10/28/2021

JamesBlond
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JamesBlond
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15
When the jailer has a birthday
...there's a little bouquet of flowers on the table and a pot of his favorite honey.
Why the fragrance bears the name Tyger is a mystery to me. It has nothing animalic about it per se and the oud lovers among you would only be disappointed, because if there is oud in it, it goes down mercilessly.
Fortunately for me and many others who care, floral is really only the top note here. Since nothing comes sweet or delicate therefore, Bianchi-mäßig gibts here times ne robust field flower on the nose and that is as quickly gone again as the interest of the servant in fresh cut flowers, thank you!
After said top note joins the from the first splash exciting, dark honey note in the foreground. To my surprise, you do not project as strongly as other honey-dominated fragrances, but that is probably due to the second "power" in this Wässer'chen. The leather.
Not medicinal or pungent shoe-leather-y, freshly tanned or smoky, more like a smooth-sitting Chesterfield couch in a men's salon where the smoking ban is scrupulously observed.
Both ingredients harmonize so perfectly with each other that it comes at no time to a penetrance the individual noses should not taste. Deep dark honey with a hint of "hardness" mix after a few hours to a creamy sweet almond milk on the skin and while on the test strip everything is good, I find that the Tyger² skin close smells something like ylang ylang. Briefly air the office, no was but the honey.
About the performance I can not say anything myself, because me honey scents always very quickly glue the taste buds, but if Frau'chen not grumble (She hates honey scents) will not get the Tyger² the Bianchi crown.
For my nose I would level it as leathery-sweet, for gourmand or floral it's way too gloomy and self-conscious for me.
The wheel is not reinvented here, but those who are otherwise deterred by the honey note, I would still recommend a test.
Why the fragrance bears the name Tyger is a mystery to me. It has nothing animalic about it per se and the oud lovers among you would only be disappointed, because if there is oud in it, it goes down mercilessly.
Fortunately for me and many others who care, floral is really only the top note here. Since nothing comes sweet or delicate therefore, Bianchi-mäßig gibts here times ne robust field flower on the nose and that is as quickly gone again as the interest of the servant in fresh cut flowers, thank you!
After said top note joins the from the first splash exciting, dark honey note in the foreground. To my surprise, you do not project as strongly as other honey-dominated fragrances, but that is probably due to the second "power" in this Wässer'chen. The leather.
Not medicinal or pungent shoe-leather-y, freshly tanned or smoky, more like a smooth-sitting Chesterfield couch in a men's salon where the smoking ban is scrupulously observed.
Both ingredients harmonize so perfectly with each other that it comes at no time to a penetrance the individual noses should not taste. Deep dark honey with a hint of "hardness" mix after a few hours to a creamy sweet almond milk on the skin and while on the test strip everything is good, I find that the Tyger² skin close smells something like ylang ylang. Briefly air the office, no was but the honey.
About the performance I can not say anything myself, because me honey scents always very quickly glue the taste buds, but if Frau'chen not grumble (She hates honey scents) will not get the Tyger² the Bianchi crown.
For my nose I would level it as leathery-sweet, for gourmand or floral it's way too gloomy and self-conscious for me.
The wheel is not reinvented here, but those who are otherwise deterred by the honey note, I would still recommend a test.
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