Delhi by Astier de Villatte
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8.1 / 10 12 Ratings
A popular perfume by Astier de Villatte for women and men. The release year is unknown. The scent is spicy-oriental. The longevity is above-average. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Spicy
Oriental
Woody
Smoky
Sweet

Fragrance Notes

CardamomCardamom Champaca flowerChampaca flower Red cedarRed cedar BergamotBergamot MyrrhMyrrh Orange blossomOrange blossom PatchouliPatchouli RoseRose VetiverVetiver
Ratings
Scent
8.112 Ratings
Longevity
8.211 Ratings
Sillage
7.511 Ratings
Bottle
7.48 Ratings
Submitted by Knopfnase, last update on 07.04.2024.

Reviews

2 in-depth fragrance descriptions
6
Sillage
8
Longevity
8
Scent
AtTheScenter

9 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
AtTheScenter
AtTheScenter
3  
...sometimes the embers flare up again...
in the mid-nineties, as a 16-year-old in the orientshop,
a small hidden store in my hometown.
sprinkled with ethereal sounds in the esoteric-looking interior.
between batiked flared pants, fisherman's shirts made of indian linen,
hand-carved wooden caskets decorated with oriental arabesques,
clay ocarinas and darbukas covered with natural skin,
hand-knotted hippi necklaces, consisting of colorful stones, strung on a leather band
and over everything was the scent of nag champa incense sticks,
in the blue and white box with the red inscription.
nag champa, the epitome of spiritual aura and meditative ambience
and at the same time an alibi scent to hide the other resinous fragrances in my children's room
to hide from my parents.
oh how i lived, immortal in my youth, when the days were still mighty
and the endless hours lay before you,
when every minute was still full of life and opened its arms to plunge
to plunge into their embrace.
i remember
of psychedelic sounds under a crystalline sky,
the nights subjected to an insatiable search,
the drive to want to go to every end,
a hunger for knowledge and poetry that was never satisfied,
but only grew more eager with every newly discovered morsel.
sleepwalking between books, poetry, philosophy,
between intoxication and meditation, ecstatic shaman drumming, guitar and piano.
nights spent awake, lurking for the moments of insight,
in the fight against sleep, because it robbed conscious life time.
and what is it today?
little more than a fragrance to those who forget time and are forgotten by time,
but to those still searching, the spirit of a memory
of an all-consuming hunger
and the question of what satisfied it over the years -
or did you just forget your appetite over the years?
accustomed to the passing of the days, accustomed to hunger
and understood emaciation as satiety?

but then every now and then, beneath the trickling sands of time,
a piece of ember from old times, which the sand covered and guarded,
one reaches for the embers of the past
and with the breath of memory you rekindle it into a new flame.

for me, delhi is an emotional reminiscence of the times of my early youth, which i
don't like to dissect olfactorily too much.
the focus is on the nag champa of the incense sticks of the time, the impression of which
i don't want to interpret it any other way for the sake of nostalgia.
all the other notes from the pyramid are perceptible, they ensnare
and support the main note.
but floyd has already described this perfectly in his wonderful review
and i have nothing more to add :)
6 Comments
8
Bottle
7
Sillage
8
Longevity
8.5
Scent
Floyd

290 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
Floyd
Floyd
Top Review 46  
In search of the past
The time in the ashram, distant and past, lies here in the echo of the singing bowls, the meditative endless loops of her scattered thoughts. Inspired, she wanders through the India store. She rummages for memories in the smells of the things, the harsh scent of the ornate boxes made of old red cedar. I wonder what they used to keep in them. Cinnamon bark perhaps, or black nails. What were they called. I seem to have forgotten, in the green bowls, the silver streaks of camphor-cool cardamom. Their wrinkled skin still breathes remnants of roses between boxes of Indian incense sticks. Her wood powders make clouds of coal dust that smell of champaca flowers, patchouli and clove cigarettes. She spills a few drops of incense oil from the small brown bottles. Then images of the past, of the ashram, flicker. She stares into space. A smile.
**
In 2008, the Parisian company Astier de Villatte, which originally mainly produced furniture, ceramics and tableware (so beautifully described as neo-retro-bourgeois by Intersport in its review of "Tucson"), delved into the world of fragrances, initially with the help of perfumer Françoise Caron, and later in collaboration with Nathalie Feisthauer, Alexandra Monet and Christophe Raynaud. Since then, a series of noteworthy fragrances have been created, which follow both the tradition of classic colognes and the path of more modern niches. Some of them are also available in a smoking stick version.
Fittingly, this also applies to "Delhi", an EdP dedicated to the fragrances of India, which combines many things that are usually associated with Indian stores in this country, but does not overuse the usual clichés, remaining more subtle. It takes a while for the fragrance to develop. Initially, there are spicy aromas of cinnamon bark, cinnamon leaf and clove on tart, austere red cedarwood, slightly camphorous, citrusy-spicy notes (cardamom, bergamot), before the champaca blossoms on the woods unfold typical incense scents, Nag Champa is obvious, as Yatagan already mentioned in his statement, but patchouli sticks are also present. With increasing duration, an incense oil-like nuance (myrrh, unsweet, lighter than usual) as well as a hint of rose clarifies the upper notes, creating more space for associations of clove cigarettes that lie between the unlit incense sticks. "Delhi" projects moderately to up close for many hours.

(With thanks to Gandix)
45 Comments

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