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CIRE TRUDON Le Diffuser Madurai 350ml

$359.00
Availability: Translation missing: en.general.icons.icon_check_circle icon 16 in stock, ready to be shipped

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The collection of Home Objects welcomed a new icon: the Trudon Diffuser joined L’OEuf, the Room Spray and La Promeneuse to further perfume interiors.

This year the collection meets with two iconic Belles Matières scents : Reggio and Maduraï

The Duke of Tuscany first brought jasmine in India in 1690, a flower originally from Arabia. Whether fresh or dried, they still play a quintessential role in India’s myths, legends and daily rituals. At times, jasminum sambac perfumes loose-leaf tea; at others, it is braided into floral necklaces. Revered spiritually, the odorant flower turns into an offering in Hindu temples.

Head Notes
Ylang-Ylang

Heart Notes
Sambac Jasmine absolute

Base Notes
Benzoin Resin

Shaped out of the same emblematic blue glass, the 350ml fluted container is adorned with a gold emblem.

Handcrafted in the same glass manufacturer who creates the candles, the Diffuser is topped with a 100% recyclable aluminium ring. Through it, you place 8 natural, black rattan sticks.

The diffuser allows a 3 to 4-month long, passive diffusion. 

Separate refills available.

 

Heritage

In 1643 a salesman named Claude Trudon arrived in Paris and became the owner of a store in Rue Saint-Honoré. He was a grocer but also a wax merchant and supplied his customers with candles for lighting their homes and for the parish. On the eve of Louis XIV's reign, Trudon thus created a small family manufacturing business that was to carry his name forward and make the fortune of his heirs. His son Jacques also became a shopkeeper and wax producer and entered the court of Versailles in 1687, as apothecary distiller of Marie-Thérèse, wife of the King. In the 18th century, in 1737, Hierosme Trudon purchased the most famous wax factories of the era from the official wax provider to King Louis XV. Trudon grew and began supplying the French court and the most important churches. The Trudon company supplied Versailles until the very end of the monarchy. As Napoleon's wax producer during the Empire, the company survived the arrival of domestic lighting and the birth of the "electric revolution" continuing to prosper. Trudon continued its work throughout the centuries, without ever interrupting its activity, particularly through the making of traditional candles and perfumed candles for the greatest names. It is now the oldest and most prestigious wax manufacturer in the world.