The Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Coffret

Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Coffret

If you’re a fan of Chanel’s Coco Mademoiselle (I must say that it’s my most-worn Chanel fragrance) then this limited edition coffret might just shoot to the top of your must-haves list. Containing an eau de parfum and a purse spray, it has all bases covered in terms of scent application, but I think that the biggest pull is that it’s just so beautifully presented – definitely the kind of packaging you’d want to put out on display. Although then you have the million dollar question: do you display it with the doors closed, or do you have them open, revealing the treasures inside?

Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Coffret

Or do you arrange it all a bit like a shop (see above), with the contents set out in front of the closed coffret, creating a kind of Coco Mademoiselle shrine? Choices, choices. Because the contents are as chic and beautiful as the minimalist, monochrome box; the 50ml eau de parfum spray with its classic glass bottle and the little refillable purse spray with its sophisticated styling and luxurious golden lid…

Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Coffret

In terms of value for money (possibly not what you’d be overly concerned with if you were hankering after this!) the 50ml perfume is worth £68 and the purse spray, with three 7.5ml refills, is worth approximately – I dunno – forty or fifty pounds? I’m guesstimating that because the full-size purse spray, which has three 20ml refills, is £76, but we all know that little luxury things often don’t scale down in price at the same rate as their size! So I think that you get your money’s worth, pretty much, though I do have to say that the full-size purse spray (here) is very special and one of the nicest perfume-y things I own. Well worth considering if you don’t want to stretch to the coffret…

The Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Coffret costs £110 and is available at Selfridges.com here.

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Guerlain: Standing Between the Parfumerie and the Cakeshop

fragrances for christmas

Ooh, Guerlain’s La Petite Robe Noire Couture is a tasty little fragrance for winter, I think. People seemed to be divided on their opinion of the original La Petite Robe Noire by Guerlain, either loving the “black-cherry-with-undertones-of-patisserie” wholeheartedly or hating it with a passion. My Mum thought that it reminded her of black forest gateau; one friend said that it was far too sweet for her tastes. But I have discovered the Couture version of the eau de parfum recently and I reckon to this being much more of a crowd-pleaser. It’s less fruity, I think, less sugary and vanilla-y – altogether less like a booze-rich, berry-moist slice of cream-topped cake.

There’s something a little more grown-up about Couture – it’s more floral than gourmand, it has a sophisticated sexiness that comes with the patchouli, vetiver and tonka bean base but not the sweet warmth of vanilla that you get with the original version. But – oddly – I actually find the newer Couture to be lighter, with its fresher raspberry rather than the dark black cherry, and so if it’s deep, rich intrigue that you’re looking for, the original might be your best bet! Longevity is ever so slightly better with Couture (I’ve spent a few days with one version on each wrist) but the original version is slightly more powdery and lovely on the skin, I think.

Read more perfume reviews…

A flash opinion poll showed that Couture was more popular, overall, (we’re not talking a national census here, just a few friends and family!) but I actually still prefer the original for its cherry roundness and touches of naughtiness. It’s very interesting. Like standing on a Parisian street between a parfumerie and an expensive cake shop and not knowing which door to turn into.

You can find La Petite Robe Noire here and La Petite Robe Noire Couture here, with prices starting at £39.60 for 30ml. (Both those links go through to Escentual.com who retail the fragrances at a cheaper price than many other places, and have free delivery – the 30ml at House of Fraser is £44, for example.)

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The Book Thief, Sherlock Holmes and a Happy New Year…

1) Happy New Year everyone! I trust you all had excellent Christmas holidays and are now picking your way out of the debris, bleary-eyed and doughy-skinned, empty wine bottles crunching beneath your feet and Quality Street wrappers tumbling from every pocket. Making that concerted effort to “get back to normal”… I’m trying to wean myself off Netflix and NowTV (see below) ready for my first official day back at work tomorrow, and I am also eating a satsuma every other hour in a vague attempt at negating the ill effects of all the truffles and chocolate biscuits I scoffed. Tomorrow I’m back on the “green juice before breakfast” routine – recipes to follow.

