
1Christina7
10 Reviews
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1Christina7
Between Ancient Egyptian Dream and Dentist
I stumbled upon this hidden little fragrance by chance. A lovely perfumer, with whom I had already gathered great experiences, had it in stock, and after I saw the scent notes, I just had to test it.
Lotus, iris butter, and myrrh - no musk, no sandalwood, no ambroxan
That sounded like a good idea to me.
The sample arrived, and I eagerly sprayed the scent on my skin.
(The other samples I had originally purchased were forgotten)
First subjective impression: pleasantly clean, a bit mystical.
First impression from my better half: good dentist
Second semi-professional impression: lotus and myrrh create a beautiful, slightly ethereal, enveloping clean scent. The iris butter is clearly the star with its clean lightness, but there’s no biting, no pencil, no lipstick.
The rest of the notes can be sensed, but particularly the cedarwood helps make the scent wearable.
The fragrance has its very simple and beautiful justification for existence. Even as a signature scent.
In the case of my husband.
Due to the absent musk, the non-existent -“an's” and -“enide,” it doesn't fall into the Your-Skin-But-Better drawer.
I can understand the spontaneous association with the dentist. The scent also has a very slight metallic note.
For all the few among you who perceive scents as having a temperature:
This one is not as frosty as it sounds. It lies slightly below room temperature.
In the meantime, a bottle has also been acquired. For all those who want to find and test the scent.
If it bites unpleasantly and frees your nose like a chemical tincture: it’s most likely not matured enough yet. With this scent, the difference in maturity is noticeable.
There are also significant differences between batches - we currently have 3.
Conclusion:
I am happy and satisfied to have found the scent.
Even though I don’t wear it myself, it brings me joy almost daily anew.
The light lotus in it is simply genius.
Lotus, iris butter, and myrrh - no musk, no sandalwood, no ambroxan
That sounded like a good idea to me.
The sample arrived, and I eagerly sprayed the scent on my skin.
(The other samples I had originally purchased were forgotten)
First subjective impression: pleasantly clean, a bit mystical.
First impression from my better half: good dentist
Second semi-professional impression: lotus and myrrh create a beautiful, slightly ethereal, enveloping clean scent. The iris butter is clearly the star with its clean lightness, but there’s no biting, no pencil, no lipstick.
The rest of the notes can be sensed, but particularly the cedarwood helps make the scent wearable.
The fragrance has its very simple and beautiful justification for existence. Even as a signature scent.
In the case of my husband.
Due to the absent musk, the non-existent -“an's” and -“enide,” it doesn't fall into the Your-Skin-But-Better drawer.
I can understand the spontaneous association with the dentist. The scent also has a very slight metallic note.
For all the few among you who perceive scents as having a temperature:
This one is not as frosty as it sounds. It lies slightly below room temperature.
In the meantime, a bottle has also been acquired. For all those who want to find and test the scent.
If it bites unpleasantly and frees your nose like a chemical tincture: it’s most likely not matured enough yet. With this scent, the difference in maturity is noticeable.
There are also significant differences between batches - we currently have 3.
Conclusion:
I am happy and satisfied to have found the scent.
Even though I don’t wear it myself, it brings me joy almost daily anew.
The light lotus in it is simply genius.
Updated on 02/06/2026



Orris butter
Pink lotus
Cedar
Myrrh
Tonka bean



























