04/29/2021
Bloodxclat
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Bloodxclat
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The approaching storm
Grey the sky, the clouds dark, driven by the wind they race from each other, overtake each other and disappear on the continuous roll of eternity. The pressure rises. The barometer quivers. The air, thick to cut.
The whipped sea, an up and down, whitecaps bursting into salty beads of water, sharp winds of citrus peel tugging at living things. Herbaceous blasts of air come from the land, mercilessly rattling the old rusted fishing boats.
The first cold drops fall. Metallic haze covers the beach as the parched grounds await salvation.
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Neil Morris of Boston, has been known for many years for his diverse and special compositions. Here he wanted to create a "Dark Rain", the athmosphere before a late summer storm by the sea.
We are not dealing with an aquatic here. I don't find any typical aquatic building blocks in this fragrance. It starts with sharp lime followed by a very herbaceous cool environment. It smells like rain and earth. Effectively, you can smell the ozone as well. Metallic and salty it hovers clearly in the background. Rust still comes to mind. A great athmosphere!
Of course, aromachemicals were used here, that's quite clear. One should have no aversion to this. How else, you should direct such a fragrance in this direction. Salt, ozone, wind, the sea, metal, air pressure, all things which you can not capture olfaktisch. The way Neil combines the excipients with the natural oils I find great. At no time do I smell the infamous chemical soup.
The big storm calms down after about two hours and remains citrusy, herbaceous and still a bit windy, but with dark driftwood in the sand for the next 6h.
For fans of rain scents, sea scents and weathermen.
The whipped sea, an up and down, whitecaps bursting into salty beads of water, sharp winds of citrus peel tugging at living things. Herbaceous blasts of air come from the land, mercilessly rattling the old rusted fishing boats.
The first cold drops fall. Metallic haze covers the beach as the parched grounds await salvation.
------
Neil Morris of Boston, has been known for many years for his diverse and special compositions. Here he wanted to create a "Dark Rain", the athmosphere before a late summer storm by the sea.
We are not dealing with an aquatic here. I don't find any typical aquatic building blocks in this fragrance. It starts with sharp lime followed by a very herbaceous cool environment. It smells like rain and earth. Effectively, you can smell the ozone as well. Metallic and salty it hovers clearly in the background. Rust still comes to mind. A great athmosphere!
Of course, aromachemicals were used here, that's quite clear. One should have no aversion to this. How else, you should direct such a fragrance in this direction. Salt, ozone, wind, the sea, metal, air pressure, all things which you can not capture olfaktisch. The way Neil combines the excipients with the natural oils I find great. At no time do I smell the infamous chemical soup.
The big storm calms down after about two hours and remains citrusy, herbaceous and still a bit windy, but with dark driftwood in the sand for the next 6h.
For fans of rain scents, sea scents and weathermen.
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