04/13/2017

Silverfire
130 Reviews

Silverfire
Helpful Review
2
Too Much Time Spent in Hiding
As you might expect, Embers starts off smoky. Within fifteen minutes, it becomes a smoky vetiver, which isn’t bad, but it isn’t the same -- I love the initial whiff of burning woods. After four hours, it has become this wispy ozonic scent – I’m guessing the cistus and freesia. Weirdly I get whiffs of the frankincense in hours 5 onward, though I don’t smell it directly when sniffing my wrists. Sniffing my wrists gives me only the ozonic smell and the faint scent of burning.
Embers is an interesting scent – fits the name perfectly – but I don't exactly enjoy the experience. I want my fragrance to be easily detectable. With Embers, I was often not sure if it was there. I can see that this might prove mysterious on someone, however. 7 hours in, it is barely there – a ghost of a scent, a faintly ozonic turned sweetish with whiffs of frankincense. I’ve never experienced a fragrance that does the hide-and-seek thing as well as this does.
Overall, I think this is an interesting scent, but not a mandatory one. If you like incense, Passage De Enfer or Cardinal is for you; if you like smoke, then Hearth by Criminal Elements is your thing; I suppose Embers is for those who want to have a fragrance journey and experience the slow dying and dissipation of a scent – ordinarily this would appeal to me, but it’s just too ephemeral to really experience it. This fragrance (like all) gradually dies away, but Embers emphasizes that aspect, and that makes it difficult to relate to; longevity is outstanding at 22 hours.
And that final irony or juxtaposition sums up Embers - hiding, disappearing, fading but longlasting. On the right person, no doubt it is charming and mysterious. On me, it spent too much time in hiding.
Embers is an interesting scent – fits the name perfectly – but I don't exactly enjoy the experience. I want my fragrance to be easily detectable. With Embers, I was often not sure if it was there. I can see that this might prove mysterious on someone, however. 7 hours in, it is barely there – a ghost of a scent, a faintly ozonic turned sweetish with whiffs of frankincense. I’ve never experienced a fragrance that does the hide-and-seek thing as well as this does.
Overall, I think this is an interesting scent, but not a mandatory one. If you like incense, Passage De Enfer or Cardinal is for you; if you like smoke, then Hearth by Criminal Elements is your thing; I suppose Embers is for those who want to have a fragrance journey and experience the slow dying and dissipation of a scent – ordinarily this would appeal to me, but it’s just too ephemeral to really experience it. This fragrance (like all) gradually dies away, but Embers emphasizes that aspect, and that makes it difficult to relate to; longevity is outstanding at 22 hours.
And that final irony or juxtaposition sums up Embers - hiding, disappearing, fading but longlasting. On the right person, no doubt it is charming and mysterious. On me, it spent too much time in hiding.