Between fen and mountains

By Tickytocky

Lubin perfumes

Parfums Lubin is one of the oldest perfume houses in the world.
Its early history is linked to the high society of the Napoleonic Era and its products became the symbol of haute couture and indicators of fashion and social hierarchy.
Pierre François Lubin founded the company in 1798 when he began supplying scented ribbons, rice powderballs and masks to "Les Merveilleuses,"  socially exulted women who frequented the Thermidorian drawing rooms of Napoleonic France; and the "Incroyables," members of the subculture that mixed fashion and propaganda which emerged following the terror that was the immediate aftermath of the French Revolution of 1789.
The fragrance won over the Imperial Court, and was worn by the likes of Joséphine and Pauline Bonaparte. When the Bourbons were restored, Lubin dedicated his fragrances to Queen Marie-Amelie. Eventually, Lubin's perfumes were worn by all the crowned heads of Europe, and were imported to America in 1830.
Lubin was still a major perfumery in the 1940s, but abandoned high-end perfume making in the 1980s.
This is the oldest piece of wall advertising in the village and probably goes back 100 years to the time the village thermal spa was visited by the rich and famous of Europe.

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