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7.5 / 10 55 Ratings
A popular perfume by Jardins d'Écrivains for women and men, released in 2013. The scent is spicy-woody. The longevity is above-average. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Spicy
Woody
Powdery
Animal
Earthy

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
GingerGinger Pink pepperPink pepper OrangeOrange
Heart Notes Heart Notes
AmberAmber PatchouliPatchouli CloveClove
Base Notes Base Notes
Peru balsamPeru balsam MuskMusk Gaiac woodGaiac wood

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
7.555 Ratings
Longevity
8.045 Ratings
Sillage
7.344 Ratings
Bottle
6.442 Ratings
Submitted by Franfan20, last update on 10/25/2024.
Interesting Facts
This fragrance is named after the novel "Orlando" by the British author Virginia Woolf.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Alahine by Téo Cabanel
Alahine

Reviews

4 in-depth fragrance descriptions
Oberon21

47 Reviews
Oberon21
Oberon21
Helpful Review 3  
orlando
this a beautifully spiced woody scent ,one of the most elegant and partcular i ve smelled lately it's not a power sillage bomb but stay long on the skin ,very good choice for any frag collectors
0 Comments
Evita

48 Reviews
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Evita
Evita
Helpful Review 3  
A Really Cool Guy, Orlando
Fantastic balance between balsamic and spicy notes.
Smells like a noble, modern young man who knows classic perfumes but doesn't consider smelling like the heroes of sci-fi movies. This guy is too impatient for romantic scenes. He lives life at full throttle for a while on cloud nine, then back to being so prudish - down to earth. Idealistic, and at the same time balanced with balsamic spices. With ingredients like orange, cloves, and spices, I immediately think of punch. Not a fixed recipe but a creative, homemade punch. As it develops, I detect a very clean, slightly soapy soft resin note of Peru balsam, as well as Indian sandalwood mixed with patchouli-incense scent. Very successful and noble, definitely unisex pure, calming, meditative, and somehow nostalgic.
0 Comments
Palonera

467 Reviews
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Palonera
Palonera
Top Review 30  
...and how many?
First of all: No, I haven't read it.
Not "Orlando," nor any other book by Virginia Woolf.
Not until now, until here, until today.
Perhaps I am therefore not predestined to write about "Orlando," that perfume which is supposed to be inspired by "Orlando," the novel and its characters - the male, the female, and the both-and.
Perhaps not.
Because I have no parallels between scent and literature, I cannot compare or examine: Is the implementation successful, is the analogy present?
Perhaps I am, after all.
Because I am free.
Free from the images in Virginia's mind, free from the ideas of what a scent named "Orlando" should be like.
Because I can encounter "Orlando," I am allowed to encounter it, as one should encounter a scent: unprejudiced, open, free - a blank sheet of paper on which the scent writes its story.
Sometimes - if it wants to.
If everything fits.
And if I know how to listen.

"Orlando" tells me of soap, powder, wood and resin, of strong, quiet tones, of rustling silk and pale skin, of boots, leather, tweed.
Of mild days, dark nights, light and a lot of shadow, delicate skin and dense fur - of rough, wild desires, painstakingly tamed in a tight corset.
A bright, dark Big Bang, glaringly clean yet very dirty, which soon settles on my skin, on my forehead, in my mind.
Chalk, crunching matte dull white, dusty, crumbling - dark hard wood, old and splintery, dry, bleached.
Girlish, ladylike, serious, boyish.
"I wanted pants" a long, long time ago.
A man in velvet and silk, yet not a dandy - wrinkles around the eyes, the first silver threads in half-long dark hair.
Very woman, very man, both and yet one in the other and still autonomous.
Strong and strict and very controlled.
And foreign, so very foreign.
Attraction and repulsion do not exclude each other.

The man beside me shifts a bit: "If I had met you with this scent, we wouldn't be here today."
A friend, casually familiar for decades, mutates into a gentleman, holds my coat and opens the doors for me, gives compliments, seemingly confused by it himself.

"Orlando" fascinates, irritates, facets in this, that direction, elusive yet straight in its own way.
"Who am I and how many?" comes to my mind - dusty, almost antiquated "Orlando" appears and at the same time modern, woody-smoky-dirty, almost animalistic, tamed only in appearance.
Then again powdery-soft - little bouquets and pastilles of violet, lace, ruffles, crackling taffeta.
Warm, moist male skin, spicy, salty, naked.
Harmonious only to a limited extent - and yet I cannot get my nose off my skin.
"Orlando" is a dark fascination, a scent that presents itself differently every time I wear it, always anew, perhaps dependent on sun, wind, and mood, on cool or warm skin.
And it is never loud - not after that first moment, the first breath, the second, third.
Discreet, almost intimate.
Almost as if its, their story is not meant for everyone - only for those who come close, who are near.
"Orlando" and also me.
And I believe I should read Virginia after all.
21 Comments
Seerose

