Welcome
August 26, 2008
Welcome to the Media section of Ask The Whiff Guys.
If you are a journalist, talk show host, producer, web blogger, book reviewer, camera man, grip, board operator, or student looking to ace a test, we welcome you with open arms, and look forward to speaking with you.
Please call our media line at (800) 761 1231 –- and we’ll hook you up with the Whiff Guys in an expedient manner. If you are seeking Press Passes or the free buffet at any of our upcoming events, please let us know and we will do our best to accommodate your needs. Please select your choices - kosher, vegetarian, free-range, lowfat, low-sodium, sugar-free, and carb-loving carnivores move to the head of the line.
For a Press Kit, please call Phillip Bergman at Roher Public Relations (914) 741-2256 –- and don’t mind Phillip’s ongoing, incessant bragging about how great we are. That’s what we pay him for. Just request the kit, and he’ll have it out to you in a jiffy.
We assure you that any interview will be handled with the utmost in professional courtesy and graciousness. Both Brumfield and Goldney are personable, loveable, knowledgeable, and pretty smart guys. Take a look at some of our videos for a glimpse of what you might encounter.
Thank you for visiting the Media Section.
AJ’s Playhouse Praises the Whiff Guys!
August 26, 2008
“Thank you so much…Russell was great!”
-Hula
Producer, AJ’s Playhouse Morning Show
KHTS, San Diego
Olfactory Fact #70: A Rose That Doesn’t Even Exist May Smell as Sweet
August 24, 2008
Phantosmia, sometimes triggered by head trauma or psychiatric illness, is an olfactory hallucination in which the brain detects a smell which is not actually present.
A Proactive Approach to Parkinson’s Disease
August 19, 2008
The University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT) is the most widely used–and useful–clinical olfactory test in the world. Developed and practiced at the university’s renowned Smell and Taste Center, the UPSIT consists of four booklets containing ten microencapsulated odors, each accompanied by four possible responses from which the participant is asked to choose. Studies using the UPSIT have positively linked olfactory dysfunction to a variety of causes ranging from head trauma and respiratory infection to neurological disorders like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. The value of the test in Read more
Futurist Magazine Praises the Whiff Guys!
August 18, 2008
“I was very pleased with Whiff!, as were my editors.”
-Rick Docksai
Futurist Magazine
Olfactory Fact #146: He Sure Plays a Mean Pinball, but He Smells Just Like Everybody Else
August 18, 2008
Despite anecdotal evidence to the contrary, the loss of another sense–such as eyesight or hearing–does not enhance a person’s sense of smell.
KQRS Praises the Whiff Guys!
August 14, 2008
“He was wonderful! He gave me a little shot and I loved it. I mentioned a news story about women being attracted to a man with the same armpit scent as their father and I said I was sure it was a news story and he said, I must’ve missed it in my 200 hours of research. Very funny. Please thank him.”
-Terri Traen
KQRS-FM
Scent Suppliers Smell Potential in Plastics
August 13, 2008
SCARSDALE, N.Y. (Aug.4, 10:15 a.m. EDT) — Brand owners, fragrance and flavor purveyors, and polymer processors are creating a range of plastic products incorporating scent — with or without the use of compounding.
Plastics “is one of the lesser-known … applications of scent,” and holds huge potential, said Harald Vogt, founder and chief marketer for the Scent Marketing Institute in Scarsdale.
“Scented polymer resins find their way into the manufacturing process of garbage bags to counteract odors,” Vogt said. “They go into plastic caps of products such as water bottles where they help generate and/or increase the flavor of the products.”
Vogt noted other applications: “Scented caps for shampoos to prevent tampering and product damage, scented primary packaging to increase the appeal of the product and to enable product sampling while on the shelf, scented toothbrush handles as indicators for replacement [and] scented fan blades as an inexpensive fragrance dispenser.”
Large suppliers of fragrances and flavors include Givaudan SA of Vernier, Switzerland; International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. of New York; Firmenich SA of Meyrin, Switzerland; and Symrise GmbH & Co. KG of Holzminden, Germany.
Scent can drive sales, but not necessarily by embedding a fragrance in a package, according to Steven Landau of ScentSational Technologies LLC, based in Jenkintown, Pa.
“Spend five minutes in a store and watch how people buy products,” said Landau, the firm’s chief technical officer and chief marketing officer. Shampoo and personal-care products, for instance, avoid using tamper-evident seals so the scent can get a shopper’s attention. People open, smell and often buy, he said.
