Miahati Inc. was a New York perfume company active primarily during the 1940s, headquartered at 377 Fourth Avenue, New York City. Before the corporation existed, the business was operated as a partnership under the name Oceanic Import Co. by Andrew Apicella and Rose Vivaudou. That partnership was already active by at least 1940 and was engaged in manufacturing, compounding, and selling perfumes. In 1940, Apicella and Vivaudou formally organized Miahati Inc., after which the perfume business was conducted under the corporate name rather than solely as Oceanic Import Co. During this early period, the company sold perfumes under several brand names including Soul of Flowers, Honolulu, Waikiki, and Pikaki.
By sometime in 1941, the transition from the Oceanic Import Co. partnership to the corporation appears to have been completed, although Andrew Apicella still continued certain activities under the Oceanic Import Co. name for a time. In 1943, a major ownership change occurred when Andrew Apicella purchased Rose Vivaudou’s entire interest in both Miahati Inc. and the former partnership business. From that point onward, Apicella became the sole owner and president of Miahati Inc., controlling the company entirely himself.
The company’s business extended beyond domestic perfume sales. Prior to December 21, 1944, Miahati Inc. and Andrew Apicella sold substantial quantities of perfume to Abbot Manufacturing Co. Inc., a Delaware corporation located at 551 Fifth Avenue, New York. Abbot Manufacturing then exported these perfumes — still bearing the original Miahati and Oceanic Import Co. brand names — to South America and other foreign markets. This indicates that Miahati perfumes had an international export presence during the mid-1940s. However, after December 21, 1944, Abbot Manufacturing ceased purchasing Miahati products and reportedly left the perfume business altogether.
The Name:
Miahati’s advertising mythology was carefully crafted to surround the perfume line with an aura of tropical romance, mystery and fantasy. Promotional material claimed that “Miahati” was derived from “a legend of ancient Polynesian origin,” describing Miahati as a “princess-goddess, spirit of all the flowers and the soul of the night blooming blossoms.” This imagery was designed to evoke moonlit Hawaiian gardens heavy with exotic perfume, connecting the fragrances emotionally to ideas of sensuality, paradise and nocturnal tropical beauty. The wording is highly poetic and reflects the style of late-1930s perfume advertising, when companies often invented elaborate romantic backstories to make fragrances feel more alluring and transportive.
However, there is no clear evidence that Miahati was an authentic figure from traditional Polynesian, Hawaiian or broader Oceanic mythology. The name does not appear in documented Hawaiian legends, Polynesian religious traditions, or recognized folklore sources. It was most likely a wholly invented marketing creation developed by Oceanic Import Co. specifically for the perfume line. During the 1930s and 1940s, many American perfume and cosmetic companies borrowed vaguely “exotic” names and fabricated legends inspired by romanticized notions of the South Seas. Hawaii in particular had become enormously fashionable in American popular culture following the rise of tourism, Hollywood films, Hawaiian music crazes and travel advertising. Companies frequently blended fragments of Polynesian imagery, floral symbolism and fantasy storytelling into entirely fictional narratives intended to make products feel luxurious and escapist.
The phrase “spirit of all the flowers and the soul of the night blooming blossoms” was especially effective because it connected the perfume directly to flowers associated with tropical evenings — jasmine-like pikake, orange blossom, honeysuckle and ylang ylang — all blossoms known for becoming more fragrant after sunset. Night-blooming flowers have long carried associations with romance, seduction and mystery in perfumery because their richest scent often emerges in warm evening air. By personifying these flowers as a mythical princess-goddess, Miahati’s advertising transformed the perfume from a mere cosmetic product into something almost mystical and ceremonial.
The concept also reflects broader Art Deco and prewar advertising aesthetics, which often romanticized women as exotic priestesses, goddesses or mysterious tropical heroines. Perfume advertisements of the era frequently relied on fantasy rather than historical authenticity. Consumers were not necessarily expected to verify such legends; instead, the invented mythology functioned as atmospheric storytelling, much like the fictional oriental palaces, enchanted gardens and royal courts often depicted in fragrance advertising of the time.
So while the legend itself was almost certainly fictional rather than a genuine ancient Polynesian myth, it successfully conveyed the mood Miahati wanted to project: lush tropical flowers blooming after dark, feminine mystery, warm island nights and the dream of an exotic paradise translated into perfume form.
