Histoires de Parfums This Is Not A Blue Bottle 1.8 Unisex Eau de Parfum 115ml

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Description

René Magritte painted a pipe and wrote beneath it: "Ceci n'est pas une pipe" — this is not a pipe. His point was deceptively profound: the painting is not the object, it is a representation, and confusing the two is the greatest illusion of all. Histoires de Parfums took that surrealist provocation and bottled it. This Is Not A Blue Bottle 1.8 is not a blue bottle — it is a question, a paradox, a challenge wrapped in cobalt glass that dares you to stop judging fragrances by their packaging, their gender assignments, or their compliance with commercial expectations. And for the discerning fragrance collector in Kuwait who has already traversed the mainstream, who knows every Tom Ford and every Maison Francis Kurkdjian by heart, this is the bottle that reignites the thrill of discovery — the one that reminds you why you fell in love with perfume in the first place.


The 1.8 designation is not a version number — it is a musical reference. In musical notation, 1/8 represents the eighth note, the quaver — a note that is brief, quick, and luminous, passing through a melody like a flash of silver through water. Composer Gerald Ghislain, the creative force behind Histoires de Parfums, composed this fragrance the way a musician composes a phrase — with attention to rhythm, to the space between notes, to the way a single vibration can change the emotional color of an entire chord. The result is a fragrance that moves with the tempo of a scherzo — bright, effervescent, and restless in the most beautiful way, never settling into a single mood long enough for you to grow bored.


The opening is an aldehydic supernova — a shimmering, sparkling cascade of effervescent aldehydes that hit the skin like sunlight refracting through a prism. Aldehydes are the most misunderstood family in perfumery, dismissed by the inexperienced as soapy or old-fashioned because their most famous deployment — Chanel No. 5 — has become synonymous with a particular era. In the hands of a niche house like Histoires de Parfums, aldehydes become something else entirely: an abstract, almost metallic shimmer that feels modern, electric, and utterly contemporary. They create a sense of space and altitude around the fragrance — as though the scent is hovering slightly above your skin rather than sitting on it — and that ethereal quality is what makes 1.8 feel simultaneously weightless and omnipresent.


The heart reveals a luminous floral core where orange blossom and lily of the valley weave together in a duet of white florals that never crosses into the heavy, indolic territory that makes many Middle Eastern wearers associate white florals with funerals rather than fashion. This is orange blossom picked at dawn before the heat releases the indoles — bright, clean, and slightly green, with a nectar-like sweetness that reads as joyful rather than seductive. Lily of the valley adds a bell-like clarity, a fresh, aqueous floral that keeps the composition feeling buoyant and airborne. Together, they create a heart that is beautiful without being pretty, floral without being feminine, and present without being dominant — exactly the balance a unisex fragrance must achieve.


The dry-down is where the 1.8 reveals its quiet genius. White musk and amber create a base that is warm but not heavy, clean but not clinical, sensual but not sexual. The white musk is the kind that smells like your skin after a cool shower on a marble bathroom floor — fresh, intimate, and subtly magnetic. The amber adds just enough warmth to ground the ethereal aldehydes and prevent the fragrance from floating away entirely, like an anchor made of silk. This base persists for hours, close to the skin, revealing itself in waves as your body heat fluctuates — more present when you are warm, more coy when the air-conditioning kicks in. It is a base designed for the Gulf climate, where a heavy oud or dense amber base becomes suffocating in the heat, and a clean, musky dry-down provides the longevity you need with the comfort you crave.


The 115ml bottle is itself a work of conceptual art. A vivid, electric cobalt-blue flacon that contradicts its own name the moment you look at it — yes, it is blue; no, it is not just a blue bottle. The color is a statement, not a designation, and the minimalist design with its clean lines and bold proportions communicates the fragrance's artistic ambition before you ever unscrew the cap. It occupies a shelf the way a Rothko painting occupies a wall — through color, proportion, and the audacity to mean more than it appears to.


