{"product_id":"vvfa-normandy-scented-candle","title":"Parfum du Voyage Normandy Scented Candle","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-article-wrapper\"\u003e\n\n\u003cstyle\u003e\n@import url('https:\/\/fonts.googleapis.com\/css2?family=Playfair+Display:ital,wght@0,400;0,600;0,700;1,400;1,600\u0026family=Cormorant+Garamond:ital,wght@0,300;0,400;0,500;1,300;1,400\u0026family=Montserrat:wght@300;400;500;600\u0026display=swap');\n\n*,\n*::before,\n*::after {\n  box-sizing: border-box;\n}\n\n.pvf-article-wrapper {\n  max-width: 780px;\n  margin: 0 auto;\n  padding: 0 32px 80px;\n  background-color: #faf8f4;\n  color: #2c2416;\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 19px;\n  line-height: 1.85;\n}\n\n.pvf-shop-header {\n  padding: 56px 0 40px;\n  text-align: center;\n}\n\n.pvf-attribute-line {\n  font-family: 'Montserrat', sans-serif;\n  font-size: 11px;\n  font-weight: 500;\n  letter-spacing: 3px;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  color: #2AB4B4;\n  margin: 0;\n}\n\n.pvf-attribute-line span {\n  color: #7a6a58;\n  margin: 0 10px;\n}\n\n.pvf-opening-paragraph {\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 21px;\n  font-style: italic;\n  line-height: 1.9;\n  margin: 44px 0 32px;\n}\n\n.pvf-body-paragraph {\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 19px;\n  line-height: 1.85;\n  color: #2c2416;\n  margin-bottom: 28px;\n  margin-top: 0;\n}\n\n.pvf-section {\n  margin-top: 56px;\n}\n\n.pvf-section-label {\n  font-family: 'Montserrat', sans-serif;\n  font-size: 10px;\n  font-weight: 600;\n  letter-spacing: 4px;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  color: #2AB4B4;\n  margin-bottom: 20px;\n  display: block;\n}\n\n.pvf-section-heading {\n  font-family: 'Playfair Display', serif;\n  font-size: 24px;\n  font-weight: 700;\n  color: #3D1C02;\n  margin-bottom: 24px;\n  line-height: 1.35;\n}\n\n.pvf-subsection {\n  margin-top: 40px;\n}\n\n.pvf-subsection-heading {\n  font-family: 'Playfair Display', serif;\n  font-size: 17px;\n  font-weight: 700;\n  font-style: italic;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  letter-spacing: 0.5px;\n  color: #3D1C02;\n  margin-bottom: 16px;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-pyramid {\n  margin: 0 0 28px 0;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-row {\n  display: flex;\n  align-items: baseline;\n  gap: 16px;\n  padding: 10px 0;\n  border-bottom: 1px solid #e8e2da;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-row:first-child {\n  border-top: 1px solid #e8e2da;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-tier {\n  font-family: 'Montserrat', sans-serif;\n  font-size: 10px;\n  font-weight: 600;\n  letter-spacing: 2px;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  color: #7a6a58;\n  min-width: 120px;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-ingredients {\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 19px;\n  color: #2c2416;\n  font-style: italic;\n}\n\n.pvf-spec-list {\n  list-style: none;\n  padding: 0;\n  margin: 0 0 28px 0;\n}\n\n.pvf-spec-list li {\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 19px;\n  line-height: 1.85;\n  color: #2c2416;\n  padding: 6px 0;\n  border-bottom: 1px solid #e8e2da;\n  display: flex;\n  gap: 12px;\n}\n\n.pvf-spec-label {\n  font-family: 'Montserrat', sans-serif;\n  font-size: 10px;\n  font-weight: 600;\n  letter-spacing: 2px;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  color: #7a6a58;\n  min-width: 160px;\n  padding-top: 4px;\n}\n\n.pvf-author-note {\n  background-color: #f2ede5;\n  border-left: 4px solid #2AB4B4;\n  padding: 36px 40px;\n  margin-top: 60px;\n  font-family: 'Cormorant Garamond', serif;\n  font-size: 18px;\n  font-style: italic;\n  color: #3D1C02;\n  line-height: 1.9;\n}\n\n.pvf-note-label {\n  font-family: 'Montserrat', sans-serif;\n  font-size: 10px;\n  font-weight: 600;\n  letter-spacing: 4px;\n  text-transform: uppercase;\n  color: #2AB4B4;\n  font-style: normal;\n  display: block;\n  margin-bottom: 16px;\n}\n\n.pvf-author-note p {\n  margin-bottom: 20px;\n}\n\n.pvf-author-note p:last-child {\n  margin-bottom: 0;\n}\n\n.pvf-safety-link {\n  color: #2AB4B4;\n  text-decoration: none;\n  font-style: normal;\n}\n\n@media (max-width: 600px) {\n  .pvf-article-wrapper {\n    padding: 0 20px 60px;\n  }\n  .pvf-author-note {\n    padding: 24px 20px;\n  }\n  .pvf-note-row {\n    flex-direction: column;\n    gap: 4px;\n  }\n  .pvf-note-tier {\n    min-width: unset;\n  }\n  .pvf-spec-list li {\n    flex-direction: column;\n    gap: 4px;\n  }\n  .pvf-spec-label {\n    min-width: unset;\n  }\n}\n\u003c\/style\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- HEADER --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-shop-header\"\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-attribute-line\"\u003e\n    Spiced \u003cspan\u003e·\u003c\/span\u003e Apple-Rich \u003cspan\u003e·\u003c\/span\u003e Harvest-Warm\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- OPENING PARAGRAPH --\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"pvf-opening-paragraph\"\u003e\n  The orchards of Normandy reveal their secrets openly. Every autumn, when the harvest mist rolls in off the \u003cem\u003ebocage\u003c\/em\u003e and the apple-heavy branches dip toward the damp earth, the air thickens into something almost edible — the scent of a morning that knows what it is and wears it without apology.