5
Very helpful Review
Rose-heavy Booth Magic
I discovered Ypno in one of my mother's old collection sets. An inconspicuous orange bottle that has a tendency to tip over. This 90s fragrance is something special, as it has little that is typically 90s (except for the asymmetrical bottle).
Right at the beginning, you catch a berry-fruity note, but then you are overwhelmingly enveloped by an intrusive and somewhat old-fashioned rose. Old-fashioned because it reminds me of the roses from the classic fragrances before the 90s: opulent, heavy, oriental - but also intrusive and a bit unrefined. The typical rose scent of the wardrobes of our grandmother's generation. However, I prefer my roses to be fresh and fruity, so the scent here overwhelms me a bit. I am surprised that rose is not mentioned in the pyramid here; I find it extremely dominant in this perfume.
After just a few minutes, resinous incense notes break through, but it's hard to say which ones. I like to burn a bit of incense at home, and overall this heavy cloud reminds me of rose incense. I enjoy that scent, but not on myself, to be honest! After half an hour, typical warm 90s notes emerge: oriental flowers, vanilla, and especially amber. All of this combined with the rose incense is quite bombastic, but also somehow nice. Just something different!
Ypno is extremely strong at the beginning with great projection, so much so that I can't even drink my coffee with it on my wrist. It overpowers everything. But after just two hours, the magic is over; all that remains is an exceptionally clean-smelling, fruity-light note. Could it really be that the fruits are coming through now? Did someone turn the fragrance pyramid upside down? One must say, Ypno is quite extraordinary.
As powerful as the sillage overwhelms you at first, the scent is just as quickly gone. Like a mysteriously appearing magician who makes himself disappear in a great noise and fog. An interesting piece, one doesn't necessarily have to have it, but you can keep it for when you need a quick bang of Abracadabra with confetti.
Right at the beginning, you catch a berry-fruity note, but then you are overwhelmingly enveloped by an intrusive and somewhat old-fashioned rose. Old-fashioned because it reminds me of the roses from the classic fragrances before the 90s: opulent, heavy, oriental - but also intrusive and a bit unrefined. The typical rose scent of the wardrobes of our grandmother's generation. However, I prefer my roses to be fresh and fruity, so the scent here overwhelms me a bit. I am surprised that rose is not mentioned in the pyramid here; I find it extremely dominant in this perfume.
After just a few minutes, resinous incense notes break through, but it's hard to say which ones. I like to burn a bit of incense at home, and overall this heavy cloud reminds me of rose incense. I enjoy that scent, but not on myself, to be honest! After half an hour, typical warm 90s notes emerge: oriental flowers, vanilla, and especially amber. All of this combined with the rose incense is quite bombastic, but also somehow nice. Just something different!
Ypno is extremely strong at the beginning with great projection, so much so that I can't even drink my coffee with it on my wrist. It overpowers everything. But after just two hours, the magic is over; all that remains is an exceptionally clean-smelling, fruity-light note. Could it really be that the fruits are coming through now? Did someone turn the fragrance pyramid upside down? One must say, Ypno is quite extraordinary.
As powerful as the sillage overwhelms you at first, the scent is just as quickly gone. Like a mysteriously appearing magician who makes himself disappear in a great noise and fog. An interesting piece, one doesn't necessarily have to have it, but you can keep it for when you need a quick bang of Abracadabra with confetti.
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