False Advertising:
By the mid-1940s, the romantic tropical mythology that had helped make Miahati distinctive became the source of serious legal trouble. In 1946, the Federal Trade Commission ruled against Andrew Apicella and his associated New York businesses — including Miahati, Inc. and Oceanic Import Co. — after determining that the company’s advertising falsely implied that its perfumes originated in Hawaii or were made from Hawaiian-grown floral materials. The FTC investigation concluded that the perfumes were actually manufactured and compounded entirely in New York City, despite years of promotional language suggesting exotic Hawaiian origins, tropical gardens, and rare island flowers harvested from the so-called “Gardens of Miahati.”
The Commission specifically objected to advertisements describing the perfumes as coming from Hawaii or being made from flowers, oils and essences gathered from the “gardens of Miahati,” because investigators discovered that no such gardens actually existed. The “Gardens of Miahati” had essentially been a fabricated advertising fantasy — a fictional paradise created to support the brand’s Polynesian identity. The FTC also challenged implications that the perfumes were manufactured or compounded in the Territory of Hawaii, or even made in the continental United States from imported Hawaiian floral ingredients. In reality, the perfumes were produced in Manhattan using conventional American perfume manufacturing methods.
The ruling reflected a broader crackdown during the 1940s on deceptive advertising practices in the cosmetic and perfume industries. During the interwar years, many fragrance companies relied heavily upon invented exotic legends, fictional origins and romanticized foreign imagery to sell products. Miahati’s advertising had gone further than many competitors by creating an entire Hawaiian mythology around its perfumes, complete with the invented “princess-goddess” Miahati, supposedly legendary tropical gardens, and perfume names tied directly to Hawaiian locations and flowers. The FTC concluded that consumers could reasonably interpret these claims as factual rather than purely decorative fantasy.
As part of the cease-and-desist order, the FTC directed the company to stop using advertising suggesting Hawaiian manufacture or Hawaiian botanical origins unless such claims could be clearly substantiated. Particularly significant was the agency’s restriction on the use of Hawaiian names such as “Pikaki” and “Waikiki” as perfume brand names without explicitly stating that the products were made in the United States. The Commission believed that the use of Hawaiian terminology itself could mislead consumers into assuming Hawaiian origin. This was important because, at the time, Hawaii was still a U.S. territory rather than a state, and its exotic distance held enormous commercial appeal in mainland American marketing.
The ruling appears to have had serious commercial consequences for the company. Contemporary reports suggest that stores carrying the Miahati line marked down existing inventory at substantial discounts — often reportedly half price — in order to clear products affected by the FTC decision. Packaging and advertising materials built around Hawaiian imagery suddenly became problematic liabilities rather than selling points. The company likely had to redesign labels, advertising copy and possibly even perfume names to comply with federal regulations..
Ironically, the FTC ruling came only thirteen years before Hawaii officially became the 50th U.S. state in 1959. After statehood, Hawaiian imagery became even more mainstream in American advertising, though by then stricter truth-in-advertising standards were already firmly established. Miahati’s case remains an intriguing example of how fantasy and escapism in perfume advertising could eventually collide with federal regulation. The company had built its entire identity around an imagined tropical paradise — jeweled bottles, mythical flower goddesses, exotic blossoms and moonlit Hawaiian gardens — but the FTC ultimately insisted that fantasy could not be presented in a way that consumers might mistake for geographic fact.
Bottles & Packaging:
Miahati distinguished itself in the late 1930s perfume market not through luxury pricing or Parisian pedigree, but through fantasy, presentation and an unusually theatrical interpretation of Hawaii. Introduced in 1939 by the Oceanic Import Co. of New York, the line appeared during a period when Americans had become captivated by Hawaiian culture, tropical tourism and South Pacific imagery. Hollywood films, Hawaiian music and travel advertising had transformed the islands into symbols of romance, escape and exotic beauty, and Miahati translated this fascination directly into perfume form. The company marketed not only fragrances, but an entire atmosphere of moonlit gardens, tropical flowers and jeweled island glamour.
