logo
We took Samantha Ruth Prabhu's new perfumes for a test run. Here's what you can expect

We took Samantha Ruth Prabhu's new perfumes for a test run. Here's what you can expect

The Hindua day ago
There is a subtle shift happening in India's fragrance culture. Clean perfumes, formulated without phthalates, parabens, synthetic dyes, or chemical fixatives, are becoming increasingly popular among conscious consumers who are just as invested in what goes into their fragrance as they are in how it smells. According to a 2023 Mintel report, more than 60% of Indian consumers now actively check ingredient labels when purchasing personal care products.
Enter Secret Alchemist, a holistic wellness brand with over three decades of credibility behind it. Founded by Sumi Thadani, the brand has long created essential oil-led remedies and rituals that blend healing with heritage. In 2024, actor and wellness advocate Samantha Ruth Prabhu joined the brand as co-founder, bringing her personal ethos into the fold. Together with Ankita Thadani, Sumi's daughter and now the business's driving force, they launched clean perfumes — a category that balances botanical depth with skin-conscious formulation.
'For me, fragrance has always been part of my personal ritual,' says Samantha. 'A certain scent can ground me before a shoot or help me reset after a long day. That's self-care. But when a scent feels aligned with who I am — that's personal power. It becomes your invisible signature.' As she became more conscious of what she was putting on her skin daily, her relationship with fragrance evolved. 'With Secret Alchemist, it was about crafting something beautiful, but also clean, honest, and safe, perfume that makes you feel as good as you smell.'
Ankita echoes this ethos: 'Our formulations are rooted in the belief that well-being isn't a luxury; it's a daily ritual. Each product is a sensorial journey, crafted to align with modern lifestyles while honouring the age-old wisdom of my mother and her 35 years of research and love. I'd like to say we're modern-day alchemists, using Nature's most potent ingredients to help you feel more balanced and alive.'
Secret Alchemist's Clean Perfumes are made with therapeutic-grade essential oils, balanced with nature-identical aroma compounds only when required. These compounds are carefully vetted under IFRA safety guidelines, ensuring the result is kind to both skin and senses. Clean perfumes do not rely on heavy musks or synthetic fixatives. Instead, they are meant to evolve gently on the skin, changing with your body's chemistry, temperature, and even mood. But do they hold up in India's heat, humidity, and real-life conditions?
Test drive
To answer that, we put two of the three perfumes across two days through a real-world test in Mumbai.
We gave Rose Oud (₹999 for 100 ml) a real-world test — think humid afternoon errands, a packed Mumbai local, and getting caught in the rain without an umbrella. The scent itself has a bold opening of pink pepper and Turkish rose, grounded by smoky oud. The top and heart notes stayed for two hours before drying down into something softer and more resinous. While the drydown felt a little quicker than expected, especially for a scent built around oud, it never turned sharp or sour, which is impressive for a clean perfume navigating Mumbai monsoon.
Madurai Jasmine (₹999 for 100 ml) was saved for a sticky evening dinner out. It is a quieter scent — a creamy blend of orange blossom, Indian jasmine, and a hint of vanilla. This one sat closer to the skin but did not disappear entirely. If anything, the humidity helped the jasmine bloom in a lovely way. It did not project across the table, but leaned in gently every now and then, especially when you moved. Even hours later in the cab, it was still lingering.
Both scents hold up surprisingly well in heat and humidity. They feel fresh, do not clash with your natural scent, and will not turn cloying or chemical. That said, if you are someone who likes a fragrance that announces your arrival, these might feel a bit too subtle. They are not here to overpower.
Note: Indian skin, on average, tends to be oilier, particularly in tropical and coastal regions like Mumbai, Chennai, and Kolkata, due to higher sebaceous activity triggered by warm, humid climates. According to a study published in Skin Research and Technology, heat and humidity significantly increase sebum production, especially on the face and upper body. This effect is further amplified in men, who produce more sebum than women due to higher levels of testosterone and dihydrotestosterone (DHT), as noted in dermatological research from Dermato-Endocrinology. This excess oil can dilute the top notes of perfumes more quickly, especially in clean formulations that avoid synthetic fixatives and rely instead on volatile essential oils.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Exploring Urban Horror in '84 Square Meters': The Nightmare of Noisy Neighbors
Exploring Urban Horror in '84 Square Meters': The Nightmare of Noisy Neighbors

