
Seasickeve
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Seasickeve
Top Review
15
This is how a bride should smell...
I believe I have found a new second favorite fragrance by Harry Lehmann, alongside my beloved BAHIA. Fortunately, I already own several of his scent creations, and just as Bahia managed to become my favorite at first sniff, so did SUCRE. I opened the bottle, and a bright, fruity-floral scent filled the room and lingered in the air for a long time. It was incredible. I had already applied a different fragrance in the morning and just wanted to take a sniff... the bottle had only been opened once, but the scent lasted almost an hour in the room, spreading good vibes. That’s what I call quality! Although I wear fragrances according to my mood and don’t care about the seasons or where I will spend the day, I immediately associated Sucre with spring and summer. The top note is fresh and fruity, smelling of peach and apricot. I’m not usually a fan of peach when it comes to perfumes, which is why I find Boss For Her dreadful-not because it smells bad, but because it is so utterly unremarkable and yet outrageously expensive. However, Sucre smells at least as much of apricot as it does of peach, and not synthetic at all. It has a delicate floral quality, and I had imagined it to be much sweeter, but it is by no means sticky-sweet; it just retains the fresh fruitiness. I can’t say which flowers are involved, but I think they are white, as they have a delicate lightness and blend harmoniously with the juicy, authentically smelling fruits. The scent is not soapy at all. The base doesn’t take long to appear; cinnamon and then vanilla balance themselves finely with the fruity notes, creating a fragrance of dreamy harmony and lightness. It puts you in a cheerful spring mood and instantly dispels any hint of spring fatigue. The cinnamon doesn’t become too dominant; the scent is rather vanilla-like, warm, soft, and very feminine. The fruity notes of the top note remain until the end, and the base is a completely homogeneous blend of all components. I would have never guessed that the sweetness comes from cotton candy, but yes: there is this delicate, fluffy hint of sweetness that cannot have come from any flower. The scent gradually weakens over several hours without changing. The longevity is enormous; Sucre lasts and lasts and lasts, and the sillage is very strong in the first two or three hours, as if you had butterfly wings that release a cloud of Sucre with every flap. However, it is not a scent that overwhelms others with its sillage; it is far too cheerful and light-hearted for that. My colleagues immediately wanted to sniff me and were all thrilled! In my eyes, Sucre is a true wedding fragrance, the perfect perfume for a radiant, happy bride in a white dream dress in the sunshine! Guests will remember a bride wearing this scent at her wedding not only because she looked so beautiful but also because she smelled so wonderful-of happiness and sunshine! This is not an erotic scent, but it makes you feel joyful, and that makes it sexy! Sexy in a way that still carries a certain innocence. If I had to assign colors to Sucre, they would be white, pale yellow, mint green, sky blue, and rosy pink.
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