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Current Luxury Wish List | A San Francisco fashion & beauty blog

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BagDior Diorama in Black Grained Calfskin | Jacket:  | Sunglasses:  | Accessory😐 Fragrance:

The makeup no-buy project I’m on has triggered a lot of decluttering in other areas of my life. I’ve recently downsized my closet, linens, and home decor stash significantly, and I’m on a roll to get rid of even more. In this process I’ve realized that many of the individual items have long since served their purpose to me, and I’m ready to move on to bigger and better things. That leads me to my current luxury wish list. I love the idea of striving to have fewer and better things in my wardrobe. Here are all the most wanted and most expensive designer items at the top of my luxury wish list.

Dior Diorama Bag

I came dangerously close to purchasing this bag tax-free in Hong Kong recently, but I thought it would be a smarter idea to save this for my next milestone birthday. This bag is stunning and suits me a lot more than the CHANEL Classic Flaps I was previously lusting after. The Diorama bag is also pretty rare on the used market, so I’m hoping it’s a timeless style for many years to come.

AllSaints Leather Jacket

Believe it or not, I don’t own a real leather jacket. And I’m not sure I ever have… it’s just not something I’ve ever splurged on when so many great faux options are more affordable and look just as nice. But there really are no substitutions for the buttery smooth finish of an AllSaints Balfern jacket. They now come in so many different colors, however the light grey and classic black interest me the most.

CÉLINE Tildas

These specific sunglasses have been on my wish list for years. I love the extremely oversized shape and squared off edges. The lenses are opaque black, perfect for hiding behind.

CHANEL Brooch

Again, another item on the wish list that has stood the test of time. There are so many CHANEL brooches on the secondhand market, plus new collections being released every season, it’s hard to pick a particular style I like best. I know eventually getting a brooch will be an excellent edition to my wardrobe because it’ll be the perfect piece to dress up any top or outerwear.

Jo Malone Midnight Black Tea Fragrance

I can’t get this scent out of my mind. This is a sensual black tea fragrance with warm oriental notes of amber, vanilla, and wood. When I finish off a couple of bottles in my current stash, this will be my next fragrance splurge, for sure!

Want more even more wish list goodness? Be sure to check out my Wish List page which is constantly updated with new shoes, clothing, and accessories that catch my eye. Let me know what’s at the top of your luxury wish list in a comment below!

http://chelseapearl.com/2017/05/12/current-luxury-wish-list/

On – 12 May, 2017 By Chelsea

The Best Luxury Hotels You’ve Probably Never Heard Of – But Should Know

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Anantara Hotels & Resorts is a Thai chain founded by an American entrepreneur spanning three continents and more than a dozen countries. As such, it combines the legendary hospitality of its homeland with a modern and global understanding of the luxury hotel industry and what today’s traveler wants. It is also one of the fastest growing luxury brands in the industry, just expanded into Europe, and if you like to travel and stay at top hotels, it is a brand you need to know.

William Heinecke moved to Thailand from the States in the Sixties when he was just 14, and within three years was running a successful advertising agency. Next, he turned his attention to fast food, and built a vast pizza empire that became the foundation of Minor International – so named because he was a legal “minor” when he started and needed parental co-signing of documents. Today, his conglomerate Minor includes a few dozen businesses and is one of the largest hospitality and food players in Asia, with around 150 hotels, nearly 2,000 restaurants and several hundred retail stores. Heinecke owns, operates, or has owned major luxury brand hotels including Four Seasons, St. Regis, Radisson and JW Marriott, and as a frequent international traveler himself, came to the conclusion that there was a void to be filled by a hotel that combined the top shelf service and amenities of a global luxury brand with a more discernible local sense of place that respected and reflected its setting and culture. To that end, he created his top tier “5-Star” brand, Anantara, and his slightly less opulent “4-Star” brand Avani. Today both are thriving and growing. Not surprisingly for a hotel chain started by a restaurateur, the emphasis on culinary experience permeates both brands.

The first Anantara was opened in Thailand’s famed beach resort of Hua Hin just 15 years ago, and now roughly three dozen of the luxury hotels and resorts can be found in a very varied range of city, island and desert settings across Thailand, the Maldives, Indonesia, Vietnam, China, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, Mozambique, Zambia, the UAE, Qatar, Oman, and now Europe. The brand just opened its first resort outside of Africa, Asia and the Middle East, the Anantara Vilamoura Algarve Resort on the Portuguese coast. Vilamoura in turn is one of the largest and best-known golf and leisure resorts on the Continent. It is a perfect example of the Anantara philosophy, bringing a branch of the brand’s highly acclaimed Thai-style spa, health club offerings such as tai chi and yoga, and a restaurant specializing in Thai cuisine, but otherwise celebrating the local setting. Rooms were furnished with local artisan products like colorful Portuguese ceramics and items made from cork trees. The main restaurant features local specialties, while a new raw bar eatery will showcase Algarve seafood, and there is a deep resort-wide program showcasing Portuguese wines. The hotel employs the winner of Best Sommelier in Portugal, who will prepare restaurant food and wine pairings, lead tastings for guests, and suites are equipped with wine fridges.

