12
Top Review
A Good Wine and a Fragrance
...for both I gladly open my wallet. I inherited my affinity for scents from my mother. Although she has already given up on hers - at least the search for her fragrance.
The situation with wine is similarly wonderful.
At first, the prope phase. Oh, what stories one hears... you have no personal taste and probably develop it here.
I apologize in advance to anyone who feels offended.
It must be sweet - for now.
Over time, most people realize that a good wine should have both dry and less dry components. And that a good red wine can indeed be dry. It unfolds after the initial taste....
What does that have to do with fragrance? Quite simply, you have expectations, ideas, components come together to form your own picture, and with great anticipation, you hope that it will be "just right".
My expectation for the niche? No understatement. No mainstream. I expect a curved, distinctive signature. Period. I expect to smell something that I can't sniff out everywhere.
Despite the tuberose, I was very curious about this scent. It also depends on how intertwined the individual notes are.
Thanks to an attentive Parfumo, I was able to sniff "Hundred Silent Ways".
But what do I smell? The better-off sister of La Vie est Belle...
I smell tuberose.... tuberose.... tuberose until the end. Heavy, sweet, and simply not special.
To not completely destroy it, I would like to note that you can indeed smell its quality.
I just want to wash it off. It fills the whole room... whether that's just my perception, I don't know, because usually what you don't like lingers too long somewhere.
The scent is mainstream, it has no unique selling point, and I don't want to smell like a girl who is beginning her journey into the world of fragrances.
Sure, it has its fans, but you can find something cheaper at the Douglas store.
Unfortunately not for me, but the name sounds promising.
....hundred Silent Ways... I will take a different path.
H/S very good. Projection is too much for me, but those who like this type of fragrance will love it.
The situation with wine is similarly wonderful.
At first, the prope phase. Oh, what stories one hears... you have no personal taste and probably develop it here.
I apologize in advance to anyone who feels offended.
It must be sweet - for now.
Over time, most people realize that a good wine should have both dry and less dry components. And that a good red wine can indeed be dry. It unfolds after the initial taste....
What does that have to do with fragrance? Quite simply, you have expectations, ideas, components come together to form your own picture, and with great anticipation, you hope that it will be "just right".
My expectation for the niche? No understatement. No mainstream. I expect a curved, distinctive signature. Period. I expect to smell something that I can't sniff out everywhere.
Despite the tuberose, I was very curious about this scent. It also depends on how intertwined the individual notes are.
Thanks to an attentive Parfumo, I was able to sniff "Hundred Silent Ways".
But what do I smell? The better-off sister of La Vie est Belle...
I smell tuberose.... tuberose.... tuberose until the end. Heavy, sweet, and simply not special.
To not completely destroy it, I would like to note that you can indeed smell its quality.
I just want to wash it off. It fills the whole room... whether that's just my perception, I don't know, because usually what you don't like lingers too long somewhere.
The scent is mainstream, it has no unique selling point, and I don't want to smell like a girl who is beginning her journey into the world of fragrances.
Sure, it has its fans, but you can find something cheaper at the Douglas store.
Unfortunately not for me, but the name sounds promising.
....hundred Silent Ways... I will take a different path.
H/S very good. Projection is too much for me, but those who like this type of fragrance will love it.
Translated · Show original
4 Comments


Your comment is brave - I think it's great!