Michelle Feeney Interview: The Floral Street Founder On The Future Of Beauty

Michelle Feeney

In the four years since it was founded in 2017 by Michelle Feeney, Floral Street has bagged a number of awards, including The Fragrance Foundation Retailer of the Year 2019.

“We have proven that you can have fine fragrance, beautiful packaging and long-lasting scents all created in a considered way.” – Michelle Feeney 

Although a small player in the scheme of things, the company has made a big impact with its vibrant, very British approach to vegan, cruelty-free and sustainably produced fragrances. “We have proven that you can have fine fragrance, beautiful packaging and long-lasting scents all created in a considered way,” Michelle Feeney says.

Michelle Feeney

In this Fragroom interview, she talks about the future of beauty, green-washing and their latest partnership with the Van Gogh Museum.

You launched Floral Street in 2017. What changes were you picking up in the market that signalled you were onto something?

I have been privileged to enjoy an amazing career in fashion and beauty, creating and establishing global brands, including Crème de La Mer and St Tropez.

Described as a “cult brander”, I’ve been able to help build cult brand status or utilise elements to connect with an audience in new ways. I spent seven incredible years on MAC Cosmetics in NYC, establishing the fashion outreach globally, accelerating the story of the MAC AIDS Fund and playing a key role in launching in over 40 countries. It was a whirlwind!

Michelle Feeney

However, at age 51, I decided to take a gap year. I had the idea for my own brand but wanted time-out to decide how I would do it and if, indeed, the world needed any more products. I realised that the fragrance industry hadn’t evolved in the same way as other beauty categories and saw a gap in the market for a sustainable, modern brand that offers fine fragrance at an affordable price.

Michelle Feeney

I decided to return to beauty in November 2017, launching my independent, “clean” brand, accessible to all. From the very beginning I wanted to make Floral Street a beacon for change, for it to have meaning and core values of environmental consideration. I wanted to stimulate the industry to take action, as consumers are now demanding this. We have proven that you can have fine fragrance, beautiful packaging and long-lasting scents all created in a considered way.

Michelle Feeney

Why are vegan fragrances so important to you and how do you define them?

When I am asked, “Why did you produce vegan fragrances”, my answer is, “This is the future of beauty”. This is not a trend; it is an absolute. It is about finding the best way to create fabulous products while lowering the impact on our planet.

“This is the future of beauty. This is not a trend; it is an absolute.” – Michelle Feeney 

I am proud we have gained an international accreditation from Peta (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) for being a vegan and cruelty-free brand. This means we do not use any animal-derived materials and no animals have been harmed in the creation of our perfumes. It verifies that we do not conduct or commission any animal tests on ingredients or formulations or finished products.

Michelle Feeney

Does it limit your perfumer Jérôme Epinette’s creative options in any way?

No, not at all. Jerome (pictured, below) is a master perfumer at Robertet, and we have chosen to partner with them because they are a world leader in sustainable, raw materials.

He has a myriad natural ingredients to choose from, plus the incredible fantasy notes and synthetic accords that are created in the lab. This all makes for the most modern fragrances that are good for you and good for the planet.

IMAGE: floralstreet.com.

Are vegan fragrances the same as natural fragrances?

Natural ingredients are either vegan or they are not. Quite often the world “natural” is misused and some ingredients in fragrances that are regarded as natural can be allergenic.

We do have percentages of natural materials within our vegan Floral Street perfumes but there are also nature-identical ingredients which serve fragrance equally. As a sustainable brand we also use vegan certified oils in our new scented home products.

Michelle Feeney

How can consumers tell if a brand is truly vegan? There must be a lot of brands claiming to be vegan…

As individuals, consumers should delve into the product or the company to ensure they have the correct accreditation and can back up what they say. Some brands do mislead the consumer by using certain words or phrases but as a responsible company we are transparent and open about our practices and certifications.

Michelle Feeney

We educate the consumer and use the globally recognised Peta bunny logo (pictured, below) as we want them to know what they are buying. This makes it clear for our customers, guiding them to make better ethical choices and purchases.

You’re also a sustainable, eco-friendly brand. How do you ensure that’s not greenwashing, from your Covent Garden, London, store to packaging?

Being sustainable is a journey and we face new challenges every day. It’s not just the fragrance that’s involved in being ethical, we consider the whole life cycle and every element that goes into our final products. From the raw materials and how they are processed, to the recyclable packaging and the responsible manufacturing methods and supply chain. From source to scent, we want consumers to know where we come from.

 We apply the 5 R’s to every aspect of our business – rethink, reduce, reuse, repurpose, recycle.

Michelle Feeney

WHAT’S IN STORE: Michelle Feeney in front of the Floral Street shop in Covent Garden, London. Image: floralstreet.com.

We reduce use by having a high 20% concentration of oil in our fragrances. Our glass candle and diffuser vessels can be reused, and we offer a perfume refill service in our Covent Garden, London, store.

