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Subject:
From:
Roberta Adams <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 17 Jan 2007 18:09:46 -0500
Content-Type:
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We once used "scratch and sniff" stickers placed on interpretive postcards
that accompanied an exhibition. We chose selected works, produced the
postcards in house, attached multiple stickers (roses, coffee, chocolate,
etc.) and placed the postcards into brochure racks with each painting.
Visitor reactions were very positive - adults and kids. This method allowed
visitors to decide if they wanted to "sniff" and it was an unusual
interactive experience not often found in a museum setting! I don't remember
the company we used, but we received them as plain stickers on a roll. Here
are two companies that deal with printed scents. Have fun with this.
http://www.promobrands.com/scratchnsniff.htm  
http://www.print-a-scent.com/

Roberta Adams
Screaming Hearts Studios
Connecting the Museum to the Community

________________________________________
From: Museum discussion list [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf
Of Rainey Tisdale
Sent: Wednesday, January 17, 2007 3:38 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [MUSEUM-L] smells in exhibitions

This subject has come up on the list before, so we don't need to do a
full-fledged revisiting, but I'm investigating incorporating smells into an
exhibition. We are a small museum with a very tiny exhibition budget, so I
can't go the route of a company like Scentair or Intercontinental that sells
machines and custom scents. 

If anyone has come up with practical, low-budget ways of working with
smells, please contact me. I've been talking to the Boston Children's
Museum, which is doing some work in this area. I've also seen the
Exploratorium's squeeze bottle method for Garden of Smells, and an
exhibition designer diagramed a sippy-cup method for me. I'd like to know
what other methods are out there, particularly how you control the smell so
it comes out when visitors want to smell it but stays contained the rest of
the time and--most importantly--is tamper-proof. 

Also, I've been investigating cheap ($15-25/bottle) sources for buying
atypical stock scents (smoke, body odor, wig powder, etc.). I found Demeter
Fragrances, but I'm wondering if there are others out there. And if you have
used this simple method of spraying cotton balls with scented oil or perfume
and placing the cotton balls inside a container with a hole in the top, I'd
to know how long I can expect the scent to last. I want to find ways to keep
maintenance to a minimum.

Any advice, either on- or off-list, would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.


Rainey Tisdale
Director of Museum Collections and Exhibitions
Bostonian Society
206 Washington Street
Boston, MA 02109
617-720-1713 x24
617-720-3289 Fax
www.bostonhistory.org

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