\n\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n  NORMANDY opens on the electric crackle of the season: cinnamon, nutmeg, and a bright twist of orange peel cutting through the October air with the particular authority of spices that have always understood their relationship to cold weather. The heart surrenders entirely to the fruit — the real thing, tart and fat with juice, the smell of apples pulled from the tree by hand in the high grass. Clove and vanilla arrive in the base with a slow, deliberate warmth, the fragrance settling into the contented quiet of a farmhouse at the end of the longest, most beautiful day of the year.\n\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n  In Normandy, luxury has always been seasonal and agrarian: cider fermenting in stone cellars, wood fires lit against the October damp, warm spices from farmhouse kitchens threading through the cold air. This fragrance is a celebration of that particular accord — the domestic and the landscape in perfect agreement.\n\u003c\/p\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- SECTION: THE FORMATION --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-section\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-section-label\"\u003eThe Formation\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003ch2 class=\"pvf-section-heading\"\u003eThe Orchard Country of the North\u003c\/h2\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    Normandy is not, by the standards of the French south, a landscape of dramatic beauty. It is a landscape of accumulated richness: the dense \u003cem\u003ebocage\u003c\/em\u003e — the network of hedgerows and sunken lanes that divides the land into small, secretive parcels — the apple orchards that have covered these hills since the Middle Ages, the stone farmhouses that have been in the same families for generations, the particular quality of Norman light that is almost never harsh and almost always complex. It is a landscape that rewards attention paid over time rather than the first glance, and this is precisely its distinction.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    The Calvados department — named, like its celebrated apple brandy, for a reef off the coast that appears on sixteenth-century maps as Salvadorez — is the heart of Norman apple country. The varieties grown here number in the hundreds: bitter, bittersweet, sharp, and sweet cultivars blended in proportions that have been refined over centuries into the \u003cem\u003ecidre\u003c\/em\u003e and \u003cem\u003ecalvados\u003c\/em\u003e that are among France’s most serious agricultural achievements. The harvest, which runs from September through November depending on variety, is the defining seasonal event of the Norman calendar — a moment when the landscape and the kitchen arrive at the same subject from different directions and find they have been saying the same thing all along.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- SECTION: THE PHILOSOPHY --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-section\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-section-label\"\u003eThe Philosophy\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003ch2 class=\"pvf-section-heading\"\u003eThe Intelligence of the Seasonal\u003c\/h2\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    There is a category of fragrance that deploys spice and apple with the blunt enthusiasm of a seasonal marketing campaign — the olfactory equivalent of a pumpkin in October, aggressive in its insistence on the appropriate emotion. NORMANDY belongs to an entirely different tradition. Its spices are not decorative; they are structural, calibrated against the apple note the way a skilled cidre maker calibrates bittersweet against sharp — not for sweetness but for depth, not for comfort but for complexity.