02/12/2020

Leko
Translated
Show original

Leko
Helpful Review
7
Mmmm... I love it
This scent has been with me for about 10 years now, no other scent has done so for a longer time and so I call it my signature scent. The only flaw in Bayres is its durability. I find them, obviously not alone, to be somewhat below average. Sillage is secondary for me anyway, because I don't want others to use full diesel.
Originally La Martina is an Argentinean manufacturer of riding saddles and later also of sports and leisure wear. He is best known as a jersey supplier to polo teams. Perhaps this also made it obvious to expand the product range to include "scented clothing".
With Bayres, La Martina has at least been successful.
The frequent comparison with TdH limps for me a little, maybe it reminds me of it remotely or the years of origin 2006 TdH and 2007 Bayres suggest that? I wouldn't call them Scented Gemini, at most, relatives. Grapefruit, pink pepper, rose geranium, vetiever are the only parallels and both come in citric-fruity.
Much more massive, spicy and fresh is what happens at Bayres. Especially the tasty spice remains more distinct and the leather (does BTE even contain that?) spreads more and more with the earthy and woody note.
It stays that way until the departure. Bayres is just more dominant, crisper, clearer. TdH is certainly also earthy and woody, but it has a completely different spiciness and is, in my opinion, much more tepid, but more durable. What both fragrances also have in common is a composition that runs almost unchanged from beginning to end. That's what I especially like about scents, instead of igniting in three stages and thus also smelling different.
Bayres is a pleasing, distinctive, authentic, masculine, noble, sporty and yet classic fragrance.
No other fragrance has been able to inspire and capture me for so long. So it's safe to assume that he just fits in with me :-)) ...
Originally La Martina is an Argentinean manufacturer of riding saddles and later also of sports and leisure wear. He is best known as a jersey supplier to polo teams. Perhaps this also made it obvious to expand the product range to include "scented clothing".
With Bayres, La Martina has at least been successful.
The frequent comparison with TdH limps for me a little, maybe it reminds me of it remotely or the years of origin 2006 TdH and 2007 Bayres suggest that? I wouldn't call them Scented Gemini, at most, relatives. Grapefruit, pink pepper, rose geranium, vetiever are the only parallels and both come in citric-fruity.
Much more massive, spicy and fresh is what happens at Bayres. Especially the tasty spice remains more distinct and the leather (does BTE even contain that?) spreads more and more with the earthy and woody note.
It stays that way until the departure. Bayres is just more dominant, crisper, clearer. TdH is certainly also earthy and woody, but it has a completely different spiciness and is, in my opinion, much more tepid, but more durable. What both fragrances also have in common is a composition that runs almost unchanged from beginning to end. That's what I especially like about scents, instead of igniting in three stages and thus also smelling different.
Bayres is a pleasing, distinctive, authentic, masculine, noble, sporty and yet classic fragrance.
No other fragrance has been able to inspire and capture me for so long. So it's safe to assume that he just fits in with me :-)) ...
3 Replies