11/04/2020

Splitter
64 Reviews
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Splitter
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12
Tender sister...
... from Metal Wave.
Anyone who has read my commentary on the latter knows that I was originally rather disappointed by the Allsaints fragrances. Surprisingly, I now own them all. At least all the ones that are currently on sale. And of these five fragrances, which were launched in two stages, not only are the two newer fragrances much more delicate and less experimental than the first three, but Flora Mortis is also the most discreet fragrance offered by Allsaints.
But why the tender sister? Well, for my feeling Metal Wave is carried in the base by a very similar composition, which appears with Flora Mortis every now and then for a short time. I want to blame it on the 'papyrus wood', which seems to have something to do with amber wood. Purely speculative, just to make it easier to find my impressions.
Apart from that I am actually a friend of hard, eye-catching, at times overflowing, gladly unusual scent compositions. And Flora Mortis does not belong to any of these.
And - to be honest - I can understand that the prices for this bottle are very low. Also I have paid less than half of the EIA.
Flora Mortis.
Allsaints also knows how to play with pictures. I imagine smoky battlefields where the first shoots fight their way out into the open; I see mourning people standing at a gravestone; two parents placing a flower where their child was hit by a car; a snowy small town whose chimneys smoke and small clearings in the snow where the first buds and flowers can be found.
Enormous images somehow for such a delicate fragrance. I'll drop everything and it'll be these two pictures: The smoky battlefield where the first rungs fight their way out and the snowy little town with the chimneys and the first green. That's it for me.
Gentle, slightly smoky, very delicate wood, surrounded by a blossom. But in such a subtle composition that I really have to be very extensive to be able to define nuances clearly at all. Flora Mortis is also very close to the body, which cannot be said of her colleagues.
As I already pointed out in my statement, I perceive Flora Mortis as a fragrance for every day. Furthermore, I perceive it as a rather simple and pleasing fragrance, which certainly cuts a good figure on many people. You don't attract attention with Flora Mortis. At the same time, I think you are allowed to have a look at it. Perhaps it is only me who needs six strokes per arm to carry a very pleasant, beautiful scent with me for three to four hours.
All others are welcome to have a look at my commentary on Metal Wave
Anyone who has read my commentary on the latter knows that I was originally rather disappointed by the Allsaints fragrances. Surprisingly, I now own them all. At least all the ones that are currently on sale. And of these five fragrances, which were launched in two stages, not only are the two newer fragrances much more delicate and less experimental than the first three, but Flora Mortis is also the most discreet fragrance offered by Allsaints.
But why the tender sister? Well, for my feeling Metal Wave is carried in the base by a very similar composition, which appears with Flora Mortis every now and then for a short time. I want to blame it on the 'papyrus wood', which seems to have something to do with amber wood. Purely speculative, just to make it easier to find my impressions.
Apart from that I am actually a friend of hard, eye-catching, at times overflowing, gladly unusual scent compositions. And Flora Mortis does not belong to any of these.
And - to be honest - I can understand that the prices for this bottle are very low. Also I have paid less than half of the EIA.
Flora Mortis.
Allsaints also knows how to play with pictures. I imagine smoky battlefields where the first shoots fight their way out into the open; I see mourning people standing at a gravestone; two parents placing a flower where their child was hit by a car; a snowy small town whose chimneys smoke and small clearings in the snow where the first buds and flowers can be found.
Enormous images somehow for such a delicate fragrance. I'll drop everything and it'll be these two pictures: The smoky battlefield where the first rungs fight their way out and the snowy little town with the chimneys and the first green. That's it for me.
Gentle, slightly smoky, very delicate wood, surrounded by a blossom. But in such a subtle composition that I really have to be very extensive to be able to define nuances clearly at all. Flora Mortis is also very close to the body, which cannot be said of her colleagues.
As I already pointed out in my statement, I perceive Flora Mortis as a fragrance for every day. Furthermore, I perceive it as a rather simple and pleasing fragrance, which certainly cuts a good figure on many people. You don't attract attention with Flora Mortis. At the same time, I think you are allowed to have a look at it. Perhaps it is only me who needs six strokes per arm to carry a very pleasant, beautiful scent with me for three to four hours.
All others are welcome to have a look at my commentary on Metal Wave