03/17/2024
Orangensorbe
17 Reviews
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Orangensorbe
3
A bouquet of roses at the dentist
You have a dentist's appointment. As you enter the practice, you see a small bouquet of pastel pink roses in a vase on the counter. The practice smells a little bit stale. A peach air freshener has been set up to improve the room fragrance.
Fragrance:
The composition starts with a children's shampoo of the peach variety. You can clearly smell shampoo synthetics, but in a beautiful way. After a minute, it becomes a little more acidic and the synthetic cleanliness is replaced by a hairspray note. At this point, florals, especially rose, are added in the background. I cannot smell ylang-ylang. Unfortunately, I can't say how the lily note behaves in a perfume, so I don't know whether you can detect it here. The hairspray synthetic lasts about 20 minutes on my skin and I don't really like it. But then something exciting happens, because the hairspray note turns into something bitter and tart. Neither musty flowers nor Kirke DNA for me. at this point, "From the Heart" develops into something of its own, but it also seems somehow familiar to me... I suspect that it's a similarly bitter dentist's synthetic that we know from BR540 and its siblings. However, I wouldn't count "From the Heart" as another relative. The drydown is a powdery rose with sweet and sour peach that is neither gammy nor synthetic. The aforementioned bitter note contrasts with these sweet fragrance notes. At no point can I specifically smell amber.
When? Where? Who?
For me, this fragrance fits well as a daily in spring. It combines sweet notes with a certain tartness. This makes it feminine to me, but not playful or cute. It has this serious, grown-up facet. I can therefore imagine this composition in the office. "From the heart" could therefore appeal to women who like a combination of powdery, floral and fruity in their fragrances, but don't want a scent that is too sweet.
Conclusion:
I think it's perfectly fine. I can imagine that it comes into its own particularly well in a person's aura. Then, when a breeze carries the perfume with it...
Fragrance:
The composition starts with a children's shampoo of the peach variety. You can clearly smell shampoo synthetics, but in a beautiful way. After a minute, it becomes a little more acidic and the synthetic cleanliness is replaced by a hairspray note. At this point, florals, especially rose, are added in the background. I cannot smell ylang-ylang. Unfortunately, I can't say how the lily note behaves in a perfume, so I don't know whether you can detect it here. The hairspray synthetic lasts about 20 minutes on my skin and I don't really like it. But then something exciting happens, because the hairspray note turns into something bitter and tart. Neither musty flowers nor Kirke DNA for me. at this point, "From the Heart" develops into something of its own, but it also seems somehow familiar to me... I suspect that it's a similarly bitter dentist's synthetic that we know from BR540 and its siblings. However, I wouldn't count "From the Heart" as another relative. The drydown is a powdery rose with sweet and sour peach that is neither gammy nor synthetic. The aforementioned bitter note contrasts with these sweet fragrance notes. At no point can I specifically smell amber.
When? Where? Who?
For me, this fragrance fits well as a daily in spring. It combines sweet notes with a certain tartness. This makes it feminine to me, but not playful or cute. It has this serious, grown-up facet. I can therefore imagine this composition in the office. "From the heart" could therefore appeal to women who like a combination of powdery, floral and fruity in their fragrances, but don't want a scent that is too sweet.
Conclusion:
I think it's perfectly fine. I can imagine that it comes into its own particularly well in a person's aura. Then, when a breeze carries the perfume with it...