03/15/2019
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"We are in the year 2019 AD. All Fleur de Marbre is occupied by the tuberose ..
...All Fleur de Marbre? No! A village populated by indomitable scents does not stop resisting the intruder"
How do I come up with this association? Because the scent has something of a comic book. Yes, in spite of the royal brand name and the important ornate bottles, which are obviously meant to be noble, the fragrance has such a refreshing directness that it makes me laugh at the first moment after spraying on. That's funny, because the buyer, who expects elegant restraint, is already a bit teased.
The opening is fresh, slightly nutty and immediately with chewing rubber tuberose. At first Fleur de Marbre could well come from the drugstore shelves, so strikingly and unchecked he falls into the house chewing gum. All of Fleur de Marbre? No, a nutty-mandelige fraction, from the heliotropes, bravely resists.
So the chewing gum squatters are slowly but surely infiltrated by a slightly powdery-creamy tone without an open fight in this band. First of all, the Heliotropic Resistors exclude some sugar bands and lock them away, even though there is still a lot of sweetness left behind. Then a highly respectable intelligence officer named Iris is recruited for backup. As is typical for secret services, she manipulates in the background and hardly appears on the outside. To the confusion from time to time mint is thrown, obviously to give the appearance of the madman.
It is said that the Resistance has other allies, lilies of the valley and patchouli. But as it is with allies, some are only on paper.
So it goes over many sides, without the resisters of the occupying power of the tuberoses becoming seriously dangerous. But at least they mix up the tuberoses properly.
That's a good thing. Because if one faction would completely defeat the other, the comic wouldn't have any follow-up volumes anymore.
A celebration! (Please without singing...)
How do I come up with this association? Because the scent has something of a comic book. Yes, in spite of the royal brand name and the important ornate bottles, which are obviously meant to be noble, the fragrance has such a refreshing directness that it makes me laugh at the first moment after spraying on. That's funny, because the buyer, who expects elegant restraint, is already a bit teased.
The opening is fresh, slightly nutty and immediately with chewing rubber tuberose. At first Fleur de Marbre could well come from the drugstore shelves, so strikingly and unchecked he falls into the house chewing gum. All of Fleur de Marbre? No, a nutty-mandelige fraction, from the heliotropes, bravely resists.
So the chewing gum squatters are slowly but surely infiltrated by a slightly powdery-creamy tone without an open fight in this band. First of all, the Heliotropic Resistors exclude some sugar bands and lock them away, even though there is still a lot of sweetness left behind. Then a highly respectable intelligence officer named Iris is recruited for backup. As is typical for secret services, she manipulates in the background and hardly appears on the outside. To the confusion from time to time mint is thrown, obviously to give the appearance of the madman.
It is said that the Resistance has other allies, lilies of the valley and patchouli. But as it is with allies, some are only on paper.
So it goes over many sides, without the resisters of the occupying power of the tuberoses becoming seriously dangerous. But at least they mix up the tuberoses properly.
That's a good thing. Because if one faction would completely defeat the other, the comic wouldn't have any follow-up volumes anymore.
A celebration! (Please without singing...)
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