Saturday, September 6, 2008

The Perfume Atomizer

Perfume Atomizer

What is Perfume Atomizer

Perfume in some anatomy or other has been about back age-old times. The Mesopotamians and Egyptians, Greeks and Romans all-powerful their bodies with perfumed oils and ointments. And in order to accumulate their products fresh they bare containers to abundance them. Archaeological excavations have unearthed ceramics and alabaster containers in Egyptian tombs and admirable bowl and glass containers from around the Mediterranean.

Perfume bottles have always been as arresting as the perfume they contained and assorted styles have been created over the years. Murano and Venetian glass makers started making admirable perfume bottles in the 16th and 17th centuries and the British baffled apply and ceramics in the 18th. During the 19th Century, with the appearance of mass production, alone fabricated perfume bottles were replaced with a highly designed but uniformly produced containers.

Initially, the big perfume makers did not have atomizers on their bottles but instead had some sort of cork or glass plug or stopper. The glass stopper could be used as a "dabber". To place the perfume on the body.

Perfume atomizers have always been an odd mix of elegance and chemistry lab utilitarianism. The graceful scent bottles of old were produced in a variety of shapes and sizes and a variety of materials including m crystal, cut glass, porcelain and enamel, with delicate filigree, or gold, silver, and jewel accents, paired with Bunsen burner-like tops connected to small rubber turkey baster-like rubber bulbs. When the bulbs were squeezed, they sent a fine mist of perfume through the nozzle of the Bunsen burner-like top.

The Perfume Atomizer Today

While the perfume atomizer of today has sacrificed elegance for convenience, it remains an essential part of a woman’s travel kit. Resembling an extra large tube of lipstick when closed, the modern perfume atomizer, with its top removed has a spray nozzle cap like those on spray mousse cans. The cap can be unscrewed so that perfume can be poured into the base through a small funnel included with the perfume atomizer. Most of these atomizers hold between one and two ounces of perfume, which should be enough to last for two to four weeks of travel.

The perfume atomizer is ideal for storing perfume, because it does not have to be opened once it is filled, and keeps evaporation to a minimum. It also allows the user to spray a fine mist of perfume into the air and simply step through it, achieving an even distribution of perfume over her body instead of having it concentrated at the pulse points. And it’s a great way to turn a signature body scent into a signature air freshener!

Perfume Atomizer
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