Time of India

time35 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Exploring Urban Horror in '84 Square Meters': The Nightmare of Noisy Neighbors

Your Dream Home Turns Into A Living Nightmare So you finally manage to buy your own place after years of hustling, saving, and maybe borrowing a little (okay, a lot) from every possible source-sounds familiar, right? That's exactly what happens to Woo Sung (played by Kang Ha Neul) in Netflix's latest Korean thriller, ' 84 Square Meters '. He's your typical "yeongkeul-jok"-someone who's literally "scraped their soul together" to own an 84㎡ (about 900 sq. ft.) apartment, the golden standard for middle-class dreams in Korea. But just when he thinks he's made it, he's hit with the one thing no one warns you about: mysterious, relentless apartment noise that just won't quit. Apartment Noise: The True Urban Horror Story by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 2025 Top Trending local enterprise accounting software [Click Here] Esseps Learn More Undo Every night, Woo Sung is tortured by bizarre sounds from above. Earplugs? Forget it. He's exhausted, stressed, and starting to lose it. His upstairs neighbor Jin Ho (Seohyun Woo) seems shady, always staring down with a poker face, while the penthouse resident Eun Hwa (Yeom Hye Ran), who runs the apartment association, looks down on everyone-literally and figuratively. The film's poster says it all: "Is it the apartment's fault? Or is it just people?" If you've ever lived in a flat where you could hear every cough, fight, or midnight furniture shuffle, you know this is not just a Korean problem. In Indian cities, too, thin walls and nosy neighbors are a rite of passage-except here, it's dialed up to eleven, with blood, paranoia, and psychological warfare. The Pressure Cooker: When Neighbors Become Enemies Woo Sung's life is already a mess-he's juggling a soul-crushing job, side gigs like late-night food delivery, and even "borrowing" office supplies to make ends meet (raise your hand if you've ever pocketed a stapler). But the real horror starts at home. Accused of being the noise culprit himself, Woo Sung gets desperate. He confronts Eun Hwa, hoping for help, but she's more interested in keeping things quiet before the new GTX train line opens (because, priorities). Meanwhile, the downstairs neighbors start leaving passive-aggressive notes, and Woo Sung gets the creeping feeling he's being watched. "The people downstairs aren't normal," he mutters, and honestly, who hasn't thought that at least once? The tension explodes as neighbors turn on each other. Jin Ho taunts, "You think the downstairs can ever beat the upstairs?" The lines between victim and villain blur, and soon, Woo Sung's face is bloodied, his mind shattered, and the audience is left wondering: Who's really to blame when everything falls apart? Why This Movie Hits So Hard '84 Square Meters' isn't just a thriller-it's a mirror to the anxieties of anyone hustling for a better life in a crowded city. The film dives deep into the struggles of the "yeongkeul-jok" generation, crushed by home loans and sky-high property prices, only to find that the real battle begins after you get the keys. It's the kind of story that hits home for young people everywhere-whether you're in Seoul, Mumbai, or Bangalore. The cast is top-tier, with Kang Ha Neul shedding his usual soft image for a raw, desperate portrayal, backed by Yeom Hye Ran's icy authority and Seohyun Woo's unsettling calm. Director Kim Tae Joon, who made waves with 'Unlocked', brings his signature suspense to the most ordinary setting: your own apartment. By the end, you'll be side-eyeing your own neighbors-and maybe sleeping with the lights on. And if you think this is just another horror flick, think again. '84 Square Meters' is a social thriller that exposes the cracks in our urban dreams, where the real monsters aren't ghosts or ghouls, but the people living next door.

