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Post by Azar
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Sweet Anthem Perfumes and perfumer Meredith Smith
Indie Fragrance Criterion – Discover Pacific Northwest Perfumes
An Interview, Review and Giveaway
On February 24th of this year APJ posted an introduction to Sweet Anthem Perfumes and perfumer Meredith Smith. Today I have a few questions for Meredith about the business of perfume in the PNW. My next post will be a review (and a give-away) of the six fragrances in the Indie Fragrance Criterion – Discover Pacific Northwest Perfume sample set.
Something extraordinary is going on in the Pacific Northwest perfume scene. In the February 24th post I referred to the PNW as a “hot spot” for Indie perfumers and attributed this phenomenon to our dreary winters and to the local creative climate but didn’t even consider that perhaps the business environment might be what is really driving the astounding growth of great noses in the PNW and all along the west coast; see Ca Fleure Bon
Instead of operating via the old industrial economic model of “survival of the fittest” through negative competition for limited resources (creating perceived value through perceived scarcity), what seems to be happening here is more of a collaboration. This collaborative model succeeds by taking steps to grow the customer base for everyone while encouraging new talent and supporting existing businesses. The perfumers are independent but recognize and foster their interdependence, creating mutually beneficial events and opportunities as well as sharing information and resources. This kind of information based, collaborative economic model works on the principle that sharing creates interest and value, supporting not only the perfumers themselves but the suppliers and related businesses as well.
Photo Stolen Sweet Anthem Perfumes
Meredith, you have been one of several PNW perfumers encouraging, as you say, the “Seattle Sisterhood” of perfumers for several years now. Would you describe what you perceive to be the reasons for this local explosion of interest in perfume?
Honestly, I have no idea how it happened! For me, though, I can say that I probably would not be a perfumer if I didn’t live in the PNW. That’s not to say that I wasn’t into perfume before moving here, but the pioneer spirit and the way we interact with nature – from the mountains to the sea – helps fuel the olfactory palette. We have such intense connections to the earthly plane that it’s difficult not to be inspired on a daily basis when living here, and that helps fuel many industries of pioneers. Plus, having spirited colleagues in many kinds of industries helps keep me going – from my fellow perfumers to other Etsy-style brand owners, the PNW is really a community of talented makers in many stripes. I know my perfume sisters agree!
Can you give us some examples of how and why whatever it is that you do works so well in the PNW?
This is the crux of the reason I moved to the PNW. Everything here seems to be done in the DIY spirit. We love to branch out and get our hands dirty. We love to learn (it’s one of the smartest places in the country to live). We love to do things no one has ever done before (the $4 coffee being a prime example). PNWers are not afraid – pioneers that we are – of going upstream, avoiding the mainstream, and eschewing the man at pretty much any and all costs. I think that’s a part of why collaboration is so vital to the NW. If going upstream is the norm, there’s no point in going it alone.
Photo Stolen Sweet Anthem Perfumes
I understand that the curated collection I will be reviewing is part of a collaborative exchange between San Francisco and Seattle area perfumers. Could you give us a little of the back-story?
This is actually a curated collaboration between myself and Antonia from Tigerlily Perfumery, a little perfume shop in the Valencia neighborhood of San Francisco that features mostly indie and niche lines. Initially, Karyn, Nikki, and I were trying to do this sort of thing with a shop in New York (who shall remain nameless) but that fell through, much to our dismay. I had a chance to meet Antonia before the perfumer’s salon last March and we really clicked, both owning perfume shops that carry a lot of the same inventory and really loving indie perfume lines. I pitched this idea to her about the PNW gift set, and she loved it! It was actually her idea to do a Bay Area box in tandem, with launch events in both cities. (It worked out nicely that several of us Seattleites were already going back to San Francisco for the summer Renegade Craft Fair, so the launch event got neatly wrapped into our existing event schedule.) But really, Antonia’s the big idea gal here, so I’m excited she’s on board!
Can you explain why/how these specific perfumes were chosen for this first Indie Fragrance Criterion?