While several hotel chains have branded their spas globally, Anantara is the only one that has taken this approach to cooking schools, with its Spice Spoons program – which always focuses on the local cuisine where the resort is set. In each case, the Spice Spoon half day format begins with obtaining ingredients alongside the chef instructor, which might mean a local market visit, foraging, or at beach resorts even catching the main course. Then guests and chef head into a dedicated demonstration kitchen where they learn to cook a local specialty, enjoy it for lunch and go home with recipes, souvenirs and keepsake ingredients like rice or spices. Guests in Thailand might learn to make green curry, at a Vietnamese beach resort to cook fish, or in this new case to prepare classic Portuguese specialties.

The Spice Spoons concept is one of my favorite features of the Anantara brand, another memorable and experiential activity in each destination, but it is not the only way locales are distinguished and emphasized. In Bangkok, I took a Thai boxing class, which I have not seen on the activity list at the many other luxury resorts I’ve visited worldwide, and it was fun, informative, memorable, and an excellent workout. I have now been to enough Anantara properties to have developed an appreciation of the unique offerings and luxury accommodations. Most locations host live cultural performances for guests, from music to dance to theater, always reflecting local culture. The food is first rate, as are the extensive spas, and most properties encourage exploration by offering extensive off property programs to showcase the location. In Bangkok they have a “Street Guru,” a full time hotel employee, to lead tours of the city complete with an immersion into its famously rich street food culture. In Cambodia’s Siem Reap, home to the world-famous Angkor Wat Temple complex, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, they have a “temple guru.” The Siem Reap boutique resort offers a laundry list of local outings, from rice paddy to fishing village tours. Outings are offering at various resorts by boat, bicycle, rickshaw and foot. Back at the hotel. rooms are lavish, there are usually multiple dining options, and gorgeous swimming pools are standard. Many resorts also feature villas with private pools. The flagship Anantara Siam in Bangkok used to be a Four Seasons, and is a grand urban business and pleasure hotel in the mold of the Peninsula Hong Kong, with a big ornate lobby, top shelf shops, multiple restaurants and much more. I loved it, and it easily competes toe to toe with any name brand 5-Star luxury hotel in the city – or most cities. But the brand’s other Bangkok property, the Anantara Riverside, is completely different, an urban resort concept with vast gardens, elaborate pools and outdoor spaces, a true oasis in the city, right on the river with its own boat service to popular destinations, outdoor Thai boxing ring and numerous choices for dining and drinking.

 

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http://www.forbes.com/sites/larryolmsted/2017/05/24/the-best-luxury-hotels-youve-probably-never-heard-of-but-should-know/

On – 24 May, 2017 By Larry Olmsted

8 Of The Best Luxury Fragrances For Men | FashionBeans

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We all know that a hefty price tag doesn’t automatically equate to a superior product. Nonetheless, there are still plenty of reasons to splash out on a spenny scent. For starters, due to the price, luxury fragrances tend to be produced in relatively small quantities and their distribution is often limited. This means you’re far less likely to bump into another man wearing exactly the same.

What’s more, free of commercial constraints, many opt to use only the finest ingredients, and their creators are able to let rip creatively, offering a real – often quirky and original – alternative to everyday department store brands.

“A lot of men genuinely want to try something that’s off the beaten track,” says award-winning fragrance blogger Dariush Alavi. “They’re interested in wearing scents that are different from the wares offered by the mainstream.”

Sound like you? Then crack open the piggy bank and read on because here are some of the best luxury scents money can buy.

Hermès Cuir D’Ange

Described as one of the most masculine fragrances ever made – it “combines an oily, grimy leather note with an astonishing, delicate luminosity,” according to Alavi – Hermès Cuir D’Ange by legendary nose Jean-Claude Ellena appropriately translates into ‘angel leather’.

Part of the French luxury goods firm’s Hermessence range (each one designed to be an ‘olfactory poem’), it’s perfect for fans of sexy leathery fragrances seeking something a little more refined, genteel and complex. Heavenly.

Available at Hermes, priced £269 for 200ml EDT.

Hermès Cuir D’Ange

Roja Parfums Vetiver

The undisputed King of luxury British fragrances, Roja Dove’s creations include perfumes that’ll set you back over £2,500. Thankfully, his ridiculously good Vetiver Pour Homme comes in at a slightly more affordable £375.

Warm, spicy and smoky, it’s laced with green notes like galbanum and has a long-lasting leathery accord, which gives it a lingering sensuality on the skin, along with superb staying power.

“I created it to be the ultimate in how a man should smell,” says Dove. Those who love it would probably agree that he succeeded admirably.

Available at Roja Parfums, priced £375 for 50ml EDP.

