How to Buy Perfume Online (and Still Get What You Love)

ShoppingFashion / Style

  • Author Joanna Mclaughlin
  • Published June 12, 2007
  • Word count 835

In an ideal world, there would be a local store that stocked every perfume and fragrance product in the known universe. It's wonderful to buy scents where you can try them on. But if you love perfume, it's pretty quick to run through the selection at your local department store. Then you need to get a travel budget so you can visit the niche perfumeries, or you can save your travel money and figure out an alternative way to perfume shop.

Hello, Internet.

Fortunately, Internet shopping has made it possible for ordinary people to buy obscure perfumes, retro-scents, sample the wares of new boutique perfumeries, and even try scents from foreign countries.

There are some pitfalls to Internet shopping. First and uppermost in my mind is the fact that there are many fragrance sites online that are selling knock-offs and counterfeits. Sometimes, the site will disclose this but more often than not it is only evident in the price. If you want to buy one ounce of Chanel No. 5 perfume (the real thing), the price tag is $260. Granted, sometimes you'll find some warehouse type sites that knock a bit off of the price. But if you ever find Chanel No. 5 perfume at $50 an ounce, you've got a knock-off.

A knock-off is another company that manufactures a similar scent and packages it as "just like" something else. A counterfeit is a company that manufactures a similar scent and lies about it and represents it as the original scent. One is more unethical than the other, but neither one are good perfume.

Here's why. Quality perfume, like a gourmet dessert, is made of the best and purest ingredients. It's also made to excruciating standards. Most copycats are made of cheaper ingredients and tend to be more homemade products by a no-name company. Think of it this way: if those guys could really make perfume, wouldn't they be better off making a truly new fragrance than just ripping off an existing product?

To avoid knockoffs, go to reputable sites. If you know the company that makes the perfume, see if they sell the product from that website. For instance, you can buy Chanel No. 5 directly from http://www.chanel.com.

And there are sites that are even bigger, such as http://www.sephora.com and others that offer a wide range of original products.

For boutique perfumes, you almost assuredly have to find the site of the perfumery. Perfume people tend to be extroverts who like each other, so it may not be long before you're a friend as much as a client.

When buying online, you do not have the opportunity to test the perfume first. Sometimes you can get interested in a scent and then find a friend who has some, so you can do your own sniff test before you buy online.

But what if you want to try a new perfume? How can you do that online? There are some sites that sell samples or small amounts of their product. If you are a regular customer of a large site like Sephora, you may find that they give samples with orders. (Don't expect samples as freebies; they are perks to people who are likely to order them.)

If you know a lot about perfume and are very bold by nature, you can buy perfume unsmelled. The best way to do this is to read a bit about the perfume. Most sites will describe scents, so you should know generally if you're getting a fruity-floral or an Oriental or a light boy-or-girl kind of scent. That's never the full story of the perfume, but I find that if you like a family of fragrances in general, it can make it easy to buy a perfume untested.

Another good way to shop for perfumes you can't smell first is to read reviews. A lot of websites and blogs review perfumes. Sometimes the reviews tell you more about the personality of the writer than the perfume. The best reviews are ones that describe the scent and its attributes rather than offer subjective opinions like, "I like this" or "I hated that." I'm sure there are perfectly reasonable people who hate Chanel No. 5 but that does not make it a bad perfume.

If you are very fond of all kinds of perfumes, it's pretty easy to buy perfume online. The service is generally good, prices tend to be reasonable, even with shipping and handling, and you can get a much broader selection of products. If you know what you like and what to stay away from (maybe you hate perfumes that are overly floral-descriptions should help you avoid them), you can do pretty well.

And sometimes I find that perfumes that do not wow me with the first whiff from the bottle eventually become lifelong favorites. That's why I like taking the risk of buying untested perfumes. Sometimes the scents you would have never picked out for yourself turn out to be the very best ones for you.

Joanna McLaughlin buys most of her perfume online which has saved her having to go to New York and Paris every week. She also writes frequently about perfume. To learn more about what perfumes might please you, go to http://www.theperfume-reporter.com . Joanna McLaughlin blogs at http://www.perfumecrazy.blogspot.com . Her favorite scent today is Angel by Thierry Mugler.

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