Objects: Designed, Used, Studied

a glimpse at Suheyla Takesh's Summer 2014 FIND Fellowship project

FIND Summer 2014 Fellow Suheyla Takesh explored the practice of perfuming in the Emirates prior to federal unification, and how this practice evolved and changed over time. As a part of her project, she met and documented the collection of Fatima Ahmead Obaid Zayed Almogani Alnaqbi, or as she is otherwise known, Umm Bassim (the mother of Bassim). This glimpse into Suheyla's project features her story of meeting Umm Bassim and one of 4 sections of her collection: the Scented Beauty Products. To view additional items from Umm Bassim's collection, as well as to view the other related stories from Suheyla's research, view the entire project at www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied.

Room in Fatima’s Khorfakkan home, housing her collection., Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Room in Fatima’s Khorfakkan home, housing her collection.

"Umm Bassim and Her Collection"

Early on in my search I met Fatima Ahmead Obaid Zayed Almogani Alnaqbi, or as she is otherwise known, Umm Bassim (the mother of Bassim). She was born in Khorfakkan in the late 1950s, and has been devoted to collecting and preserving objects from her immediate surroundings since the age of twelve. Umm Bassim still lives in Khorfakkan despite having a home in Sharjah, saying that traditions are still alive in her eastern coastal town, and communal relations stand strong. She says that until today she knows all her neighbors, and they exchange food and sweets amongst each other with and without occasion. She says that often a neighbor would call out to her, asking what that delicious smell coming from her kitchen window was. She would then of course proceed with sharing whatever dish she was cooking.



Despite being passionate about preserving traditions and maintaining links to her heritage, Fatima Almogani Alnaqbi also recognized the importance of widening one’s horizons early on and was one of the first Emirati women to graduate from the United Arab Emirates University, established in Al Ain in 1976, with a bachelor’s degree in psychology. Admissions to the university had opened only a year before Umm Bassim’s planned wedding, and as a result she could not enroll along with its first batch of students. However, she proceeded with signing up for a psychology program a few years later, while already being married and having had children. She later went on and enrolled in a master’s program at the same university while already being a grandmother of three, formulating her graduate thesis around the notion of divorce in the emirate of Sharjah.

Umm Bassim’s fascination with collecting domestic objects began with a gift from her grandfather when she was still a young girl. Like most men at the time, her grandfather owned a rifle that he carried with him at all times, and used for hunting and protection. When Fatima was twelve years old, he gave it to her, asking her to keep the rifle safe for him. Shortly after this exchange, her grandfather had passed away, leaving young Fatima feeling like she had been asked not only to preserve the rifle, but to safeguard all heritage and culture of her people. She says she felt that way because out of the fifty people that their household comprised of, her grandfather had chosen precisely her to dedicate the task to.

"“There must have been a reason,” she says."

Fatima shows me a "mukhammariyya" pot, and speaks of its uses in perfume making. The object in her hands is the lid of the stone pot., Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Fatima shows me a "mukhammariyya" pot, and speaks of its uses in perfume making. The object in her hands is the lid of the stone pot.

Today, her home is a cluster of pre-1970s material culture, and Fatima is a keen story-teller. She knows every object she owns intimately, and can speak of each one at length. She has dedicated an entire room in her Khorfakkan house to accommodate her collection, and objects are only roughly separated into categories. The very rifle that triggered the emergence of Fatima’s entire collection still hangs on her wall, along with eight others acquired by her throughout later years. As objects from Fatima’s collection were photographed for this project, she conversed with me about the use and significance of each. When it came to objects related to scents and fragrances, I have discovered that items in Fatima’s collection were not all produced before 1971, with some of them being acquired as late as this year. This chronological span allowed me to roughly trace the development and evolution of these products over time.

During one of my visits, Fatima has described to me some aspects of the perfuming tradition in the Emirates, which were already mentioned by Aida Sami Kanafani in her book Aesthetics & Ritual in the United Arab Emirates. Below is a transcribed version of Fatima’s oral account, detailing various ways in which perfuming the self was as much a social activity as it was an act of adornment. The participation of a group was often part of it, and the act of perfuming had communal significance.







