11/25/2019
Maggy4u
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Maggy4u
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The original Timbre EDT came from the Studio Series on the theme of yuzu and wood. And was in itself a real milestone in dry wood and light citric. To turn the fragrance into an EDP, Chris had to completely rebuild and balance the fragrance. It is often not known, that especially with the use of natural base substances, a concentration cannot even be obtained by varying the alcohol content. Each chord and ingredient works completely differently in different doses. And yet Timbre EDP is finally ready.
The fragrance - like the EDT - clearly concentrates on the border crossing at the outer, super dry end of the wood fragrances. Chris works out California's sunburned wood like no other. It's almost dusty and with light smoke. Whoever followed the recent forest fires there knows what I'm talking about. This dryness is supported by a suitable Oud and drawn with more depth.
A very minimal resin note comes from myrrh and galbanum. These grind a little the edges of the rugged dryness without taking away the particularity of it. They produce with me rather echoes of earthiness and some bark.
Yuzu and Mandarine are not directly recognizable to me. Yeah, there's lemonade, and what a wonderful one. But more like juniper. With slight bitterness. Structured and radiant in all the dust-dry wood. And this is exactly where Timbre EDP.
's appeal lies
It's not just a more durable timbre EDT. It is a new dimension of fragrance. Comparable, for me, with the feeling of a really good, very dry gin - drunk on a sun-tanned bench, on a hill above L.A.
And again and again, with the wind, a facet of the landscape turns olfactory into the foreground. And above all the scorching heat and the wood cracking.
The fragrance - like the EDT - clearly concentrates on the border crossing at the outer, super dry end of the wood fragrances. Chris works out California's sunburned wood like no other. It's almost dusty and with light smoke. Whoever followed the recent forest fires there knows what I'm talking about. This dryness is supported by a suitable Oud and drawn with more depth.
A very minimal resin note comes from myrrh and galbanum. These grind a little the edges of the rugged dryness without taking away the particularity of it. They produce with me rather echoes of earthiness and some bark.
Yuzu and Mandarine are not directly recognizable to me. Yeah, there's lemonade, and what a wonderful one. But more like juniper. With slight bitterness. Structured and radiant in all the dust-dry wood. And this is exactly where Timbre EDP.
's appeal lies
It's not just a more durable timbre EDT. It is a new dimension of fragrance. Comparable, for me, with the feeling of a really good, very dry gin - drunk on a sun-tanned bench, on a hill above L.A.
And again and again, with the wind, a facet of the landscape turns olfactory into the foreground. And above all the scorching heat and the wood cracking.
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