
Penelope (Dakota Johnson) uses Sisley Grand Ecran Solaire Visage sunscreen.
There’s a jar of Pond’s cold cream on the bedside table in the bedroom of Pamela Walters (Sophie Stuckey). There’s also a round tin box of Vaseline pure petroleum jelly.
When Louisa (Emilia Clarke) and William visit Paris, she stops to take a look at L’Artisan Parfumeur shop window. The fragrances on display have the old bottles, with the colourful labels; judging from the orange labels, they could be Séville à l’Aube, Fleur d’Oranger, Mandarine or Dzongkha.
I have no idea what Catherine Deneuve was doing in a Hermès shop window in Paris, but I love this shot. Taken in the 1960s, it portrays the French actress barefoot, acting like a shop assistant who’s taking a bag from the window for a customer.
Among the objects displayed, a bottle of Calèche, one of the most famous perfumes by the leather good fashion house. Created in 1961 by Guy Robert, it’s a very feminine perfume, with woody and white floral notes. It takes its name from a two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle, thus echoing its logo (a duc carriage with horse).
There is a display of Cacharel Anais Anais in a mall visited by Samantha (Kelli Maroney) and Regina Belmont. The bottles shown include the stopper version, the splash and the spray ones.