Our award-winning, biodegradable pulp fragrance box (pictured, below) can be repurposed to store keepsakes or grow seeds or herbs in and being compostable, if it does end up in land fill, it won’t leave any trace on the environment.

IMAGE: floralstreet.com.

All our packaging is widely recyclable, and our paperboard is FSC certified and sourced from responsibly managed forests. We carbon balance via the World Land Trust, and our 2020 certificate confirmed we helped to protect over 6 500m² of critically threatened tropical rainforest.

In addition, we partner with those that share our ethos and principles, including global retailers that lead and champion sustainable ways to shop.

“We also partner with global retailers that lead and champion sustainable ways to shop.” –  Michelle Feeney 

Floral Street is all about “powered by flowers” and from all your releases so far, you’re bringing a fresh new spin to this genre. Is there a personal reason for your floral focus?

Every time I look at a flower it makes me smile. They are joyful, don’t cost much to grow or admire and are the universal language of beauty. Our sustainable scent creations are a modern way to experience the beauty of flowers.

Also, our flagship is in the heart of Covent Garden, London, where the original Victorian flower market was situated, so this floral inspiration flows throughout our store and our brand.

Michelle Feeney

IMAGE: floralstreet.com.

I read on the website that Floral Street is against the use of sexuality to sell its products. Please tell us more about that.

Having lived through three decades of beauty advertising and having a teenage daughter myself, I just feel that using sex to sell is lazy and outdated. We do not use the word “sex” or “sexy” anywhere in the Floral Street brand. We have established motivational and empowering words to describe our fragrances and individual moods.

“Having lived through three decades of beauty advertising and having a daughter myself, using sex to sell is lazy and outdated.” – Michelle Feeney 

We are an inclusive brand, inspiring our customers to choose a perfume based on the way they feel. We have changed the conversation around scent and offer an experience where people identify with “who they will be today”. Our customers should be their own “celebrity” at the centre of their life.

What’s next for Floral Street?

My vision is for Floral Street to become a “clean” lifestyle brand. I strongly believe that by leading by example you empower others and the more successful your business, the more change you can influence. I want to give consumers the opportunity to feel good and make better choices that bring sustainable beauty to their everyday life.

IMAGE: floralstreet.com.

We have just launched our ethical and vegan collections of candles and diffusers, which has taken our eco-credentials and joyful approach into the home. When we were developing them, I realised what we don’t put in is just as important as what we do put in, so we have taken out all harmful elements. This enables the sustainable fine fragrance to shine though so you can “bloom wherever you are”.

Using scent within different spaces can make you feel good and better about life. It’s about self-care and creating the right “mood,” reflecting how you want to feel.

IMAGE: floralstreet.com

Partnerships are also important if you are a small brand. By connecting with others and being part of bigger movements or collaborations, you can tell your story in new and different ways.

As an independent, British brand I was honoured when we were recently chosen as the first fragrance partner of the internationally renowned Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

This four-year partnership enables us to connect with a diverse audience globally in appreciation of fine art and fine fragrance. Our first launch is Sunflower Pop, inspired by Van Gogh’s famous Sunflowers masterpiece and his citation “If one truly loves nature, one finds beauty everywhere.”

Michelle Feeney

IMAGE: floralstreet.com.

Floral Street is available in South Africa at Woolworths and ARC Store.

For more on vegan fragrances, see my recent post.

 

Chopard Fragrances Overview: Love Chopard EDP + Black Incense Malaki EDP + Oud Malaki EDP + Happy Chopard Collection

Chopard Fragrances

Chopard fragrances were recently launched in South Africa, and I was fortunate to be on the receiving end of several of their releases. While I’m familiar with the olfactory offerings from other luxury jewellery and watch brands (for example, Bvlgari, Boucheron, Cartier), it’s my first time with Chopard.

Image: chopard.com.

The Swiss company founded by Louis-Ulysse Chopard (pictured,  above) in 1860 has been in the fragrance biz since the 1980s. Earlier classic releases, Chopard Happy Diamonds (1986) and Chopard Casmir (1992), have been discontinued. But judging from the perfumes I received, the company has more than enough quality current scents to go around.

Image: Fragrantica.

“Sustainability” is often just a corporate buzzword, but from the admirably detailed product info, Chopard seems to be doing more than most to ensure their fragrances meet their “do good, feel good” philosophy. The brand emphasises its commitment to responsibly and ethically sourced ingredients (many of them naturals) from certified partners.

Where known, the name of the perfumer is included after the name of the fragrance in this Chopard overview.

JOIE DE VIVRE: Julia Roberts is the face of the Chopard Happy Diamonds Collection. Image: chopard.com.

CHOPARD LOVE CHOPARD EDP (ALBERTO MORILLAS)

Another day, another rose perfume… Not quite. While this recent (2020) release is a take on the queen of florals, it’s sufficiently different and multifaceted enough to stand out in the crowded category.

Chopard Fragrances

Billed as the company’s glamorous tribute to roses à la the Cannes Film Festival Red Carpet (Chopard is an official partner of the event), it’s roses from top to bottom. Various essences were used to create this EDP, including Turkish rose infusion, Bulgarian rose oil, Moroccan centifolia rose absolute and rose damascena absolute from Turkey.

