34 boulevard Saint-Germain thrilled the senses by piquing the curiosity of its visitors, and inviting them to share in an epicurean art of living.
Stepping into the boutique was like opening a door into a world of imagination. Here, the senses were constantly stimulated. At a single glance, they were dazzled by the sight of so many astonishing finds, objects with intriguing shapes, and delicate materials that could only be fully experienced through touch. Visitors were exhilarated by the bottles of bewitching fragrances from English perfumers, which the Maison was the first in France to market, alongside the founding trio’s own olfactory creations, candles and eaux de toilette. From The Rolling Stones to Monteverdi, a stirring melody drifted from the gramophone. The trio’s eclectic musical tastes gave the space a unique soundscape, adding to its singular atmosphere. In 1966, Diptyque even played the exclusive cacophonous recordings of American singer Florence Foster Jenkins, whose brilliant career was matched only by her lack of musical sense, in a new and original approach to sound.
All of these shared passions were there to be seen, touched, listened to, inhaled, and felt. For visitors, it was like a timeless interlude: a point of departure for poetic wanderings.