Roja Parfums Vetiver

Amouage Bracken Man

Drawing inspiration from its birthplace in the Sultanate of Oman, luxury niche perfume house Amouage is known for its use of carefully sourced, high-quality ingredients such as rare silver frankincense.

Bracken Man is one of its best creations. “It’s an utterly divine fougère that is incredibly compelling and mysterious and really doesn’t smell like anything else out there,” says Josephine Fairley, co-founder of The Perfume Society.

Also worth a sniff is Honour Man, an Amouage fragrance that features a classic trio of masculine notes (incense, patchouli and vetiver), which Alavi describes as a scent projecting the very essence of confidence. And that’s what every man wants from his eau de parfum, right?

Available at Selfridges, priced £225 for 100ml EDP.

Amouage Bracken Man

Creed Aventus

Creed fragrances are a bit like David Bowie albums: everyone has their favourite, but there are a couple that everyone agrees are head and shoulders above the rest.

Original Vetiver is sweet and smoky, while Green Irish Tweed (a favourite of George Clooney, Pierce Brosnan and even P.Diddy) is floral, green and woody – but it’s Aventus that is probably the most accessible.

Launched in 2010 to celebrate Creed’s 250th anniversary (how’s that for staying power?), it’s a complex and juicy yet warm, woody and sophisticated number with notes of pineapple, blackcurrant, jasmine, patchouli, oakmoss and vanilla. Feel free to argue whether it’s a Ziggy Stardust, Hunky Dory or a Blackstar amongst yourselves.

Available at Creed, priced £230 for 100ml EDP.

Creed Aventus

Clive Christian 1872 (Masculine Edition)

Few companies have done more to popularise luxury perfumery in the UK than Clive Christian. Famous for exquisitely designed bottles with equally exquisite contents, the company’s ‘No 1’ fragrance was once advertised as ‘The World’s Most Expensive Perfume’.

The masculine edition of 1872 – a fresh, citrusy and spicy creation with green grassy notes and a hefty dose of sandalwood – is brilliantly versatile and a great place to start if new to this most luxurious of luxury brands.

Available at Selfridges, priced £350 for 100ml EDP.

Clive Christian 1872 (masculine edition)

Boucheron Oud de Carthage

There are plenty of expensive oud fragrances out there. In fact, so popular in the Middle East is oud that companies have long battled it out to produce ever more wallet-draining versions.

According to Fairley, this one by French jewellery house Boucheron – part of a six-piece scent collection – is one of the best, and at £175 is relatively affordable luxury. “It’s so good because as an oud it has all the edges buffed off it by incense, honey and tonka bean,” she says.

Like all the fragrances in the collection, Oud de Carthage was created by none other than Dominique Ropion, the nose behind scents such as Burberry Brit Rhythm, Paco Rabanne Invictus and countless others by Frederic Malle.

“It’s resinous and smoky with a fabulous incense trail – and a gorgeous bottle,” she says. “And yes, when it comes to luxury, the bottle matters.”

Available at Boucheron, priced £175 for 125ml EDP.

Boucheron Oud de Carthage

Papillon Artisan Perfumes Tobacco Rose

The benefit of many luxury fragrances is their unfettered creativity and experimentation. For a clear example of this, you need to look no further than the niche Tobacco Rose. “Papillon pushes the limits of […] fragrances almost to breaking point,” says fragrance writer Stephan Matthews. “[The brand] challenges people’s perceptions and always adds a dash of sexuality to every perfume.”

Though a floral scent, Tobacco Rose is one that men should not be afraid of wearing. “You get a truly sensuous floral with masculinity coming from the clever use of hay, oakmoss and beeswax, which add a real earthiness to the fragrance,” adds Matthews. The scent itself was nominated for Best New Independent Fragrance at the FiFi Awards (the olfactory Oscars), so you can investigate with confidence.

Available at Papillon, priced £122 for 50ml EDP.

Papillon Artisan Perfumes Tobacco Rose

Les Eaux Primordiales Champ d’Influence

When perfumer Arnaud Poulain, founder of Les Eaux Primordiales, set about creating Champ d’Influence, he had in mind the childhood memory of his grandfather shaving in the kitchen of his house in rural France. Hence there’s a barbershop freshness here thanks to lemon, lavender and geranium, but also a warm, comforting base of woods, musk and patchouli.

“This scent is so full of richness, sentiment, nostalgia, freshness and imagination,” says award-winning fragrance expert James Craven of independent perfumery Les Senteurs. “It has the depth of a vintage Creed, the inspiration of a classic Guerlain and is a modern classic for an assured gentleman of wit, wisdom and joie de vivre.”

Available at Les Senteurs, priced £155 for 100ml EDP.

Les Eaux Primordiales Champ d’Influence

http://www.fashionbeans.com/2017/best-luxury-fragrances-for-men/

On – 23 May, 2017 By Lee Kynaston

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