Latecomer from the 80s
It seems so, even though I am a child of the 90s and therefore find it harder to judge.
Viva Di Tosca was an impulse buy, back in 1997 at Woolworth. I liked it back then vanilla-musk-creamy, I was into Sun by Jil Sander and Joop Femme, of which I had a miniature at that time. And also, Viva Di Tosca belongs, as I remember, in this series, dense, vanilla, intense. Vanilla is still a popular fragrance direction today, but today’s vanilla is sharper, less voluminous. This scent, with its extraordinarily present vanilla-musk-ylang-ylang-powderiness (I can only speculate about the notes, I would provide them if I find anything) belongs to the 80s, and I could have sworn it was a fragrance from that time. Longevity and sillage were, by the way, bombastic, very much in the style of the 80s.
Later, I received the squeaky Bella Firenze Di Tosca from the same brand as a gift, which I liked far less than its predecessor Viva Di Tosca.
Viva Di Tosca was an impulse buy, back in 1997 at Woolworth. I liked it back then vanilla-musk-creamy, I was into Sun by Jil Sander and Joop Femme, of which I had a miniature at that time. And also, Viva Di Tosca belongs, as I remember, in this series, dense, vanilla, intense. Vanilla is still a popular fragrance direction today, but today’s vanilla is sharper, less voluminous. This scent, with its extraordinarily present vanilla-musk-ylang-ylang-powderiness (I can only speculate about the notes, I would provide them if I find anything) belongs to the 80s, and I could have sworn it was a fragrance from that time. Longevity and sillage were, by the way, bombastic, very much in the style of the 80s.
Later, I received the squeaky Bella Firenze Di Tosca from the same brand as a gift, which I liked far less than its predecessor Viva Di Tosca.
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