Fatima Ahmead Obaid Zayed Almogani Alnaqbi (transcribed and translated from Arabic):

"When we receive guests, for example during a wedding, and especially in a female only setting, bokhour is always part of it and is already present when the guests arrive. As the guests walk in, there are women that have been positioned, holding mabakher (plural of mabkhar) in their hands, which contain coal and oud, so that the guests can perfume themselves. Women can perfume themselves in a number of ways. For example, the mabkhar can be placed under a woman’s sheila (headscarf) on both sides. She could also waft the perfumed smoke onto herself with her hands, or place the mabkhar under her dress. But men only have one way of perfuming themselves in a social setting, which is by placing the mabkhar under their gutra (male headdress) and allowing their clothes to become scented.

"“It is also the custom that oud and bokhour are circulated among everyone present in a social gathering from the right to the left. It is considered bad manners to pass it in a circle from left to right. The only exception for a fragrance to be passed to the right first, is if the woman sitting to the right of the hostess is the oldest or the most honored among all other guests. Then, the incense is passed to her first, and after she has finished perfuming herself, the mabkhar makes its way back to the left and is passed from one guest to the next in the customary way.”"

Objects from Fatima’s collection, Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Objects from Fatima’s collection

"When saying goodbye to the guests after a visit is over, we also pass a mabkhar around. There is a saying, 'Ma ba’ad el-’ūd gu’ūd' - 'After oud, there is no more sitting.' Firing up a mabkhar is a sign that the visit has come to an end. So for example, if Suheyla is visiting me at my home, and I know that Suheyla is planning to have lunch with me, it would be rude of me to offer her perfume. Because if she is offered perfume, it is as though I am cutting her visit short. So if a person is expected to stay for a longer time, bringing out of the oud is pushed until the end of their visit. This is one of our customs.

""Alongside a mabkhar, the hostess also brings out liquid perfumes, so that the ladies can scent their bodies. In the past, only one bottle of perfume would be brought out. Then, in the 70s and 80s of the past century, the idea of a tray was introduced. The perfume tray was very simple and carried four or five bottles of perfume. The tray would be offered to the guests, and each guest would choose which scent they liked. Another way was for the hostess to open all the bottles one by one, and pass them around the circle, while the tray was positioned in the centre."

This is what Fatima’s perfume table looks like in 2014. It is positioned in her living room, where she receives guests, ready to offer them various fragrances. The trays on this table carry a number of oils, perfumes in bottles with spray nozzles, as well as jars with bokhour and dokhoun., Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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This is what Fatima’s perfume table looks like in 2014. It is positioned in her living room, where she receives guests, ready to offer them various fragrances. The trays on this table carry a number of oils, perfumes in bottles with spray nozzles, as well as jars with bokhour and dokhoun.

"One important thing about bokhour is that you don’t give your guest a mabkhar that has already started smelling of burnt wood. After each guest, or after 2 - 3 guests that have perfumed themselves, you should put some new oud into the incense burner. You should not leave the same dokhoun that you have placed in the mabkhar from the beginning and serve it to twenty people. That is because once the incense burns out, it starts smelling like scorched wood. So every once in a while, the bokhour that has been placed in the incense burner should be changed, and new one should be added and added. Sometimes a guest would tell you, 'No, no, this is enough. There is a lot, don’t add anymore.' You should say, 'No, that won’t do,' and proceed with adding more. There is a belief that a burnt-out bokhour can cause disagreements and arguments, for instance within a family, where a husband and wife would quarrel with one another. This is of course only a superstition, and not the truth, but it is a reason for saying to an objecting guest, 'No, no, that won’t do. Let me add some new oud, so that your husband doesn’t get upset with you.' This is how women joke and tease each other.

“Another superstition states that you should not turn the mabkhar upside down, especially if it is made out of wood, because it represents your life being turned upside down from happiness to sorrow.



