After her husband passed away, Katia Apalategui's mother held on to her late husband's pillowcase to keep his unique scent.
"This
gave me the idea of bottling a dead person's unique scent so that
grieving relatives can keep their loved one's memory alive," said Apalategui to The Telegraph.
"We take the person's clothing and extract about 100 molecules [sic] of
their unique bodily odor. Then in a distillation process that takes
four days we reconstruct it in the form of perfume."
Apalategui
worked with scientists at Le Havre University to develop the technique
to reproduce a person's distinct odor. That odor, she added, could
provide "olfactory comfort" that Apalategui claimed is more effective
than photos of the deceased.
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