ScentSational has plastics processing partner- ships with Bemis Co. Inc. of Neenah, Wis.; Crown Holdings Inc. of Philadelphia; Fabri-Kal Corp. of Kalamazoo, Mich.; Pliant Corp. of Schaumburg, Ill.; Portola Packaging Inc. of Batavia, Ill.; London-based Rexam plc; Seaquist Closures of Mukwonago, Wis.; and Munich, Germany-based Süd-Chemie AG.
Applications with significant volumes for scented products include blown film for kitchen trash bags, especially Glad and Hefty brands; small, single-use, sachet-type bags for products such as ketchup or shampoo; and molded components for automotive air fresheners.
Glad Odor Shield trash bags in “fresh clean” or “fresh vanilla” scents are made with a patented technology that the company said neutralizes odors. The fresh clean scent also is embedded in Glad’s ForceFlex drawstring bags. Clorox Co. and Glad Products Co., both of Oakland, Calif., and Cincinnati-based Proctor & Gamble Co. develop and manufacture Glad products under a joint venture agreement.
Pactiv Corp.’s scented Hefty Kitchen Fresh tall waste bags incorporate an odor-neutralizing ingredient within the polyethylene film. Pactiv launched Kitchen Fresh CinchSak bags in 2003 with an interior odor-neutralizing patch containing the patented ingredient ActaZene. Lake Forest, Ill.-based Pactiv eliminated the patch in a 2006 reformulation and rebranding.
Baby products are also a market for scented films. Among scented baby wipes are the private-label Parent’s Choice product from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. of Bentonville, Ark., and the Nature Babycare line from Naty AB of Nacka, Sweden.
The Playtex infant-care business of St. Louis-based Energizer Holdings Inc. offers odor-controlling film products for diaper disposal using a large plastic container and lid. The Diaper Genie II’s Air-Tite control has a liner refill with seven-layer barrier film, and the original Diaper Genie Twistaway wraps diapers in a triple-barrier film.
Not all scented plastics are film products. Rotuba Extruders Inc. does twin- and single-screw compounding, and sheet and profile extrusions at its headquarters facility in Linden, N.J.
The custom extruder and compounder has partnered with Eastman Chemical Co. of Kingsport, Tenn., and is the exclusive supplier of Eastman’s scented cellulosic plastics, which are made from renewable softwood materials.
Rotuba President Adam Bell said the company supplies scented Auracell-brand natural polymer for Tessco Technologies Inc.’s aftermarket portable clip-on cell phone cases, and coated lighting fixtures from Mobern Lighting Co. of Laurel, Md.
Rotuba is preparing to commercialize other products, including jewelry, hair products, bathroom furniture, mobile phones and MP3 players, Bell said.
The firm works with fragrance supplier Givaudan which, beyond its Swiss base, has manufacturing and research and development operations in Teaneck, N.J.
Rotuba customer Tessco markets two-piece, clip-on cases for portable cellular telephones. The cases cost $19.95 and come in four scents: vanilla vibe, raspberry rave, groovin’ grape and coconut chill. Tessco’s mobile devices and accessories business targets teenagers and tweens. Rotuba supplies scented Auracell pellets, and Tessco contracts for production of the eight-model line in southern China.
Auracell resin is made from wood pulp, “making it sustainable and not dependent on petroleum,” said Chris Barnhill, Tessco manager for the case line.
The Hunt Valley, Md., company plans to introduce scented iPod and iPhone cases during the 2008 holiday season, and has more scented plastic products in mind.
“We are in discussions with domestic and international fragrance and consumer electronic and toy companies,” Barnhill said.
Other specialty compounders have other scented products on the drawing board. Polyvel Inc. in Hammonton, N.J., might commercialize an odor-absorbent masterbatch by year’s end. Polyvel compounds fragranced masterbatches for consumer goods and packaging, including those for Food and Drug Administration-approved food-safe applications.
“Some [compounds] go to reprocessors and recyclers and may include vanilla to mask smells,” said Dean Dodaro, inside sales technical service engineer.
Polyvel can compound a fragrance with almost any resin and has experience adding hickory, barbecue or bacon scent to polyurethane for dog toys. The company employs 20-25 and has an in-house laboratory that can perform injection molding trials. The firm also extrudes material into pellets for shipments.
International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. produces scented masterbatches and is promoting its proprietary PolyIFF technology. A facility in Hazlet, N.J., compounds scented low density PE.
“We ship to any converter … to make any molded piece,” said Chris Gellner, PolyIFF commercial representative.
Other scented plastic products are still in the conceptual stage.