Men don’t get perfumed with dokhoun (a fragrant mixture). They are perfumed with pure oud (agarwood). This is because they wear white clothes, and the smoke that is released by dokhoun/bokhour is quite dark and can stain their clothes. The fragrant substances that are used to add scent to oud can be yellow or brown in colour, so men only use oud which is pure and has no oils added to it. This oud is imported from Burma or India and it is very very expensive. It is weighed using a unit called 'toll.' So when you go to a shop, you don’t just ask them for oud, you ask them to weigh a tola for you.”

Note: a “tola” is equivalent to an ounce.

Mabkhar containing burning embers and incense., Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Mabkhar containing burning embers and incense.

Object: Beauty Product 001 Type: Perfume Name: Ramage Eau De Cologne, Bourjois Place of origin: France Date of production: Uncertain. This perfume was launched in 1951, and was one of the first French perfumes to make its way into the Emirates. It has now been discontinued. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Volume: 210 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 001

"Scented Beauty Products"

All objects in this section are in the private collection of Fatima Ahmead Obaid Zayed Almogani Alnaqbi.



(For the sake of convenience, in all future texts in this section of the project, Fatima Ahmead Obaid Zayed Almogani Alnaqbi will be referred to as F.A.A.)



All dates of production and places of origin of these objects are based on Fatima’s oral recollections.

Object: Beauty Product 002 Type: Perfume (rose extract) Name: White Rose no.1 Place of origin: uncertain Name on Label: Ansons Trade Mark Date of production: Uncertain, but F.A.A. remembers her grandmother using this product. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Diameter of cap: 1.5 cm Base dimensions: each side of hexagon is 2 cm Height: 8.5 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 002

Object: Beauty Product 003 Type: Perfume Name: "Mukhallat" (handwritten in Arabic), meaning "mixture" Place of origin: Mumbai, India Name on Label: Al Hashmi Date of production: Uncertain, but F.A.A. remembers her grandmother using similar products. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Diameter of cap: 2 cm Base dimensions: each side of octagon is 1 cm Height: 7 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 003

Object: Beauty Product 004 Type: Perfume (rose extract) Name: Rose 555, "Bint Al Bahrain," meaning "Girl of Bahrain" Place of origin: Bahrain Date of production: c.1940s - 1950s Brand name: "Asgharali" - This was a well-known brand of beauty products from Bahrain, usually identified by the image of a young girl with flowers in her hair on the package. Women would look for this image as a guarantee of quality when selecting beauty products in a shop or from a merchant. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Diameter of cap: 1.5 cm Base dimensions: each side of hexagon is 2 cm Height: 8.5 cm Volume: 25 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 004

Object: Beauty Product 005 Type: Perfume Name: JIVADEUR #2 Place of origin: United Arab Emirates (this indicates that the product was manufactured after the federal unification of 1971) Date of production: c. late 1970s Brand Name: Nabeel Perfumes Ind. UAE Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Length of box: 4.8 cm Width of box: 3 cm Height of box: 10 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 005

Object: Beauty Product 006 Type: Lotion Name: Rêve d’or, L.T. Piver, Paris Place of origin: France Date of production: c.1970s Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Diameter of bottle neck: 2.5 cm Rectilinear dimensions of bottle: 7.5(l) x 5(w) x 16(h) cm Height of entire bottle: 20.7 cm Volume: 423 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 006

Object: Beauty Product 007 Type: Lotion Name: Pompeïa, L.T. Piver, Paris Place of origin: France Date of production: This bottle was acquired in 2013, but this line of fragrances was launched in 1907, and according to F.A.A. has already made its way to the Emirates by the 1950s and 60s. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Diameter of bottle neck: 2.5 cm Rectilinear dimensions of bottle: 7.5(l) x 5(w) x 16(h) cm Height of entire bottle: 20.7 cm Volume: 423 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 007

