11/01/2019

Silverfire
130 Reviews

Silverfire
1
Gasoline, Kool-Aid, and Play-Doh
Goes on as gasoline Kool-aid. Yeah, you read that correctly. Gasoline Kool-aid.
Then it moves into scotchguard territory with some cheap stryax, eventually morphing into little girl's overly-sweet flower with some aldehydes plus scotchguard. That's where the first fifteen minutes takes you -- confused, speechless, but not impressed. Unfortunately, it's not done. The fragrance eventually lands on a fresh Play-Doh smell, gradually dying away. I lost track of it after four hours.
I have to say -- this is strange, but not in a weird, gothic, compelling way, which is exactly what all the imagery and the language on the Strange South's website promise. It is creative, but completely off-putting. A bit more subtlety and effort spent creating a wearable scent instead of just an olfactory experience would have been very much appreciated.
As it stands, Some Mother's Boy ends up as just another disappointment from the Strange South.
Then it moves into scotchguard territory with some cheap stryax, eventually morphing into little girl's overly-sweet flower with some aldehydes plus scotchguard. That's where the first fifteen minutes takes you -- confused, speechless, but not impressed. Unfortunately, it's not done. The fragrance eventually lands on a fresh Play-Doh smell, gradually dying away. I lost track of it after four hours.
I have to say -- this is strange, but not in a weird, gothic, compelling way, which is exactly what all the imagery and the language on the Strange South's website promise. It is creative, but completely off-putting. A bit more subtlety and effort spent creating a wearable scent instead of just an olfactory experience would have been very much appreciated.
As it stands, Some Mother's Boy ends up as just another disappointment from the Strange South.