
Seerose
775 Reviews
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Seerose
Top Review
Rural Scent
I would like to write something more positive or even nothing at all. But this scent also deserves a comment. In the test spray, there is a garnet-red liquid, and I find the color quite promising. However, that is also the best thing about "Divine" by Providence Perfume.
First, a wave of scent with a strong sillage hits my nose, a pressing mix of white flowers, with jasmine being dominant for me. The scent strength decreases immediately, and a grainy dry-dusty note develops. A little later, I also smell green dry hay, and "Divine" becomes slightly sour. Even later, the sillage is now very moderate but not weak, and I also catch a hint of aromatic spice. With good will, one can also perceive softening vanilla and ambrette.
I associate the ambrette with the grain note. I don't particularly appreciate ambrette in perfumes. I find it similar to how one cannot really equate chicory coffee with real roasted coffee. In a way, ambrette cannot even - in my perception - be compared to the good synthetic replicas of Walambra, only Ambroxan I find worse.
Overall, "Divine" is a scent dedicated to the goddess Demeter, based on its name.
"Divine" smells of jasmine, second hay meadow, earthy, harvested grain, and coriander, which is also used as a bread spice. A truly rural scent.
But even "Divine" cannot be imagined as a perfume for me. It feels too deliberately eco-friendly. By wearing "Divine," one positions oneself, sending a clear olfactory signal: "I am eco-conscious, environmentally aware...
First, a wave of scent with a strong sillage hits my nose, a pressing mix of white flowers, with jasmine being dominant for me. The scent strength decreases immediately, and a grainy dry-dusty note develops. A little later, I also smell green dry hay, and "Divine" becomes slightly sour. Even later, the sillage is now very moderate but not weak, and I also catch a hint of aromatic spice. With good will, one can also perceive softening vanilla and ambrette.
I associate the ambrette with the grain note. I don't particularly appreciate ambrette in perfumes. I find it similar to how one cannot really equate chicory coffee with real roasted coffee. In a way, ambrette cannot even - in my perception - be compared to the good synthetic replicas of Walambra, only Ambroxan I find worse.
Overall, "Divine" is a scent dedicated to the goddess Demeter, based on its name.
"Divine" smells of jasmine, second hay meadow, earthy, harvested grain, and coriander, which is also used as a bread spice. A truly rural scent.
But even "Divine" cannot be imagined as a perfume for me. It feels too deliberately eco-friendly. By wearing "Divine," one positions oneself, sending a clear olfactory signal: "I am eco-conscious, environmentally aware...
9 Comments



Top Notes
Bergamot
Bitter orange
Coriander
Heart Notes
Jasmine
Neroli
Rose
Orange blossom
Base Notes
Vanilla
Amber
Ambrette
Angelica
Floyd
Yatagan
Seerose
Fluxit
Dorabella
ClemensJ
Bellemorte
Morgaina
Jersey
YElektra






