Image: chopard.com.

It starts out fresh and dewy, with hints of pink pepper and cinnamon in the background. Bravo to the brand for admitting to the use of the synthetic rose molecule Roseolate, with its fruity nuances. It gets spicier and warmer as the fragrance progresses, with notes of jasmine sambac and orange blossom adding to the richness. There’s a lot going on in the gourmand drydown, in which earthy patchouli meets notes of honey, cacao and vanilla.

The result? Sweet, over-the-top sophistication. And I mean that in a good way.

Chopard Fragrances

CHOPARD BLACK INCENSE MALAKI EDP (ALBERTO MORILLAS)

Wowzers! Inspired by the ancient tradition of royal frankincense, the most recent addition to the brand’s Middle East-inspired Malaki Collection (2020) is standout stuff. Some people might even use the dreaded phrase, “niche quality”, to describe it.

The fresh aromatics of lavandin oil from France is distinctive among the various spices of the opening. There’s then plenty more spice of the smoky and resinous frankincense kind, courtesy of the essential oil sourced from family-owned company Neo Botanika in Somaliland.

Chopard Fragrances

Perfume geek alert! It’s given a leather-licious feel thanks to “a pyrogenation process [which] sublimates the original note”, according to Firmenich. I’m not quite sure what that means, but the effect is intoxicatingly dark and potent. The dense drydown sees Indonesian patchouli taking the lead, with its earthy and musky properties.

Alberto Morillas (pictured, below) might be the most prolific perfumer in the biz, but he has not lost his touch.

Image: Firmenich.

CHOPARD OUD MALAKI EDP (DOMINIQUE ROPION)

From Frédéric Malle Carnal Flower EDP and Mugler Alien EDP to Elie Saab Girl of Now EDP and YSL Y EDP, Dominique Ropion (pictured, below) gets the balance between creative and commercial success just right. This 2012 release from the Malaki Collection exemplifies this approach. Let’s get the obvious out of the way first. At the price, this is definitely not a “real” oud, but Ropion masterfully creates a damn fine approximation.

Chopard Fragrances

Featuring notes of grapefruit, lavender and artemisia, the opening is brisk and fresh. The temperature increases with a combo of caramel-y tobacco and spice. The synthetic oud is quality stuff and captures the warm and sweet muskiness of the precious ingredient in an accessible style. It’s accentuated by synthetic ambergris and wood notes.

Don’t let all this talk of synthetics – the backbone of modern perfumery – put you off this EDP. They’re used in the right way, so you wouldn’t even know the difference.

Chopard Fragrances

HAPPY CHOPARD LEMON DUCLI EDP (DORA BAGHRICHE)

The Happy Chopard Collection was launched in 2018 and takes its cue from the scientific research on the link between feel-good scents and their influence on mood. Although not marketed as such, it has a younger feel than the other Chopard ranges, but has broad appeal. Lemon Dulci is my favourite from the line.

Chopard Fragrances

The opening is all uplifting citrus freshness, with bergamot, mandarin and, in particular, primofiore lemon essences from southern Italy on show. Shiso leaves and mint add a zesty green element, while notes of orange flower water and apple bring a delicate sweetness to the composition.

It’s the perfect choice when I’m moody AF.

Chopard Fragrances

HAPPY DAYS: Dora Baghriche created the Happy Chopard Collection. Image: Firmenich.

HAPPY CHOPARD FELICIA ROSES EDP (DORA BAGHRICHE)

Gosh, isn’t this 2018 release pretty, although I didn’t notice it at first after the flamboyance of Love Chopard!

The rose nuances of the notes of pink pepper and raspberry extract are played up in the intro, while pink grapefruit essential oil brings an element of citrus crispness. Notes of Bulgarian rose bud and absolute create a fresh and dewy ambience, with blackcurrant bud absolute adding to the greenery. The drydown is gently woody, with cedarwood essential oil from Alaska, of all places, mingling with the vanilla tones of Brazilian tonka bean.

It all adds up to produce a perfume that’s beautifully natural smelling. Probably all those natural essences.

Chopard Fragrances

HAPPY CHOPARD BIGARADIA EDP (DORA BAGHRICHE)

The bigarade (or bitter orange) tree has a special place in perfumery. Apart from its fruit, its blossoms, leaves and twigs are steam distilled to produce neroli and petitgrain respectively. This 2018 release makes the most of it in a warm and sunny way.

Chopard Fragrances

It opens with the freshness of bitter orange, neroli and petitgrain oils. The effect is uplifting in a tart and green manner. A carrot note adds an element of powderiness. The sun keeps on shining and the composition gets sweeter with the appearance of orange blossom water, Chinese sambac jasmine and honey from Provence. After all that lightness, it’s the turn of Indonesian patchouli and cistus labdanum to bring earthy depth to the composition.

This is immensely likeable stuff!

Chopard fragrances are available in South Africa at Edgars and Truworths.