bruised almonds, water of orange flower, rose water, borate of soda, spirit of benzoin. Dissolve.
  • White Rose Toilet Water – extract of white rose, oil of rose, oil of rose geranium, cologne spirits, and water.
  • Hugh C. Muldoonin submitted various toilet water formulas he called "Own-make Toilet Specialties" to the Bulletin Of Pharmacy in 1917.

Footnotes

References

References

  1. Murray, James. (1926). "Oxford English Dictionary". Clarendon Press.
  2. "Definition of "toilet water"". [[Collins English Dictionary]].
  3. Cristiani, p. 117
  4. (February 1997). "Newsletter 15".
  5. Cox, p. 118
  6. Ebert, p. 304
  7. Lawless, p. 39
  8. "Fragrance Defined: Parfum vs. EDP vs. EDT vs. Cologne". Bell Sugar.
  9. "What is the difference between eau de parfum and eau de toilette in perfumes and colognes?". Gilded Life.
  10. Baker, p. 262
  11. Fettner, p. 102
  12. "Cologne". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  13. [http://www.answers.com/topic/perfume perfume]
  14. Groom, p. 329
  15. [http://www.thefreedictionary.com/eau+de+toilette ''eau de toil'' definition from the online Free Dictionary]
  16. "Thesaurus online dictionary".
  17. Grolier, p. 154
  18. ''Consumer reports'', pp. 409–411
  19. Müller, p. 348
  20. Sherrow, p. 211
  21. Sherrow, p. 125
  22. [http://www.everythinkaboutperfume.com/history.html The History of Perfume] {{webarchive. link. (2015-02-08)
  23. Sherrow, p. 125 ''King Louis XIV (1638–1715) had his shirts scented with toilet water that included aloewood, rosewood, orangle flower, musk, and spices. The concoction was called "heavenly water" ...''
  24. Better Nutrition magazine, Nov 1999, p. 34
  25. Hiss, pp. 918–919
  26. Frank, p. 414
  27. Dewey, p. 55
  28. [https://books.google.com/books?id=bclNAAAAMAAJ&dq=perfume+%22toilet+water%22+define&pg=PA333 Interstate druggist, Volume 7, page 333]
  29. Stoddart, p. 154
  30. [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=58687 Dictionary of Traded Goods and Commodities, 1550–1820 by Nancy Cox and Karin Dannehl]
  31. Booth, p. 157
  32. [https://archive.today/20070614152057/http://www.readersdigest.ca/homegarden/n_homegarden_fragrance.html Reader's Digest – Make your own Fragrance]
  33. Halpern, p. 37
  34. Booth, p. 82
  35. Lillard, p. 33
  36. Hopkins, p. 875
  37. Fletcher, p. 219
  38. Miller, p. 99
  39. Hopkins, p. 876
  40. Hiss, p. 915
  41. [http://chestofbooks.com/food/household/Housekeeper-Encyclopedia/Toilet-Ideas-Part-2.html Toilet Water ideas]
  42. "kananga water".
  43. [https://books.google.com/books?id=rahakHd9V2oC&dq=lavender+%22Toilet+water%22&pg=PA73 Country Wisdom Almanac: 373 Tips, Crafts, Home Improvements, Recipes, and Homemade Remedies]
  44. Keppel, p. 154
  45. [http://www.perfumeintelligence.co.uk/library/perfume/n/n3/n3p2.htm Nosegay]
  46. The National Druggist, Volume 42, p. 65
  47. ''Beauty—its attainment and preservation'', p. 494
  48. ''Bulletin of pharmacy'', p. 317
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