Perfumer's Choice Nº11 Leo Milton-Lloyd / Jean Yves Cosmetics
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Working Class
The British blending machine Milton Lloyd has created a real hooligan with Leo!
I would hate to use the embarrassing phrases that are used to describe potent fragrances. They would be appropriate here.
It is the translation of an expensive model into a striking version, the fairground translation, so to speak, of the comparatively finer model.
A service to the working class. Anyone can join in and apply the right fragrance for little money to hang out at the bumper cars, for example.
The first spray comes across like pepper spray. The motif of the fragrance is so PLAKATIVE, giant letters with spray paint. There's no lightness, the rest of the day you smell like a billy goat on the hunt for votes. And you ask yourself, why do you fall for something like this? What's so captivating about this pungent stuff? First of all, the blend of ingredients is completely successful. Period. It has to be said - but it's not even a downgrade to say it - that Leo doesn't smell expensive at all. That's not the idea behind it at all.
Watch out - if you're not planning to hang out at the bumper cars (and you're not a young fan of working class leisure activities) then Leo is actually the wrong choice. But why should you be too precise.
I would hate to use the embarrassing phrases that are used to describe potent fragrances. They would be appropriate here.
It is the translation of an expensive model into a striking version, the fairground translation, so to speak, of the comparatively finer model.
A service to the working class. Anyone can join in and apply the right fragrance for little money to hang out at the bumper cars, for example.
The first spray comes across like pepper spray. The motif of the fragrance is so PLAKATIVE, giant letters with spray paint. There's no lightness, the rest of the day you smell like a billy goat on the hunt for votes. And you ask yourself, why do you fall for something like this? What's so captivating about this pungent stuff? First of all, the blend of ingredients is completely successful. Period. It has to be said - but it's not even a downgrade to say it - that Leo doesn't smell expensive at all. That's not the idea behind it at all.
Watch out - if you're not planning to hang out at the bumper cars (and you're not a young fan of working class leisure activities) then Leo is actually the wrong choice. But why should you be too precise.
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Won't be for me, but reading your review was fun.🙂