Object: Beauty Product 008 Type: Bokhour Ingredient Name: "Turab Misk Abyadh," meaning "White Musk Powder" Place of origin: London, England Date of production: c.1930s - 1940s Brand Name: Star Aromatics Ltd. Materials: plastic container, musk powder Diameter: 5 cm Height: 7.8 cm Weight: 70 gram (approx.), Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 008

Object: Beauty Product 009 Type: Bokhour Ingredient Name: "liban" meaning frankincense or aromatic gum Place of origin: Uncertain, likely Oman. Oman gained the name "Land of the Frankincense" (Arabic: Ardh Al-liban) for its extensive production of the aromatic resin Date of production: Uncertain. Aromatic gum has been traded in the region for centuries. Materials: plastic container, aromatic gum Diameter: 5 cm Height: 8 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 009

Object: Beauty Product 010 Type: Bokhour Ingredient Name: ambergris ("ambar") Place of origin: Ambergris was produced by whales of the Indian Ocean and was traded by India and East African countries. Date of production: Uncertain, ambergris has been traded in the region for centuries. Materials: ambergris in a plastic wrap Size: The pack is small enough to be held in the palm of a hand., Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 010

Object: Beauty Product 011 Type: Bokhour (incense) Name: Bokhour "Jawi" Place of origin: Bokhour Jawi often comes from Indonesia Date of production: Uncertain, incense has been traded in the region for centuries. Materials: various gums mixed together Size: small enough to be held in the palm of a hand, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 011

Object: Beauty Product 012 Type: Toilet Soap Name: Lifebuoy Place of origin: England Date of production: This bar was purchased post the year 2000, but this brand of soap was launched by the Lever Brothers in 1895, and made its way into the Emirates during the British protectorate (which took place between 1820 and 1971). F.A.A. remembers using it as a young girl. Materials: paper box, soap bar Weight: 85 g, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 012

Object: Beauty Product 013 Type: Oil Name: Swasti Perfumed Castor Hair Oil Place of origin: Pakistan Date of production: uncertain Brand Name: Swasti Label info: Beautifies and promotes the growth of long lustrous hair. Materials: glass bottle, metal cap Volume: 300 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 013

Object: Beauty Product 014 Type: Oil Name: Jasmine Hair Oil Place of origin: Karachi, Pakistan Date of production: This bottle was purchased in 2012, but this product existed in the Emirates prior to the federal unification of 1971. An identical bottle is displayed in the Sharjah Heritage Museum, as part of the beauty and adornment section. Brand Name: Bathgate Perfumery Products, Karachi Materials: glass bottle, metal cap Volume: 250 ml Oils (or "dihn") were very important in the beauty regiment of every woman, because they are more long lasting than alcohol based perfumes, and are pleasant to the touch. They could also be mixed with one another by the woman herself in a domestic setting, creating her own blends of fragrances. The 6 primary types of oils that most (if not all) women owned, as described by A.S.Kanafani, 1983, are: 1. Agarwood or aloewood ("oud") 2. Ambergris ("ambar") 3. Saffron ("zaafaran") 4. Musk ("misk") 5. Rose ("ward") 6. Jasmine ("yasmin"), Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 014

Object: Beauty Product 015 Type: Oil Name: Otto de Rose 555 Hair Oil (Otto refers to the Arabic word "ottor," meaning perfume.) Place of origin: Bahrain Date of production: This bottle was purchased in 2013, but according to F.A.A. this product existed in the Emirates prior to the federal unification of 1971. Brand Name: Asgharali Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Volume: 250 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 015

Object: Beauty Product 016 Type: Oil Name: Black Seed oil Place of origin: Medina, KSA Date of production: This bottle was purchased in 2004, but according to F.A.A. this product existed in the Emirates prior to the federal unification of 1971. Materials: glass bottle, plastic cap Volume: 200 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 016

