
Emma (Debra Winger) is about to meet her family, who’s visiting her in hospital. She puts on some blush to look and feel better.


The aqua green marbled compact she’s holding is a Clinique Young Face blush.

Emma (Debra Winger) is about to meet her family, who’s visiting her in hospital. She puts on some blush to look and feel better.


The aqua green marbled compact she’s holding is a Clinique Young Face blush.




Eleanor (Bernadette Peters) is retouching her make-up using a Clinique blush in an aqua green marbled compact with mirror.


Eleanor (Bernadette Peters) is having a party at her apartment. She draws a human figure on a mirror using a Revlon lipstick.

There are several bottles on a table in Megan and Don’s bedroom. Even though there are no bright lights in this scene and no close-ups on the table, a couple of products can be identified.


Hard to miss the beautiful flacon montre by Guerlain with the orange red disk, which means it contains Shalimar eau de cologne.

Moving to the left, we can see a cylindrical container printed with a tiger pattern: it’s Fabergé Tigress bath powder.
Thanks to Jane Daly for submitting this post.


Eleanor (Bernadette Peters) uses a Lancôme mirrored compact to apply her lipstick. The compact above is slightly different from the one seen in the film, but the golden rose decoration is the same.

There are several versions of the same fragrance on a shelf in Jean and Edith’s bathroom: it’s Habanita by Molinard, launched in 1921 with the intention of “scenting” cigarettes. As explained by Barbara Herman, it originally “came in scented sachets you could put into a pack of cigarettes or as a liquid you could apply to your cigarettes with a glass rod to ‘perfume the smoke with a delicious, lasting aroma.” Three years later “Molinard turned their scent into a perfume to be worn rather than smoked”.

The black bottle with gold stopper is the eau de toilette version.

The white bottle contains Habanita L’Esprit, launched in 2013.

The black bottle contains the eau de parfum, launched in 2012.
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post.

Edith (Catherine Frot) receives Guerlain Shalimar as a gift.

We’ve seen three different versions of Molinard Habanita in her bathroom, so maybe that’s why she doesn’t look happy about getting a bottle of Shalimar.
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post.

One of the most distinctive symbols introduced in the 1999 adaptation of The Talented Mr. Ripley, a 1955 novel by the American writer Patricia Highsmith, is the perfume by Santa Maria Novella that Dickie buys for his fiancée Marge. In the film only the packaging was shown, so I have always wondered what the mysterious perfume could be.
Now the series created and directed by Steven Zaillian finally gives us a solution to the mystery. A bottle of Acqua di Colonia G. Ugo Stefani by Santa Maria Novella is shown in all its golden foiled glory in the dramatic scene of Dickie’s murder.

This fragrance, now discontinued, was named after one of the heirs of the pharmacist Cesare Augusto Stefani, who first rented the historical Officina Profumo-Farmaceutica di Santa Maria Novella on February 5th, 1867, and passed it down to his descendants.

The bottle can be seen again when Tom collects Dickie’s belongings on the beach. This scene reminds me of a similar moment in Casino Royale (2006) by Martin Campbell, where James Bond finds a bottle of Acqua di Colonia al Melograno by the same brand among the belongings of Vesper Lynd.


A bottle of Sisley Soir d’Orient can be seen in Maximo’s bathroom. This amber fragrance was created by Olivier Pescheux and launched in 2015.

On the same tray we can see a bottle of La Prairie cellular energising mist.
Thanks to Alessandra for submitting this post, and to Charlie in the comments for La Prairie id.

There are two bottles of Prince Matchabelli Cachet in Diane’s bedroom.


One is the cologne version, while the other is the eau de toilette. This chypre floral fragrance was launched in 1970.

The girl also owns the body lotion scented with the same fragrance.
Thanks to LePetitCivet for submitting this post.