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new | Manon Candle 9.5 oz by Cire Trudon
Brand : Cire Trudon
new | Manon Candle 9.5 oz by Cire Trudon
Brand : Cire Trudon
Product Specifications
Conditionnew
AsinB0080MWOXQ
CategoryHealth & Household
SubcategoryCandles
LeafcategoryHealth and Beauty
MPNUCIR05712
ColorOrange
OriginUSA
BrandnameCire Trudon
Height1
Length1
Width1
Weight2
Product Details
Manon - Fresh laundry
Burn time: 55 to 60 hours
Head notes: Lavender, Orange
Heart notes: Lavender, Soft Soap
Base notes: Musk
Product Ranking
#6766 in Aromatherapy Candles
#928311 in Health & Household
Product Description
As happy as a lark, this delicious scent of cupboard and of swilled down tile floors, recall the washing days of George Sand’s heroes and the Parisian laundry maids. Between stacks of embroidered linen sheets on a lady’s festooned bed, lavender and orange diffuse a smell of lightness and neatness. A "lavandière", or laundress, was a woman who washed linens by hand, in a stream or at a wash house. The laundry was thrown into the water, rubbed with ash, rinsed, twisted and folded repeatedly. It was then beaten with a wooden instrument to wring out as much water as possible. It was then placed in a basket and taken somewhere to dry. In Paris, members of the laundress guild worked in dozens of wash houses, called “wash-sheds”, that were moored in the Canal St. Martin. Despite the hard labour, the laundresses, or washer-maids, were joyful, chattering and teasing amongst themselves.
Product Description
As happy as a lark, this delicious scent of cupboard and of swilled down tile floors, recall the washing days of George Sand’s heroes and the Parisian laundry maids. Between stacks of embroidered linen sheets on a lady’s festooned bed, lavender and orange diffuse a smell of lightness and neatness. A "lavandière", or laundress, was a woman who washed linens by hand, in a stream or at a wash house. The laundry was thrown into the water, rubbed with ash, rinsed, twisted and folded repeatedly. It was then beaten with a wooden instrument to wring out as much water as possible. It was then placed in a basket and taken somewhere to dry. In Paris, members of the laundress guild worked in dozens of wash houses, called “wash-sheds”, that were moored in the Canal St. Martin. Despite the hard labour, the laundresses, or washer-maids, were joyful, chattering and teasing amongst themselves.