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Floyd
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44
Something from the Root Children
Then comes autumn, damp winds of distant storms drive root children beneath gnarled trees. They follow the mulch, a delicate cheesy smear through lime-green shimmering layers into the sour soils of the clammy earth. Sharp smoke blows from the grasses' chimneys, delicate sulfur wood threads into the cave, floating like mist there at the ceiling around the buried nut that has become a tuber. From its hazy brown shell, tangled wood root hairs grow, down into the green-leathery fluff of the glowing fibers from the bark. (Very freely based on Sibylle von Olfers)
**
The Spanish label Almah Parfums 1948 claims to use exclusively natural essential oils of the highest quality, "to create a new generation of unique niche perfumes," it says on the homepage.
At least the implementation of "AgarBlue" seems unusual, which combines Nagarmotha, the Asian sweet grass root vetiver, various Indian and Cambodian agarwood varieties, as well as pepper and lime notes, one would expect something different given the pure concept of the pyramid and the name. The scent is certainly not blue at all, rather olive green. After several attempts over a good six months, perhaps my sympathy for the strange smell has also matured alongside the fragrance.
At the center is clearly the Indian nut grass Nagarmotha, woody-earthy, slightly smoky-leathery, but above all actually moist nutty, initially combining in the top note with very subtly used Indian oud, which carries discreet cheesy-animalistic traits, before a sour-earthy note joins in. It is the vetiver that here, earthy-rooty and matchstick smoky, is sharpened by citrus notes and pepper, remarkably accentuating the moist nut grass tuber. The slightly mulch-like smoky bark chip notes likely come from the Cambodian oud, which are still perceptible in the base.
The clear to moderate projection of the buried nut tuber with the tangled wood root hairs can be experienced in the earthy cave almost until the next spring, at least for several hours.
**
The Spanish label Almah Parfums 1948 claims to use exclusively natural essential oils of the highest quality, "to create a new generation of unique niche perfumes," it says on the homepage.
At least the implementation of "AgarBlue" seems unusual, which combines Nagarmotha, the Asian sweet grass root vetiver, various Indian and Cambodian agarwood varieties, as well as pepper and lime notes, one would expect something different given the pure concept of the pyramid and the name. The scent is certainly not blue at all, rather olive green. After several attempts over a good six months, perhaps my sympathy for the strange smell has also matured alongside the fragrance.
At the center is clearly the Indian nut grass Nagarmotha, woody-earthy, slightly smoky-leathery, but above all actually moist nutty, initially combining in the top note with very subtly used Indian oud, which carries discreet cheesy-animalistic traits, before a sour-earthy note joins in. It is the vetiver that here, earthy-rooty and matchstick smoky, is sharpened by citrus notes and pepper, remarkably accentuating the moist nut grass tuber. The slightly mulch-like smoky bark chip notes likely come from the Cambodian oud, which are still perceptible in the base.
The clear to moderate projection of the buried nut tuber with the tangled wood root hairs can be experienced in the earthy cave almost until the next spring, at least for several hours.
35 Comments



Vetiver
Nagarmotha
Cambodian oud
Chamomile
Black pepper
Citrus notes
Sri Lankan oud
Musk
Eggi37
Matze8338

































