A Picnic in Arkham
Ars Amatoria
Ars Draconis
Ars Moriendi
Astrological Oils
Atomic Luau Lounge
Bards of Ireland
Bewitching Brews
Carnaval Diabolique
Celestials
Dark Elements
Diabolus
Doc Constantine's Pharmacopoeia
Excolo
Fifth Anniversary
Forum Scents
Great Duets in Horror
Illyria
Iteru
Limited Edition
Limited Edition: A Demon In My View
Limited Edition: A Little Lunacy
Limited Edition: Ashtanyika
Limited Edition: Carnaval Noir
Limited Edition: Halloweenie 2007
Limited Edition: Halloweenie 2008
Limited Edition: Lupercalia 2007
Limited Edition: Lupercalia 2008
Limited Edition: Maelström
Limited Edition: Oblation
Limited Edition: Springtime in Arkham
Limited Edition: Summer 2009
Limited Edition: The Order of the Dragon
Limited Edition: The Wind in the Willows
Limited Edition: Yule 2006
Limited Edition: Yule 2007
Limited Edition: Yule 2008
Mad Tea Party
Märchen
Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett: Good Omens
Neil Gaiman: Stardust
Neil Gaiman: The Carousel
Neil Gaiman: The Graveyard Book
Ode to Aphrodite
Panacea
Phoenix Steamworks And Research Facility
Rappaccini's Garden
Sephiroth
Sin & Salvation
Single Notes
Sixth Anniversary
Sleepy Hollow
Somnium
Summer Garden Miniseries
Tarot Oils
The Chakras
The Salon
Unreleased
Voodoo Blends
Wanderlust
Warrior Queens Inquest
Zodiac Blends 2007

Before we go any further, we present a scent whose proceeds support the work of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund:

413 U.S. 15 / Miller Vs California

In 1974, a court ruling established a litmus test for obscenity in the United States. Does the First Amendment protect dirty birds? Yes, and no; it depends on where you are and what your neighbors perceive as naughty. The Court's majority opinion stated that material could only be defined as obscene if

"(a) the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; and the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value"

If all three conditions are satisfied, voilà! - your work is obscene.

But is it art?

Although a work considered to have literary, artistic, political, or scientific value cannot, in theory, constitutionally be found to be obscene regardless of whether it appeals to prurient interest or is patently offensive, the question lies in how we can possibly determine with certainty whether or not a film, photograph, tale, or limerick has social value when philosophical and moral compasses vary so wildly from person to person and community to community.

Is a perfume inspired by an 18th Century painting of a dildo obscene?

What would your friends and neighbors say?

Leather, cognac, fig, ripe berry, and cream, stuffed into a plain brown paper bag.

(over 3 years ago)

Strange and jangly when wet. The fig note is sharp and green and almost at war with the other scents. I'm hoping the leather & cognac will smooth it all out when it dries.

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