What made the line especially memorable was its packaging. Contemporary descriptions repeatedly emphasized the striking bottles, which were unlike the conventional glass flacons dominating perfume counters at the time. Miahati perfumes were housed in softly tinted translucent plastic containers made from a “new transparent hand-carved material,” with floral motifs seemingly suspended between double walls. The effect must have resembled glowing carved gemstones when illuminated on a dressing table. Each fragrance was identified by its own jewel tone: Honolulu appeared in amber, Soul of Flowers in sapphire blue, Waikiki in ruby red and Pikaki in amethyst purple. The bottles were described as so decorative and unusual that they remained desirable long after the perfume itself had been used, functioning almost as vanity ornaments or decorative art objects.
The packaging was further enhanced by presentation cases made in the form of tall wooden cylinders crafted from native maple. These cylindrical cases reinforced the illusion of handcrafted tropical luxury and gave the perfumes strong gift appeal. Even though the perfumes themselves were relatively inexpensive — a quarter-ounce bottle sold for $3.50 — the elaborate presentation made them appear glamorous and exotic. Miahati cleverly combined affordable pricing with visually dramatic packaging, allowing consumers to purchase a small fantasy of Hawaii during the waning Depression years and the uncertain years surrounding World War II.
Advertising language surrounding the perfumes leaned heavily into escapist mythology. Promotional copy described the fragrances as originating from the “famous Miahati gardens in Hawaii,” supposedly filled with tropical blossoms such as pikake jasmine, orange blossoms, honeysuckle, hibiscus and ylang ylang. Whether real or imagined, these gardens served as a romantic backdrop that transformed the perfumes into symbolic souvenirs of paradise. The descriptions emphasized humid night air, lush flowering vines and exotic blossoms opening after sunset. This imagery aligned perfectly with the era’s fascination with tropical sensuality and distant travel.
The fragrances themselves were positioned as concentrated, lasting perfumes rather than fleeting toilet waters. Soul of Flowers was described as a rich floral blend intended to evoke tropical blossoms in bloom, while Honolulu was characterized as a drier, tangier composition built around tropical woods. Waikiki and Pikaki likely continued the floral-island theme, with Pikaki referencing Hawaiian jasmine, one of the islands’ most iconic and romantic flowers. Together, the four perfumes formed a coordinated collection unified by color, fantasy and atmosphere rather than by traditional European perfumery conventions.
Even after the Federal Trade Commission challenged Miahati’s Hawaiian advertising claims in 1946, the company continued emphasizing decorative novelty. That same year Miahati released a line of compacts featuring hand-carved floral designs in transparent plastics, extending the visual language of the perfume bottles into cosmetics and accessories. This suggests that the company understood its true appeal lay as much in its aesthetic presentation as in the fragrances themselves. Miahati occupied a distinctive place in American perfume history: a line that blended affordable fragrance, Art Deco-inspired decorative design and romantic tropical fantasy into a cohesive commercial identity aimed squarely at consumers dreaming of glamour, escape and the imagined paradise of Hawaii.
Fragrance List:
- 1939 Miahati
- 1939 Honolulu (a dry, tantalizing blend of exotic woods and amber)
- 1939 Ka Lani Keia ("This is Heaven')
- 1939 Soul of the Flowers (a floral medley of tropical flowers, honeysuckle, hibiscus, jasmine, orange blossom)
- 1939 Pikaki (a spicy blend of hyacinth, carnation and wild jasmine)
- 1939 Waikiki (a heady, oriental bouquet with top notes of rose and jasmine)
- 1940 Cherry Blossom
- 1941 Old Mission
- 1941 Old Mission - Crocus
- 1941 Old Mission - Rosemary
- 1941 Old Mission - Verbena
- 1941 Ye Olde Wishing Well
- 1942 El Morocco
- 1944 Blue Fox (an heady spicy floral oriental, a patchouli note is combined with carnation, jasmine, rose, and rich amber notes)
- 1944 Audacious (a crisp aldehydic fruity floral perfume)
- 1944 Downing Street (for men)
- 1945 Jaunty (a light, aldehydic floral perfume)
- 1946 Na Ahiahi ("The Evenings")
- 1947 Emotion
- 1947 Narcissus
- 1947 Lily of the Valley (Muguet)
- 1947 Freesia
- 1947 Carnation
- 1947 Violette
- 1947 Mimosa
- 1950 Tarantella
- 1950 Tomorrow
- 1950 My Fancy (a soft aldehydic fresh floral bouquet perfume of jasmine and roses)
- 1957 Four Moods (presentation of four fragrances)




