Daligramme: Messages Secrets à Gala - Ma Muse Dali Haute Parfumerie 2017
14
Top Review
what might she want to tell him?
Whoever is kissed by this muse might first need to catch their breath.
Whatever Gala wants to convey to her Salvador Dalí: If it were enveloped in this fragrance, it could not remain a secret!
Jasmine storms forward powerfully; it comes with wide, sweeping strides - those who do not like it should make a wide berth around this scent!
I really like jasmine, and in this intensity even more than I previously thought!
June evenings with buzzing little beetles in the air, perhaps a chirping cricket in the underbrush, and lushly blooming jasmine: This is part of one of my dream images!
Heliotrope, with its strong vanilla scent, is no wallflower either, but here it cannot "stink" against this white-flowering scent rival!
The vanilla orchid is also no wallflower: It fires unabashedly from all cylinders.
As its name suggests: Vanilla aroma that is on par with that of heliotrope.
But together with the equally scent-intensive tuberose, both create a magnificent carpet on which jasmine can spread. Which it does shamelessly!
Then there is the garden carnation. However, it does not even try to grasp for scent supremacy: Over time, it noticeably lifts its proud head: "Look here - I am here!"
This carnation is unmistakable!
Carnation scent is always a bit old-fashioned for me.
It reminds me of the little gifts brought back during coffee time, especially in delicate pink or white. (My mother even had a specially shaped carnation vase - it really existed!)
Or of an elegant old lady in a muslin dress with lace collars: A delicate, yet unmistakable hint of carnation surrounds her!
Of course, lace gloves and a parasol must not be missing. Otherwise, the picture would be incomplete.
As a symbol of the fiancée in the language of flowers, a certain virginity resonates in the carnation scent: Pure and untouched!
Dalí's Haute Parfumerie has spared no expense with "Daligramme: Messages Secrets à Gala - Ma Muse": All recognizable fragrance notes are very generously dosed here.
I am amazed at how much I like this powerful composition! It is truly immense, with powdery opulence and simply fascinating.
I have already reported on Dalí and his Gala in my comment on "Dalí," the Eau de Parfum.
She was his muse, the center of his truly surreal world!
To what extent she has to share this place with his Great Danes, I do not wish to judge.
His more or less authorized biographers are still struggling with this: Good luck!
With this very idiosyncratic, generously embracing fragrance creation, Dalí's muse has been given a wonderful monument: A monumental scent that stands out just as this couple always did!
I have not yet uncovered a secret: But I am captivated by a jasmine scent that seems almost uniquely natural.
Dosed sparingly, it may be fine; I love it full and powerful!
So: "Jasmine to the power!" - Ta-da!
Whatever Gala wants to convey to her Salvador Dalí: If it were enveloped in this fragrance, it could not remain a secret!
Jasmine storms forward powerfully; it comes with wide, sweeping strides - those who do not like it should make a wide berth around this scent!
I really like jasmine, and in this intensity even more than I previously thought!
June evenings with buzzing little beetles in the air, perhaps a chirping cricket in the underbrush, and lushly blooming jasmine: This is part of one of my dream images!
Heliotrope, with its strong vanilla scent, is no wallflower either, but here it cannot "stink" against this white-flowering scent rival!
The vanilla orchid is also no wallflower: It fires unabashedly from all cylinders.
As its name suggests: Vanilla aroma that is on par with that of heliotrope.
But together with the equally scent-intensive tuberose, both create a magnificent carpet on which jasmine can spread. Which it does shamelessly!
Then there is the garden carnation. However, it does not even try to grasp for scent supremacy: Over time, it noticeably lifts its proud head: "Look here - I am here!"
This carnation is unmistakable!
Carnation scent is always a bit old-fashioned for me.
It reminds me of the little gifts brought back during coffee time, especially in delicate pink or white. (My mother even had a specially shaped carnation vase - it really existed!)
Or of an elegant old lady in a muslin dress with lace collars: A delicate, yet unmistakable hint of carnation surrounds her!
Of course, lace gloves and a parasol must not be missing. Otherwise, the picture would be incomplete.
As a symbol of the fiancée in the language of flowers, a certain virginity resonates in the carnation scent: Pure and untouched!
Dalí's Haute Parfumerie has spared no expense with "Daligramme: Messages Secrets à Gala - Ma Muse": All recognizable fragrance notes are very generously dosed here.
I am amazed at how much I like this powerful composition! It is truly immense, with powdery opulence and simply fascinating.
I have already reported on Dalí and his Gala in my comment on "Dalí," the Eau de Parfum.
She was his muse, the center of his truly surreal world!
To what extent she has to share this place with his Great Danes, I do not wish to judge.
His more or less authorized biographers are still struggling with this: Good luck!
With this very idiosyncratic, generously embracing fragrance creation, Dalí's muse has been given a wonderful monument: A monumental scent that stands out just as this couple always did!
I have not yet uncovered a secret: But I am captivated by a jasmine scent that seems almost uniquely natural.
Dosed sparingly, it may be fine; I love it full and powerful!
So: "Jasmine to the power!" - Ta-da!
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5 Comments
InBlossom4me 8 months ago
1
What a wonderful, comprehensive review. Delightful to read, thank you for that.
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Pluto 7 years ago
See Yatagan :o) I was just thinking the same thing!
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Yatagan 7 years ago
1
Strange that the Dali Haute Parfumerie series is so hard to find. A lot of them actually sound really interesting.
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Ruesselchen 7 years ago
1
I’d also like a bit of wood; it does sound a bit hefty: it’s just Dalì!
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Gelis 7 years ago
That sounds too heavy for me, even though I like all the flowers mentioned. I also miss a counterbalance to the flowers, like wood, amber, or something similar.
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