Object: Beauty Product 017 Type: Oil Name: Saffron Place of origin: India Date of production: Uncertain, according to F.A.A. this product existed in the Emirates prior to the federal unification of 1971. A similar bottle of saffron extract is displayed in the Sharjah Heritage Museum, as part of the beauty and adornment section. Brand Name: Ahmad Hussein Ali Trading Company, Dubai Materials: plastic bottle, plastic cap Volume: 50 ml, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 017

Object: Beauty Product 018 Type: Container for fragrant substances Brand Name: Elephants Brand Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder Length: 13 cm Width: 8 cm Height: 3.3 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 018

Object: Beauty Product 018 Type: Container for fragrant substances Brand Name: Elephants Brand Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder Length: 13 cm Width: 8 cm Height: 3.3 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 019 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder or other fragrant spices Length: 16.3 cm Width: 10.8 cm Height: 4.2 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 019 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder or other fragrant spices Length: 16.3 cm Width: 10.8 cm Height: 4.2 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 019

Object: Beauty Product 020 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder or other fragrant spices Length: 16.3 cm Width: 10.8 cm Height: 4.2 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 020 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, containing saffron powder or other fragrant spices Length: 16.3 cm Width: 10.8 cm Height: 4.2 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 20

Object: Beauty Product 021 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, may have originally contained sweets Length: 18.5 cm Width: 11.5 cm Height: 8.5 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 021 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Date of production: c. 1940s Material: metal box, may have originally contained sweets Length: 18.5 cm Width: 11.5 cm Height: 8.5 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 21

Object: Beauty Product 022 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: Mecca, KSA Date of production: Uncertain. This object was acquired in the late 1970s as a gift from F.A.A’s mother in law. Used for storing bokhour, or fragrant powders. Material: plastic Lid diameter: 9.5 cm Base diameter: 7 cm Height: 14 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 022 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: Mecca, KSA Date of production: Uncertain. This object was acquired in the late 1970s as a gift from F.A.A’s mother in law. Used for storing bokhour, or fragrant powders. Material: plastic Lid diameter: 9.5 cm Base diameter: 7 cm Height: 14 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 22

Object: Beauty Product 024 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: Ras Al Khaimah Date of production: c. 1930s - 1940s Material: The pot is carved out of a single piece of stone. Lid diameter: 20 cm Height: 28 cm Base converges to a point. Women made large quantities of thick liquid perfume called "mukhammariyah" in stone pots such as this one. Different ingredients, including saffron, aloewood, civet and ambergris were mixed together and allowed to ferment by burying the sealed pot in the ground for forty days. To ensure that the pot was air and water-tight, wet mud was used on the lid as a sealant. After forty days, the mixture of ingredients would turn into a concentrated fragrant liquid, and the pot would be taken out of the ground. The thick perfume would then be poured into smaller containers, to be distributed among friends and family, or to be kept ready for use by the woman herself., Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 023 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: China Date of production: c.1970s Material: plastic container, metal lid Top diameter: 4 cm Base diameter: 2.5 cm Height: 6.5 cm Women would make large quantities of thick liquid perfume called "mukhammariyah" in a stone pot. The thick perfume would then be poured into smaller containers such as this one, to be distributed among friends and family, or to be kept ready for use by the woman herself., Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 025 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: India Brand Name: D.V. International Delhi Date of production: Uncertain. An identical container is displayed at the Sharjah Heritage Museum, as part of the beauty and adornment section. Material: pure aluminium Diameter: 12 cm Height: 7 cm, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 024 Object: Beauty Product 023 Object: Beauty Product 025

Object: Beauty Product 026 Type: Container for fragrant substances Place of origin: various emirates Date of production: Uncertain, a similar object is displayed at the Sharjah Heritage Museum, as part of the beauty and adornment section. Material: paper sheets, thread Size: variable, usually small enough to be held in the palm of a hand, Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh, 2014, Original Source: http://www.f-in-d.com/stories/objects-designed-used-studied
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Object: Beauty Product 026

Credits: Story

Photography—Suheyla Takesh (Umm Bassim) and Clint McLean for Suheyla Takesh (Scented Beauty Products)

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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