Author-entrepreneur Russell Brumfield of Clearwater Beach, Fla., said there is market potential for scented plastics in promotional golf balls; affinity cards from hotels, coffee shops or book stores; and holiday items such as “a Godiva card with something pleasant like chocolate or cinnamon” scents.
Quimby Press in June began distributing Brumfield’s 334-page book, Whiff!: The Revolution of Scent Communication in the Information Age.
ScentSational is small as a technology, development and licensing company, but works with major players. In 2004, ScentSational introduced its proprietary CompelAroma technology, which can incorporate a scent in a plastics package or a tamper-evident seal.
“We can allow a shampoo maker to put an [internal] induction seal on the product,” Landau said.
ScentSational has partnered with some of the largest food and fragrance companies, such as Givaudan and Firmenich, and large plastics processors, according to Landau. The firm has “a team of flavorists, food scientists and plastics engineers,” he said.
Food, beverage, pharmaceutical and consumer-product brands drive business for ScentSational. “We start with a product and go to a processor,” he said. “We can take our process into any [converting or processing] plant.”
ScentSational’s technology “is much greener than using concentrates,” Landau said. “Typically, the large majority of our applications do not use compounded concentrates.”
ScentSational’s patents on using scented plastics were obtained after many years of trial and error and failed plant runs.
Landau developed a technology to take flavors and make them stable for the process.
“Flavors are more delicate [than fragrances] to make a proper formulation because of the high heat of plastics processing,” he said. “After the burn-off, you are left with … a far cry from what you want.”
Use of flavor concentrates requires two heat processes — one for compounding the scent and resin into pellets, and the other for molding the scented part. “We use a single heat history and are left with a more stable material.”
For a multifacility plastics processor, “usually a specific plant makes a specific component for a specific product,” Landau said.
Working with a film manufacturer might be the hardest of all practices because a processing error can bring the bubble down, he said. But “if a processor does something wrong in injection molding — maybe a mold won’t release — it is an easy fix.”
Typically, ScentSational recommends polyolefins for injection molding applications.
ScentSational, founded in 1997, moved to commercialization in late 2003. The effort received recognition recently when Vogt’s Scent Marketing Institute gave out three inaugural SMItty awards.
Landau received the Best New Proven Technology award for ScentSational’s work on scented and flavored packaging technologies for food, beverage, pharmaceutical and other consumer products.
Vogt sees major potential for scent technology, but he believes more market-related efforts are needed to grow the industry niche.
“The engineers have to talk to the marketers and explain what they have,” Vogt said. “Then the marketers can go out and sell it. Now, that is not happening to a sufficient degree in Europe or the United States.”
[This article was written by and reproduced with the permission of Plastics News Correspondent Roger Renstrom. Many thanks, Roger!]
Keeping Up With SCENTtrends
August 13, 2008
The Whiff Guys would like to extend a hearty clap on the back to the innovative minds at The Scent Marketing Institute, organizers of the first annual ScentWorld Conference & Expo in June of 2008, for the launch of their e-newsletter, SCENTtrends!
“Being a pioneer is always risky,” says SMI founder and chief marketer Harald H. Vogt, pictured here with Whiff! author and ScentWorld Expo keynote speaker C. Russell Brumfield, along with the lovely Whiff Girls. “That’s why we provide a space where science, marketing, creativity and technology can come together, exchange ideas and develop solutions, creating the best possible return on investment.” For the very latest news briefs, event updates, insights on emerging trends, and profiles on people, new applications, technologies and research in the world of scent marketing, be sure and Sign Up for SCENTtrends!
Forensic Pathology Device Sniffs Out Dead Air
August 13, 2008
“The Body Farm,” as the University of Tennessee Forensic Anthropology Facility has been known since inspiring Patricia Cromwell’s novel, was opened in 1971 by Dr. William Bass, who recognized the need for research into human decomposition after police repeatedly asked for his help analyzing bodies in criminal cases. What began as a small patch of land where one body was allowed to decompose in the open air for the sake of science has developed into a 3-acre complex that contains remains of around 40 individuals at any given time. Now, the Knoxville facility has been recruited by Orange County detectives for help in their continuing investigation into the disappearance of toddler Caylee Anthony.
After cadaver dogs responded to an odor emitting from the white Pontiac found abandoned by the child’s mother, Orlando investigators tapped The Body Farm for assistance in testing air samples from the trunk of the car. Using a sort of “artificial nose” which pulls air through a tube into a spectrometer chamber, the scientists will be looking for the presence of certain chemical compounds that are released only by a decomposing body. “After we die and the bacteria proliferate in our body and start breaking down our Read more



