Perfumery: The art of capturing scents

Gulab Singh would wake up early- way before dawn, every single day, to supervise the plucking of jasmines and roses. Jasmine smells the strongest in the dead of the night. It is distilled before dawn and rose is distilled just after dawn, to preserve the respective scents for long, as the fragrance wanes with the rise of the sun. Gulab Singh has for years dealt with this job, and his traditional factory is a riot of scents- musk, camphor, lotus, sandalwood, saffron , etc. indulging the olfactory senses of his customers for ages. In Purani Delhi , this oldest Indian perfumery, has been practicing this 15th century art for about 200 years, making pure and natural ittars devoid of alcohol. The place has seen great days when tourists and foreigners flocked here to buy scents in intricately designed crystal bottles called ittar-dans . Refined connoisseurs bought several as parting gifts to their guests. Like a sommelier and a part-physician, the ittar-...