
Xianthra
10 Reviews
Translated · Show original

Xianthra
deserved award
The scent starts off light, green, and bright. Delicate like a spring breeze and without the commonly used citrus notes often found in tea.
Shortly after, something medicinal and spicy comes to the forefront. It immediately reminds me of an herbal ointment from the past. However, this one is not sharp and biting but rather smoother.
I smell the test strip a few more times, yes definitely like a healing ointment. A quick search confirms my suspicion. Camphor is an ingredient in various ointments for colds, whether bought or homemade.
A slight smokiness is added, definitely the tea, but the main note remains the camphor, with the tea merely playing around it.
I decide to give the scent a little time and step out of the room, and while I’m folding laundry, the scent wafts back to me. There’s something fruity alongside the spicy-medicinal camphor.
So back to the tester, as my curiosity won’t let go.
Yes, there is something fruity that dances around the smoky-spicy notes. A wonderful development from the green-light start to this.
The camphor remains the main player in my nose, rounded out by tea-slightly smoky and green-and fruit, never sharp but still present. It also has a slightly earthy quality.
Somehow, I see it fully on a cool autumn morning. One stands in the middle of a clearing as a silent observer, light fog enveloping the forest and making it steam. Hidden among the trees is a small tea house, from where the fog comes.
The scent is fantastic. Just the transformation is beautiful, but packaging this medicinal note so wonderfully and pleasantly that one is not reminded of the last cold and the associated discomfort, but rather is taken to this quiet moment in nature, is grand.
I don’t know if I would wear it. Maybe if the tea notes were more present and I could get a spoonful of honey, but it is beautiful nonetheless and a special gem to boot.
Sillage is light and close to the body. It doesn’t need to burst through doors and beg for attention. That’s not its intention. It’s something for oneself, to preserve and carry a small quiet piece of the forest.
It’s not a blind buy, but absolutely worth a test.
Update:
It also has something of a sauna infusion. This spiciness fits, and it has a hint of eucalyptus.
Shortly after, something medicinal and spicy comes to the forefront. It immediately reminds me of an herbal ointment from the past. However, this one is not sharp and biting but rather smoother.
I smell the test strip a few more times, yes definitely like a healing ointment. A quick search confirms my suspicion. Camphor is an ingredient in various ointments for colds, whether bought or homemade.
A slight smokiness is added, definitely the tea, but the main note remains the camphor, with the tea merely playing around it.
I decide to give the scent a little time and step out of the room, and while I’m folding laundry, the scent wafts back to me. There’s something fruity alongside the spicy-medicinal camphor.
So back to the tester, as my curiosity won’t let go.
Yes, there is something fruity that dances around the smoky-spicy notes. A wonderful development from the green-light start to this.
The camphor remains the main player in my nose, rounded out by tea-slightly smoky and green-and fruit, never sharp but still present. It also has a slightly earthy quality.
Somehow, I see it fully on a cool autumn morning. One stands in the middle of a clearing as a silent observer, light fog enveloping the forest and making it steam. Hidden among the trees is a small tea house, from where the fog comes.
The scent is fantastic. Just the transformation is beautiful, but packaging this medicinal note so wonderfully and pleasantly that one is not reminded of the last cold and the associated discomfort, but rather is taken to this quiet moment in nature, is grand.
I don’t know if I would wear it. Maybe if the tea notes were more present and I could get a spoonful of honey, but it is beautiful nonetheless and a special gem to boot.
Sillage is light and close to the body. It doesn’t need to burst through doors and beg for attention. That’s not its intention. It’s something for oneself, to preserve and carry a small quiet piece of the forest.
It’s not a blind buy, but absolutely worth a test.
Update:
It also has something of a sauna infusion. This spiciness fits, and it has a hint of eucalyptus.
Updated on 01/09/2026



Top Notes
Oolong tea
Grass
Green tea
Heart Notes
Black tea
Black plum
Base Notes
Cedar
Camphor tree

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