Raza Murad says distributors who once begged for Raj Kapoor's films refused to buy Bobby without seeing it after Mera Naam Joker flop: 'He was in tremendous debt'
Raza Murad says distributors who once begged for Raj Kapoor's films refused to buy Bobby without seeing it after Mera Naam Joker flop: 'He was in tremendous debt'

Time of India

time36 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Raza Murad says distributors who once begged for Raj Kapoor's films refused to buy Bobby without seeing it after Mera Naam Joker flop: 'He was in tremendous debt'

Raj Kapoor 's magnum opus Mera Naam Joker may have become a cult classic over time, but at the time of its release, the four-hour-long epic left the legendary actor-filmmaker in financial ruin. The film took six years to make and failed at the box office, putting Kapoor in a position where he was forced to rebuild the trust of an industry that had once revered him. In an interview with Filmy Charcha, veteran actor Raza Murad , who frequently collaborated with Kapoor, reflected on the aftermath of Mera Naam Joker's failure and how it impacted the making of Bobby . 'After Mera Naam Joker, he was in tremendous debt,' Murad said. 'Things got so bad that distributors refused to buy Bobby without seeing it first. These were the same people who were once desperate to secure the rights to his movies. But after Mera Naam Joker, everything changed.' Raj Kapoor wouldn't drink until his films got a censor certificate Despite being hailed early in his career and often compared to Orson Welles, Kapoor's subsequent films faced the burden of great expectations. Murad described him as a deeply passionate filmmaker who sacrificed everything, his time, his health, and even his family, for cinema. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 5 Books Warren Buffett Wants You to Read In 2025 Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo 'He loved his drinks and meat, but he would quit before getting a censor certificate,' Murad recalled. 'He would become absolutely consumed by films. He had the mind of a 14-year-old. He would fall ill a week before his film's release because he would be so tense about its reception. He was aware that his reputation was at stake. It wasn't about the money. He would put everything on the line.' When Raj Kapoor cheated on wife Krishna Raj Kapoor Raj Kapoor was a Shiva devotee and musical genius Raj Kapoor, who founded the iconic RK Studios and helped define post-Independence Indian cinema, was also deeply spiritual, Murad said. 'He was a devotee of Lord Shiva, and frequently referenced the Ganga in his films.' The actor also recalled Kapoor's exceptional musical instincts: 'He could play any musical instrument under the sun without practice.' Faced with skepticism from distributors during Bobby, Kapoor stood his ground. He reportedly refused to show them the full film but eventually agreed to show the songs to generate confidence. With Bobby, Raj Kapoor not only revived his fortunes but also launched his son Rishi Kapoor into stardom, proving once again why he was called 'The Showman' of Indian cinema.

Indian artisan rights vs Prada: PIL demands apology over Kolhapuri copy
Indian artisan rights vs Prada: PIL demands apology over Kolhapuri copy

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Indian artisan rights vs Prada: PIL demands apology over Kolhapuri copy

Prada's fashion-forward moment at Milan Fashion Week has landed it in hot water and this time, it's not just about runway drama. The luxury brand showcased a pair of toe-ring leather sandals that looked way too similar to India's iconic Kolhapuri chappals, and now a public interest litigation (PIL) has been filed in the Bombay High Court calling them out for cultural appropriation. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The PIL, filed by Prof Adv Ganesh S Hingmire (an expert in Geographical Indications and no stranger to protecting Indian crafts), is demanding that Prada publicly apologise and compensate the artisans of Kolhapur who've been making these traditional sandals for centuries. The filing accuses Prada of ignoring the cultural roots and GI tag of Kolhapuri chappals, and instead passing off the style as their own slick designer creation. Basically, the claim is this: Prada took a centuries-old Indian design, gave it a runway rebrand, and didn't give the original makers a shred of credit or cash. The petition says this isn't just an 'oops, we were inspired' situation. It's economic and intellectual exploitation of an entire community that's kept the craft alive for generations. Sure, Prada did put out a statement saying their sandals were 'inspired by traditional Indian handcrafted footwear' and that they 'deeply recognize the cultural significance' but let's be honest, that's not quite enough to undo the damage. The petition is pushing for a proper public apology, one that goes out on all platforms - digital, print, and even Prada's own socials. It's also asking the court to get the government to step in and protect indigenous artisans from this kind of creative theft in the future. We're talking legal protections, proper financial support, and maybe even a global framework so that Indian crafts with GI tags don't keep getting knocked off without credit. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now The bigger picture here? This isn't just about a sandal. It's about years of hard work, heritage, and art being reduced to a trendy product by a global brand without giving the people behind it their due. And honestly, it's about time the world started treating Indian craftsmanship as more than just a 'fashion inspiration.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store