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    The philosophy behind this fragrance is the philosophy of the Norman harvest itself: that the finest things come from patient attention to what the land and the season are actually producing, rather than from imposing an idea of what they ought to be. Cinnamon, nutmeg, and orange peel in the opening are the aromatic intelligence of a farmhouse kitchen that has been working with these materials for generations. Tart apple in the heart is the orchard as it actually smells — not as it smells in a candle that is trying to smell like an orchard, but as it smells when the fruit is on the branch and the harvest mist is in the air and there is nothing between you and the thing itself.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- SECTION: THE MAKING --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-section\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-section-label\"\u003eThe Making\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003ch2 class=\"pvf-section-heading\"\u003eHand-Poured, Consciously Crafted\u003c\/h2\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    Each NORMANDY candle is hand-poured in the USA using a coconut apricot wax blend chosen for both its performance and its conscience. The formula — a vegan blend of natural coconut, apricot, and soy waxes, completed with a minuscule quantity of highly refined food-grade paraffin — burns cleaner and more evenly than traditional paraffin while holding fragrance with greater fidelity than pure soy. For a spice-forward composition, this matters particularly: the heavier aromatic molecules of cinnamon, clove, and nutmeg require a wax that releases them steadily rather than in a rush.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n    The wax is toxin-free, paraben-free, and phthalate-free, sourced from renewable origins and fully biodegradable. The frosted glass vessel diffuses flame into warm, amber-tinted glow; the natural wooden wick adds its characteristic soft crackle — a sound that belongs, like this fragrance, somewhere between a stone hearth and an October afternoon that refuses to admit it will eventually end.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- SECTION: THE FRAGRANCE --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-section\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-section-label\"\u003eThe Fragrance\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003ch2 class=\"pvf-section-heading\"\u003eThe Note Pyramid\u003c\/h2\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eTop, Heart \u0026amp; Base\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-note-pyramid\"\u003e\n      \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-note-row\"\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-tier\"\u003eTop Notes\u003c\/span\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-ingredients\"\u003eCinnamon, Nutmeg, Orange Peel\u003c\/span\u003e\n      \u003c\/div\u003e\n      \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-note-row\"\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-tier\"\u003eHeart Notes\u003c\/span\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-ingredients\"\u003eTart Apple\u003c\/span\u003e\n      \u003c\/div\u003e\n      \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-note-row\"\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-tier\"\u003eBase Notes\u003c\/span\u003e\n        \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-ingredients\"\u003eClove, Vanilla\u003c\/span\u003e\n      \u003c\/div\u003e\n    \u003c\/div\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eReading the Pyramid\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n      The opening trio of cinnamon, nutmeg, and orange peel is the fragrance equivalent of a farmhouse kitchen in the first week of October: warm, spiced, and possessed of a brightness that keeps the warmth from becoming heavy. Cinnamon here is bark-forward rather than candy-sweet — the real material, with its dry, slightly woody edge intact. Nutmeg adds depth and a faint sweetness that is more complex than sugar; orange peel provides the citrus lift that keeps the whole opening from settling prematurely into winter.\n    \u003c\/p\u003e\n    \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n      Tart apple in the heart is the composition’s most honest note — not a reconstruction of apple but apple itself, the specific tartness of a Norman bitter-sharp variety that has been in the sun all summer and is now exactly ready. It is a note of genuine agricultural character: farmlike without being rough, fruity without being sweet, entirely specific to a time and a place. Clove and vanilla in the base bring the harvest indoors: the slow warmth of the stone kitchen at the end of the day, the fire brought in against the evening chill, the long satisfaction of something completed. This drydown is where the fragrance settles into memory.