2) I have decided that Netflix and NowTV are the source of all evil. Before they came into my world I used to have such productive, rewarding evenings filled with cooking sessions and reading and looking at Mid Century Modern interiors ideas on Pinterest. Now, what with my six-hour-long television marathons, I can barely be bothered to rustle up cheese on toast let alone peruse the cookbooks and conjure up a gourmet sensation! The problem with Netflix (and NowTV, which is our latest “thing”, downloaded because they were showing The Blacklist with James Spader) is that there’s absolutely nothing stopping you from watching whole seasons of stuff all in one go. On normal telly, you watch an episode and then have to wait a week until the next instalment; on internet telly you are handed the entire televisual universe on one big plate. This Christmas Mr AMR and I watched the whole of Homeland seasons 2 and 3 and then 24 episodes of Elementary, a US Sherlock Holmes murder-mystery series with Johnny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu. I can highly recommend Elementary – especially if you don’t want to get anything done for the next few weeks – but don’t blame me if you get hooked. Blame Caroline Hirons: she started the whole thing off.

the book thief book review

3) I finished loads of books over Christmas but the one that has cemented itself into my memory is The Book Thief. A very interesting narrative perspective, because the entire story is told by “Death”, who has been made almost a tangible character, one who greets the newly dead and carries away their souls. Also interesting because although it’s about the second world war, it mostly follows the lives of German, non-Jewish citizens – not a point of view that’s represented very frequently in fiction. It certainly gets you thinking, this book, and the writing style is unusual – the voice of “Death” is unexpected; strangely warm and compassionate and prone to reeling off little lists of observations and character descriptions. If you’ve read it then let me know what you thought – if you haven’t, you can find it online here. Apparently the novel was made into a film, I must look that up…

4) You may have noticed that the Sunday Tittle Tattle part has disappeared from the title. This is still the Tittle Tattle, and it will still be published on a Sunday, but the post description was becoming too long and messy. If lots of people really strongly object to the change then I’ll bring it back, otherwise just keep on tuning in every Sunday for your weekly dose of random nonsense and news.

mr bear

5) Pets! This Christmas Mr Bear, above, overdosed on catnip and spent a good few minutes staring manically at a blank wall. Dexter didn’t really do very much at all over the holidays and so no good photos of him (he’s actually quite hard to take photos of because he just looks like a shaggy mop with a black nose!) but here he is gatecrashing my latest video. I’ll be posting the video up later on today, it’s my December Favourites.

dexter the cockapoo

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Castello di Casole: a Luxury Tuscan Disneyland.

tuscany travel review

Ciao! I went on a little trip to Tuscany last month and it was wonderful. I hadn’t been to Tuscany for almost twenty years (the last time was a school trip when I was fourteen, we did a big tour starting in Florence and ending down in Sorrento, via Rome and Pompeii and Naples) and I had forgotten how utterly beautiful the countryside is. Just breathtaking. Mr AMR and I started our Tuscany trip at a lovely little hotel called Poggio Piglia; I was reviewing it for Mr & Mrs Smith and you can see my write-up on that here. I’ve done a few bits of secret reviewing for Mr & Mrs Smith now – I really enjoy it. I have to stay anonymous until checking-out time, at which point I reveal my true identity, along with some jazz hands “ta-dah!” style waving, and hope to God that the hotel do me a nice discount on the bar bill. (Joke. Though it is usually quite a big bar bill… )

holiday snaps

After Poggio Piglia, we drove across the Tuscan countryside to Castello di Casole, a luxury resort just outside of Siena, but I have to say that the journey itself was one of the most spectacular parts of the whole trip. The scenery was amazing! We drove via Montepulciano (above and below) and Pienza and played the soundtracks from Gladiator and The English Patient as we went along, because both films were shot in the area and I do like a location-appropriate soundtrack. (Batman in Chicago, Amelie when I’m pootling around Paris, you get the picture. Everyone does this, surely? If they don’t, then they should – it’s like walking about in your very own movie set!)

narrow street in montepulciano tuscany

Montepulciano is a must-see, if you’re in Tuscany; a medieval walled town with tiny narrow streets and the most incredible views from the outer wall. It also has a Torture Museum but I’d rather not talk about that (it made me feel nauseous and faint, especially the death-by-impalement part) – again, feel free to read my travel review over on Mr and Mrs Smith. But onwards, troops, onwards through the rolling hills and then up a tree-lined road to the magical, secluded Castello di Casole.

tuscany tree-lined avenue Continue reading