What is cashmeran?

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What is cashmeran?

Cashmeran is a trade name registered by IFF for a chemical ingredient whose scientific name is DPMI.
This was discovered in the 1970s by Doctor John Hall.
In addition, cashmeran comes from research into inexpensive chemical transformations from other ingredients.

It is an alicyclic ketone, an organic compound, with a melting point of 27°.
This is described as being a policlinic musk.

In other words, cashmeran is a synthetic product, also called cashmere wood.
What's more, it is a particularly recent product on the perfumery scale. Cashmeran is a unique material since it is as much tactile as it is olfactory.

Indeed, it has a surface that you immediately want to touch, like cashmere.
Thus, cashmeran is a raw material that everyone would dream of snuggling into, both for its feeling of comfort and for its bewitching smell.

woody and sensual scent of cashmeran
Cashmeran releases a fairly complex smell and its olfactory facets are rich.

It turns out to be a predominantly woody and musky ingredient. However, it is also spicy, fruity, chypre, balsamic and vanilla.
It releases a sensual and soft sensation and has a characteristic scent that makes it immediately identifiable.
What's more, it is a synthetic product whose scent is very different from natural wood essences.
Many consumers thus give their personal and sometimes divergent impressions concerning cashmeran.
Some say its scent is musky and evocative of the undergrowth.

For many, it reveals the same breath as that of concrete when hit by rain.
In this sense, it evokes an urban landscape on a gloomy day.

Others, on the other hand, say it is very spicy while some find it elegantly powdery.
Generally speaking, perfumers like to describe cashmeran as being a complex product subsequently revealing a light scent of apple associated with pine.

In any case, cashmeran remains an excellent way to support the floral notes of a perfume and more particularly the flavor of jasmine.
Cashmeran appeared for the very first time in Givenchy's famous Amarige from 1970.

Since that day, it has become an essential ingredient in perfumery.
As such, it is present in perfumes such as Acqua Di Gioia Essenza by Armani, 1881 Blanc by Cerruti or Bang Bang by Marc Jacob. Likewise, it appears throughout Thierry Mugler's Alien collection.


Details
Written by: Keevans
Category: Perfumes
Published: May 15, 2024
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