\n    \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- SECTION: THINGS WORTH KNOWING --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-section\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-section-label\"\u003eThings Worth Knowing\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003ch2 class=\"pvf-section-heading\"\u003eBurning Well \u0026amp; Burning Safely\u003c\/h2\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eThe Vessel \u0026amp; Specifications\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cul class=\"pvf-spec-list\"\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eVessel\u003c\/span\u003e Frosted Glass with Natural Wood Lid\u003c\/li\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eWax Color\u003c\/span\u003e Natural — No Dyes\u003c\/li\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eWick\u003c\/span\u003e Natural Wooden Wick — Trim to 1⁄8” before each burn\u003c\/li\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eSize\u003c\/span\u003e 11 oz.  •  2.93” W × 3.75” H\u003c\/li\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eBurn Time\u003c\/span\u003e Approximately 60 Hours\u003c\/li\u003e\n      \u003cli\u003e\n\u003cspan class=\"pvf-spec-label\"\u003eOrigin\u003c\/span\u003e Hand-poured in the USA\u003c\/li\u003e\n    \u003c\/ul\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eThe First Burn\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n      Allow the wax to melt fully to the edge of the vessel on the first burn — generally two to three hours. This prevents tunneling and engages the full wax pool for every subsequent burn. A candle given this small courtesy at the outset will honour the full sixty hours of its intended life.\n    \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eSafe Burning\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n      Never leave a burning candle unattended. Never burn on or near anything that might catch fire. Keep out of the reach of children and pets. For comprehensive guidance, the National Candle Association maintains an excellent resource at \u003ca class=\"pvf-safety-link\" href=\"https:\/\/candles.org\/fire-safety-candles\/\" target=\"_blank\"\u003ecandles.org\u003c\/a\u003e.\n    \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\n  \u003cdiv class=\"pvf-subsection\"\u003e\n    \u003ch3 class=\"pvf-subsection-heading\"\u003eThe Vessel After\u003c\/h3\u003e\n    \u003cp class=\"pvf-body-paragraph\"\u003e\n      The frosted glass vessel is worth keeping when the candle has run its course. Warm water and dish soap remove any remaining wax cleanly, and what remains is a small, beautifully finished object that deserves a second life — as a vase, a vessel for pencils, or simply a reminder that good things are worth the space they occupy.\n    \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c!-- AUTHOR NOTE --\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"pvf-author-note\"\u003e\n  \u003cspan class=\"pvf-note-label\"\u003eA Note from Jeff\u003c\/span\u003e\n  \u003cp\u003e\n    I have distinct memories of driving through the Calvados on a damp October afternoon — the hedgerows close on both sides of the lane, the apple trees heavy, the air so saturated with the smell of crushed fruit and woodsmoke that driving through it felt like moving through something that had texture. It is one of the few places in the world where the weather doesn’t ruin the day. It makes it. The damp is not inconvenient; it is the medium through which the landscape releases everything it has been holding since spring.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n  \u003cp\u003e\n    I have never bought an antique in Normandy that I regret. The brocantes there have the particular quality of places where things have been used rather than merely owned — Norman furniture with genuine wear, faience that has been on actual tables, objects that carry the weight of the domestic life that surrounded them. This candle has the same quality: not precious, not performed, but genuinely warm in the way that only things rooted in a real place can be. Light it when the first real cold comes in.\n  \u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e\n\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Handcrafted In the USA","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43052353093699,"sku":"FROSTED10_AO","price":56.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0670\/5188\/0515\/files\/file_69bc49f833d017.84886337.png?v=1773947386","url":"https:\/\/www.vintagevoyagersfrance.com\/products\/vvfa-normandy-scented-candle","provider":"Vintage Voyagers France","version":"1.0","type":"link"}