By and large, the perfumers were asked to submit their best works! In the Seattle set, we all submitted things with a bit of a Northwest-y vibe, and I consulted with many of the perfumers what I thought would be the best fit (I’m thankful that they trust my judgment and happy that they’re all brands I’ve come to know and love). In the San Francisco set, you’ve got some IAO award nominees and winners, and some noses new to me but not to Antonia. Antonia and I talked a lot about themes, but in the end we decided that for a showcase of raw talent, generally the talent knows their works best, and so we left it up to each of them.
Meredith, thank you so much for taking the time to share your perspective on indie perfumery in the PNW. Stay tuned, everyone, for the upcoming review and give-away!
Azar xx

Hey Azar,
I am LOVING this interview. excellent work and I can’t wait to get to PNW one day and search out the frag crew there.
Portia xx
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Thank you Portia.
Your perfume pals here (from SF through BC and up to Alaska) would LOVE a visit from you – the sooner the better!
Today I am writing up the final review for the Indie Fragrance Criterion and will have that post to you soon. I have discovered at least a couple of new favorites in this set!
Azar xx
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Thank you!! I`m living off of the nice! sample program at SA 🙂
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Hello there Hotlanta,
I love it that Meredith will often send extras with her already generous sample program. I fell in love with her solid perfumes that way. Here SA list makes an excellent gift too! Do you have a favorite from her line?
Azar xx
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i agree with Meredith 100% about the PNW. as a Washington native, i do believe the constant barrage of scents, botanical, earthen and oceanic begin a PNW perfumer’s olfactory training before we are even aware we are blessed with some of the most beautiful aromas in the air.
my only complaint is that i did not REALIZE there were so many PNW perfumers when i lived there! there i sat in my own little world, taking the grief my friends offered by my smelling literally EVERYTHING and their insistence my apartment looked like some sort of mad scientist lab (although they never complained at the mods offered for evaluation or the endless gifts of aromatics and massages.)
i would have loved to join this “Sisterhood of Scent”!!
Meanwhile i have had the joy of experiencing many of PNW perfumers at this point… and the talent pool seems oddly biased in their favor!
carry on Azar! cary on! 😉
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Hi einsof!
When I take Fender the dog for his daily walk we always smell something new and wonderful in the PNW. Both of us are forever stopping and sniffing the air. One of these days I will be brave and try to make my own perfume concoction but for the time being I am completely enjoying the fragrance creations of others, particularly those living nearby. Do you miss the PNW? We have had sun now for about three days in a row!
Azar xx
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Wonderful interview Azar!
I am quite befuddled at the wastefulness of competition and a true believer in sisterhood and collaboration, so this is lovely to read.
PNW is indeed a special part of the world, can you recommend an indie salt fog and sequoia fume for someone who is far from there now? : p
looking forward to the reviews!
Bless x
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Thank you, Sister Mary.
So many creative and beautiful ideas (and people) have been lost to the old survival of the fittest/competitive business model. It is refreshing to see artists and businesses prospering through collaboration!
Your suggestion of salt fog swirling through a stand of sequoia is a wonderful idea for a fragrance. I don’t know of an indie that smells like that but would like to find one myself!
Azar xx
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Great post Azar; fascinating to read about such a hotbed of innovation. The PNW has been an area for Trailblazers (excuse the sporting pun) for a long time. Seattle, of course, has for decades been in the vanguard in fields as diverse as aeronautics, software and grunge rock. Portland OR is also a cultural centre boasting some of the best up-and-coming musicians around. Great to see the tradition continue in yet another creative field.
BTW, I love Sweet Anthem’s bottle design; I’d love to try their perfumes some day.
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Hi Gregory and Thank You.
Even though I have lived for long periods in various places I am a Seattle native and remember the days of the Salmon Derby and going up to the top of the tallest building in town (the Smith Tower). I also remember our late basketball team, the Sonics (the Super Sonics)…sigh. For several years we had a house on the Oregon coast (until the weather literally almost blew us away) and so I consider myself a pseudo Oregonian as well as a bona fide Washingtonian and love the wet coasts, the dry deserts and the towns and cities of the PNW. Meredith really described the local scene so well.
Azar xx
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