Key Features

  • Conceptual art-inspired fragrance — named after Magritte's surrealist provocation, designed to challenge assumptions about perfume, gender, and representation
  • Musical composition structure — 1.8 refers to the eighth note (quaver), composed with attention to rhythm, tempo, and the spaces between notes
  • Aldehydic effervescent opening — shimmering, electric aldehydes that create altitude, space, and an abstract modernity around the wearer
  • Luminous white floral heart — orange blossom and lily of the valley in a bright, clean, non-indolic duet that reads as joyful and unisex
  • White musk and amber base — warm, clean, and intimate dry-down that persists for hours close to the skin without heaviness
  • Truly unisex composition — balanced precisely between floral beauty and clean musk, with no gendered lean in either direction
  • Eau de Parfum concentration — richer and longer-lasting than an Eau de Toilette, calibrated for the nuanced development niche collectors expect
  • 115ml generous format — the full artistic presentation in a size that honors the fragrance as a complete work
  • Electric cobalt-blue flacon — a minimalist, conceptual bottle that is both the statement and the contradiction the name promises

Why Customers Love It

  • "This is the most intellectually stimulating fragrance I have ever worn — it makes you think while you smell it"
  • "The aldehydes are absolutely electric — nothing else in my collection opens like this"
  • "I wore it to a gallery opening and three people asked if it was a bespoke commission — that is the energy this carries"
  • "Finally a unisex fragrance that is truly unisex — not masculine with flowers or feminine with wood, just beautifully balanced"
  • "The dry-down lasts through an entire day in Kuwait and it never becomes cloying or oppressive in the heat"
  • "The bottle alone is worth the purchase — it looks like a piece of contemporary art on my vanity"

Best For

  • Occasion: Gallery openings, cultural events, creative industry meetings, intimate dinners, evenings where distinction matters, any moment requiring a fragrance as intellectually compelling as it is beautiful
  • Season: Year-round — the aldehydic structure and musky base thrive in Kuwait's heat where heavier compositions suffocate, and the floral heart reveals more nuance in cooler temperatures
  • Gender: Unisex — deliberately and precisely composed for any wearer regardless of gender identity
  • Style/Personality: Fragrance connoisseur, art and culture enthusiast, intellectual rebel, niche collector, the person who has outgrown mainstream perfume and craves genuine originality
  • Skin Type: All skin types — performs beautifully on both warm and cool skin tones, with the aldehydes and musk adapting to individual chemistry
  • Usage Scenarios: Expanding a fragrance collection beyond mainstream and designer into genuine niche artistry, wearing a scent that invites conversation and contemplation rather than simple compliments, standing apart at events where everyone else is wearing the same ten bestsellers, experiencing the aldehydic genre at its most modern and refined, gifting to a fragrance lover who already has everything conventional, making a statement about taste and intellectual curiosity through scent, enjoying a clean, musky, long-lasting fragrance perfectly suited to the Gulf climate

How To Use

  1. Apply to clean, moisturized pulse points — the aldehydic structure develops most authentically on skin that is free from competing fragrances and heavy lotions
  2. Target the inner wrists, the hollow of the throat, and behind the ears — these warm areas will project the luminous aldehydes and white florals most effectively
  3. Spray from fifteen centimeters away to allow the fine mist to settle evenly — the Eau de Parfum concentration delivers generous projection from a light application
  4. Do not rub the fragrance into the skin — aldehydes are delicate top notes that fracture and distort when crushed by friction; let them settle and develop naturally
  5. For a more intimate, skin-close experience: apply one spray to the inner elbow crease and one to the lower neckline — the white musk base will warm with your body and create a personal, magnetic aura
  6. For maximum presence at an event: spray both sides of the neck, inner wrists, and one mist through the hair — hair holds fragrance remarkably well and releases it gradually as you move
  7. Avoid overspraying — four to five sprays total is ideal for this Eau de Parfum; the aldehydes and musk are potent, and the fragrance projects more than its weightless feel suggests
  8. To fully appreciate the composition's development, apply to one wrist and revisit it at five-minute intervals over the first hour — the journey from aldehydic sparkle to white floral heart to musky amber is a masterclass in perfumery architecture
  9. Store the cobalt bottle away from direct sunlight and extreme heat — while the 115ml format is generous, preserving the aldehydic top notes requires reasonable storage conditions, especially in Kuwait's climate