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Quick and efficient shipping despite Canada Post strike / Free delivery with purchase of $99 before taxes* / Free in-store pickup
Quick and efficient shipping despite Canada Post strike / Free delivery with purchase of $99 before taxes* / Free in-store pickup

The smell lottery (Multi)

SentoSphere

$59.99

Scents contained

100% natural scents: Lemon, Eucalyptus, Mint, Orange, Pine, Fennel, Lavender, Vanilla,

Scents created with natural products and/or molecules: Orange Blossom, Wood Fire, Sea, Blackcurrant, Pineapple, Strawberry, Grass. Banana, Honey, Lily of the Valley, Honeysuckle, Rose, Grapefruit, Apricot, Soap, Mushroom, Hazelnut, Melon, Coconut, Violet, Biscuit, Apple.

Manufacturing secrets

The fragrances have been developed by Véronique Debroise, a perfumer, with the utmost attention to quality, in order to educate the younger generation to develop an olfactory culture using the finest raw materials for perfumery, and to help them discover the scents of nature. The fragrances are then produced in our factory in the Yvelines.

A box designed and made 100% in France.

Instructions for use

Our scent capsules are guaranteed for a minimum of 2 years of olfaction and can last much longer if they are closed after each game with the right cap. Keep the game away from sources of heat.

Can't recognise a smell? Don't panic, you can work on your sense of smell! Someone who is not used to recognising smells without the help of a written aid may find it a difficult exercise, but we guarantee that with a little practice, it will become child's play.

Our first tip is to learn to categorise the scent you smell: is it sweet? fruity? woody? floral? etc.

Our second tip is to find out what the smell evokes for you. The sense of smell is the sense with the longest memory! A smell can therefore evoke a season (strawberries in summer), a person (the smell of lavender in your grandmother's cupboard), a dish, a shampoo, a place, etc. This will automatically help you make the connection and put words to your olfactory sensation.

Finally, smells are like colours. They are full of nuances. Just as there are different shades of green, there are different shades of apple: Green Apple, Golden, Granny Smith, Apple Juice, Apple Compote... The smells in our games are therefore just one of the many shades of smell that we've tried to make as realistic and high-quality as possible.

Having difficulty naming a smell doesn't mean that you don't have a sense of smell, just that you don't yet have the brain plasticity to make a link between the perceived sensation that arrives in the perception centre, the hypothalamus, and the language centre. This is something we acquire over time, just as perfumers and oenologists do.

Ages 4 to 99
Multilingual

002264