Posted by GK Fragrances
The best feeling is when you discover the perfect scent for you. It smells fresh with every application, and the compliments never stop rolling in. 
Best of all: it makes you feel as amazing as it smells.  
But eventually, you’re horrified to see your favorite scent has been discontinued. Worst of all, you have no idea why. 
We’re going to go into detail why perfumes are often discontinued, what it means to be discontinued, but also where you can find your discontinued fragrance again — even after they’ve disappeared into oblivion.

1. They’re not selling as well as expected

The company who represents a perfume (e.g, Tom Ford, Vera Wang), and the manufacturers of the perfume are two different entities. But they work together to produce a new scent — the scent you adore.  
When the company sets out to create this scent, they buy their ingredients in bulk from manufacturers based on concentration percentages, ingredients, shelf life, and more. Buying these ingredients at large volumes is absolutely necessary. To lower the volume size and buy fewer ingredients from the manufacturer would cost the company an arm and a leg. 
When your favorite perfume isn’t the favorite of the world, and the company’s profits begin to suffer, it’s not a smart decision financially to continue selling the perfume any longer. Either the company pays more for fewer ingredients, or they buy the ingredients at high volumes and throw them out, because not enough people are buying the perfumes in stores. 
Either way, the company is tossing out money. Financially it’s smarter to simply cut losses and discontinue your favorite perfume than to continue down the path of lost profits. 

2. The ingredients are extinct

Perfume scents are affected by the smallest change to the ingredients, concentration, or the way in which it was manufactured. It doesn’t take a lot to create a huge difference — good or bad — depending on the nose.  
Ingredients also change frequently. Some that were available in one location may now be completely extinct. Although they may still exist elsewhere, it could cost the company extensively to have the ingredients flown in. Instead, the better cost effective alternative is supplementing a different ingredient into the perfume formula. But this change can make or break the perfume’s original scent. 
If the company can’t find a suitable replacement, they’ll discontinue the perfume. If they can, the scent will change, and it may be re-created under a new name. 

3. Legalities and time changes

Many perfumes include ingredients which are not 100% natural. These ingredients need to be checked by appropriate figureheads to determine if they’re safe for the skin and the body. If it causes pain or discomfort (such as irritation to the skin), it can very easily turn into a legal dispute. 
Some ingredients can’t be sold or imported depending on the rules of the country, while others need to be thoroughly examined and approved before being used to create the perfume. 
It’s also a case of time. If your favorite scent was sold years ago, the way in which it was created then would be vastly different now. What worked before (including specific ingredients) might not give the same results now as it once did. For that reason, some fragrances are forced to be discontinued.

4. Replica perfumes are difficult to recreate 

It’s not just the ingredients that make the perfume, it’s the way the ingredients are used that result in a specific scent. This is why some perfumes may remind you of an old favorite, but it’s not the exact same. Something is off. That ‘something’ can be the deciding factor whether you buy it or put it back down.
If you’re feeling up to it, you could send a sample of your discontinued perfume to Prive Label and they can replicate it. The cost of the sample replication is $250, which can be used towards your own private label perfume line as well. www.privelabel.com

There’s great news, though! 

Many classics forced off of the shelves are available right here at Perfume Express. They’re 100% original from the packaging to the scent. All of our fragrances are stored in a cooled environment to ensure the perfume doesn't go bad.
On top of that, many of these discontinued fragrances are priced better than when they were available in retail stores. If there was ever a reason for a smile, it’s right now.  
If you're unsure whether we have the discontinued perfume, use our search option above or contact us to find it quickly!

Comments

  • Posted On May 21, 2019 by Tamera

    Calvin Klein’s “Contradiction” spray perfume for women. Germaine Monteil’s “Galore” in LOTION formula. And Giorgio LOTION (women). How I miss these vintage scents!

  • Posted On May 02, 2019 by Mariflor Navia

    Where do I begin? Trussardi for women, C’est la vie by Christian Lacroix, Escada (their very first fragrance 1990), the original formula and bottle of Byzance by Rochas, same with Kenzo’s Parfum d’Été (the original bottle was a precious etched leaf flacon), Boucheron pour femme, Jean Paul Gaultier Fragile (with its exquisite/adorable “snowball” bottle – it was a viewing spectacle in its own right). The first Carolina Herrera; Loulou by Cacharel; Joy’s original, 1000 …
    For men, I was trying to find the YSL Jazz I remembered in a half black, half white bottle with a fragrance that was absolutely memorable, but only came across a simple black little box and it was a disappointment. Red for Men by Giorgio Beverly Hills, Tuscany by Aramis – where are they? Right now I’m having the hardest time finding Silver Man by Benetton – and it’s from 2008!
    Yes, I may be stuck in the 80s and 90s, but these fragrances really stood out in the crowd; people came up to my mother and me to ask what we were wearing – and for the good reasons. In the past two decades, I have rarely come across new fragrances that actually made me ask (Guerlain’s La Petite Robe Noir, Rabanne’s Million for women and men). It’s as if the premise is to blend into the light, uniform, what-everybody-else-is-wearing/making.
    And what’s up with perfumers launching one fragrance and almost immediately another version of the same, and then another, and then a whole string of others that are slightly different from the original, but never live up to it (except very rare cases like Kenzo’s Flower Tag or CH’s 212 VIP). Come on! Where did creativity go? I, for one, do not like to disappear into the crowd.

  • Posted On April 12, 2019 by Neal Mayers

    Loved members only. From the 1980,s. Sold by mem company, developedby Dana.
    Absolutely terrific

  • Posted On March 18, 2019 by Simon dobbins

    Please try to help find me
    Noir Ed de toilette black egg shape bottle
    It was around in the early 80s

    Many thanks
    Simon

  • Posted On February 19, 2019 by Anna Andreea

    Jean Paul Gautier – Ma Dame …

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