775 Reviews
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Seerose
Seerose
Helpful Review 0  
Raging Roland?
Creating a fragrance series "The Gardens of Writers" is an appealing idea. When selecting the literary names, I had two figures in mind. First of all: The name Roland is a form of the name Orlando.
Ultimately, I cannot relate the name of the fragrance "Orlando" to the historical figures.
Initially, the name of the perfume "Orlando" made me think of Virginia Woolf's novel: "Orlando." This novel spans over 300 years, and the protagonist(s) continually change gender. Virginia Woolf describes this very sensitively. She was a bisexual woman, which she conveys in the book with great delicacy through changing figures in historical transformation.
However, when I tested "Orlando," I thought of the historical figure of "Knight Roland."
This story begins in the early Middle Ages with the Song of Roland. "Rolland" "Orlando" is a brave and loyal Breton knight. This song is later referenced in medieval knightly literature (such as in Parzival and later Don Quixote) and undergoes corresponding transformations. From then on, it is about the knight Orlando, who becomes madly furious due to unrequited love for the sometimes (Handel) Chinese princess Angelica. The princess becomes Chinese only in the Renaissance. In any case, she chooses Medoro/Medoreo. The magician Zoroastro eventually cures "Orlando" of his madness, and he becomes a brave knight again.
This theme is revisited with variations over the centuries in literature and music, often in excerpts as Sarastro, Zarathustra, for example.
The story of "Orlando" itself is complicated with many variations. When you read the summary of the libretto for Handel's opera "Orlando," it is so complicated that I have at least quickly forgotten it repeatedly. However, this design had its reasons. In Handel's time, the lead roles in the opera "Orlando" were sung by the famous mezzo-soprano castrato Senesino. In general, Handel's operas (not just those by Handel) were always cast with transvestite roles. Female roles were sung by men and vice versa. The African Medoreo was sung by a woman because bass roles were not necessarily sung by men.
So this perfume is also likely partly about gender swapping, homosexuality (Wilde), thus about the transgender, not clearly heterosexual. (Why don't they have a fragrance "Thomas" (man)? Probably because he wasn't French.) Just as "George" is about travesty, so too with Orlando, if you take Handel's opera, it again concerns the role reversal of genders, albeit only in the persons of the performers.
After reflecting on everything I knew about "the raging Roland" and having read some more: Wiki makes it easy, I expected a wild fragrance. Something strong, magic, passion, sweetness.
As it often goes with overly intense expectations: They are not fulfilled!
"Orlando" begins with an aldehydic soapy waxy note. I quite like that. However, "Orlando" is already expressionless here. The orange seems to be a sweet one. Slightly spicy hints follow. As can be seen later in the pyramid, they are supposed to be ginger, pink pepper, and clove. Aha, I wouldn't have guessed that. Furthermore, I think of violet roots, iris, honey. Because "Orlando" becomes sweet, creamy. Perhaps there is something of juniper berry added? So unexciting, the fragrance wafts with a mediocre sillage almost gourmand for about an hour from my wrist to my nose. Meanwhile, I am writing emails. Because something should still come.
And it does. Suddenly, for about an hour, "Orlando" smells totally foul, really fecal. Disgusted, I keep smelling it. What is that? Is this supposed to be a performance of real musk? Or is the patchouli, which I cannot detect, in conflict with the musk and the guaiac wood, or are there even lily of the valley notes included? They can smell terrible to me. I resist the temptation to wash off the fragrance. "Orlando" stinks, but it is still not a strong smell.
Then, after another hour, "Orlando" becomes a sweet, amber resinous, yes vanilla fragrance with, to my surprise, a slightly metallic note. The longevity is indeed very long for my sense of smell; I am sure that I will still perceive "Orlando" in a few hours. Because no matter how "Orlando" changes, the fragrance strength does not diminish.
Now a slight woodiness comes into play, a scent of sweet tobacco.
"Orlando" is, apart from the one-hour "stink act," a mild resinous sweet fundamentally flower-free (iris and violet root notes are muddled with the stench) fragrance blend. The honey also comes back into play.
I cannot warm to it. I miss something distinctive, spicy, smoky, a resinous bitterness from coniferous trees, perhaps something bitter-citrusy. Or another harsh scent, angelica, davana, mugwort, burning sharp galbanum would be possible, something smoky.
Since I accept the lack of congruence between name and fragrance and also imagine that others perceive "Orlando" differently, I conclude for myself: A so exciting fragrance theme and a flabby, medium-strong yet intrusive fragrance: Checked off!
4 Comments

Statements

16 short views on the fragrance
1
!Way! too bodily. My weak sense of smell makes me cautious with those. I don't want to be interpreted both as sexy and smelling of cat piss.
0 Comments
1
2
Un superbe parfum, a prix abordable.
Un superbe mélange boisé épicé a découvrir sans aucun doute
2 Comments
10
4
Aromatic-spicy with mysterious facets. Becomes more interesting with each test and has risen in my rating from 7 to 8.5 today.
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4 Comments
10
1
At the edible level: Patchouli with orange brings a chocolate vibe. Plus, it's balsamic and spicy. A good scent that takes a different path.
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1 Comment
6 years ago
9
3
Phew, strong stuff. Not for the faint-hearted. Reminds me a lot of the nineties and has a hint of Poison. If you like that, definitely give it a try.
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3 Comments
8
4
Oh man, what is this? It smells like a spiced corpse that's been dead for a few days. Sorry, but I find it disgusting - gag
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4 Comments
7
The strong orange pepper at the start is followed by clove-patch and balsam. The scent is powerful and I really like it!
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0 Comments
6
3
My dear goodness, this one packs a punch. Clove, patchouli, and lots of resin set the tone here, vintage vibe included. Not for summer.
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3 Comments
6
2
Concept fragrance: Transformations from musty-spicy to delicate-gourmand
Does the scent match the name?
Well. Maybe.
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2 Comments
5
1
Christmas West package with spice soap (Maja instead of Fa), oranges, and dark chocolate -
but unfortunately, the coffee was forgotten...
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1 Comment
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