From the search results, we can gather the following information about J. perfumes product details, positive and negative effects, and ingredients or materials:
Product Details
- There is no specific information about J. perfumes in the search results.
Positive Effects
- Fragrances can elicit positive emotions and evocative autobiographical memories with presumed therapeutic benefits.
Negative Effects
- Fragrances can cause allergies and sensitivities.
- Some fragrance chemicals are linked to serious health problems such as cancer, reproductive and developmental toxicity.
- Fragrances can have negative impacts on our health.
Ingredients or Materials
- Fragrances contain a combination of chemicals that give each perfume or cologne its distinct scent.
- Companies that manufacture perfume or cologne purchase fragrance mixtures from fragrance houses to develop their own proprietary blends.
- In addition to “scent” chemicals that create the fragrance, perfumes and colognes also contain solvents, stabilizers, UV-absorbers, preservatives, and dyes.
- The chemical components in fragrance itself are protected as trade secrets and described on the label only as “fragrance” .
- Dozens, sometimes even hundreds, of chemicals can hide under one little word – “fragrance” – on the product labels of the beauty and personal care products you use every day.
- Fragrance suppliers have long enjoyed federal trade secret protections that allow them to hide the ingredients that make your beauty and personal care products smell good.
- The International Fragrance Association (IFRA) published a list of 2,339 possible fragrance materials used by IFRA affiliated members, including fragrance suppliers, who use chemicals from this list or “palette” of ingredients to formulate fine fragrances and fragranced cosmetics and personal care products.
- The safety evaluation of the large number of diverse chemicals used as fragrance ingredients follows a systematic prioritization of data generation and analysis.
- Many popular perfumes, colognes, and body sprays contain trace amounts of natural essences, but they also typically contain a dozen or more potentially hazardous synthetic chemicals, some of which are derived from petroleum.
- Makers are allowed to withhold fragrance ingredients, so consumers can’t rely on labels to know what hazards may lurk inside that new bottle of perfume.