
Minigolf
2580 Reviews
Translated · Show original

Minigolf
3
Topography of a Slightly Slanted Fragrance Landscape
Has anyone ever seen vehicles rolling uphill? Or a dip where there isn't one?
And all of this not because the laws of physics have suddenly been suspended. But because rare peculiarities in the landscape create an optical illusion.
In a similarly olfactory way, this fragrance also causes me slight confusion. There are indeed "purple flowers" in the form of peonies, but aren't there also violets present? Those that, unlike the former, prefer to grow in the shade under trees.
Can I smell something else "woody" here alongside amber, such as "birch tar" and/or cedarwood? And isn't there something "rough-Nordic" to be detected alongside a slightly "tropical" coconut scent that slowly transforms the heat of ginger into a cool spice?
YES, all of this can be SMELLED! But where do these impressions come from?
It must be due to the "topography" of this "fragrance landscape," which bends everything in such a way that it truly appears real, which is actually very difficult to achieve! Try to solve the riddle...
I think that all the fragrance components cleverly overlap, underlay, penetrate each other, and then separate again. The pepper is probably "to blame" for making ginger "cold," and the musk notes for making amber "tar-like." Or how shade-loving violets join the "sun worshippers" peony.
Yes, it is the nuances of the "surrounding landscape" that create optical and olfactory illusions! :-))
And all of this not because the laws of physics have suddenly been suspended. But because rare peculiarities in the landscape create an optical illusion.
In a similarly olfactory way, this fragrance also causes me slight confusion. There are indeed "purple flowers" in the form of peonies, but aren't there also violets present? Those that, unlike the former, prefer to grow in the shade under trees.
Can I smell something else "woody" here alongside amber, such as "birch tar" and/or cedarwood? And isn't there something "rough-Nordic" to be detected alongside a slightly "tropical" coconut scent that slowly transforms the heat of ginger into a cool spice?
YES, all of this can be SMELLED! But where do these impressions come from?
It must be due to the "topography" of this "fragrance landscape," which bends everything in such a way that it truly appears real, which is actually very difficult to achieve! Try to solve the riddle...
I think that all the fragrance components cleverly overlap, underlay, penetrate each other, and then separate again. The pepper is probably "to blame" for making ginger "cold," and the musk notes for making amber "tar-like." Or how shade-loving violets join the "sun worshippers" peony.
Yes, it is the nuances of the "surrounding landscape" that create optical and olfactory illusions! :-))



Top Notes
Cardamom
Ginger
Pepper
Heart Notes
Coconut
Gardenia
Orange blossom
Peony
Base Notes
Amber
Musk
Sandalwood
Minigolf



























