at your desire."
Unfortunately, I can't say that... This birth of Venus does not correspond to my wishes at all and does not do justice to the divine namesake in any way. Perhaps I shouldn't have set the bar too high after this song and the similarly named razor. The latter certainly lives up to the price-performance ratio - but the scent, in my opinion, does not.
It starts off very sweet, with individual notes being hard to discern, most likely the raspberry. The target audience I can imagine here would be teenage girls, as the scent feels very girlish and gives more the impression of a rather generic designer fragrance. It has little to do with the goddess of love. It’s perhaps more of a childish gesture, a mischievous glance, a quiet giggle among girls when an attractive boy walks by.
As fleeting as that moment seems, so does the longevity of the fragrance. It quickly retreats and becomes skin-close after just a few hours...
And at that moment, it becomes almost unbearable for me personally. It reminds me of a certain room fragrance. With this spray, I covered up the smell that lingered when my dog had an accident in the apartment, and all the cleaning wasn't enough to get rid of the fecal odor.
Now, not everyone will have such a repulsive association with this scent, but just the similarity to that air freshener is, in my opinion, enough to deny the fragrance the comparison to the birth of Venus.
Please, please... I can't get it out of my head since testing it :D! Yes, there are so many fragrances that want to be tested, so you can definitely skip this one.