EO Black Ensar Oud
29
Top Review
Dark Jungle
Ensar is known for releasing endlessly, and the demand seems to justify this, so I won't evaluate this circumstance here. Not every fragrance will be able to maintain the quality level - objectively speaking - but the probability increases. EO Black is fortunately business as usual in this regard, which is why I am happy to introduce you to the scent.
I stand in the deep jungle. Dense foliage holds back the sun. Beneath me, damp, bitter earth, interwoven with myriads of decomposed tree remnants. Into this primal moisture, this bitter note already stemming from the oud, patchouli mixes in. It smells intense. Powerful. Yet never intrusive, as it enters into a symbiosis with the oud, with the jungle. A hint of spicy-peppery nuances flits over - carefully balanced.
But the oud in the inner eye, the jungle, splits. A fork in the path reveals the individual facets, the differences between the ouds from different origins. Suddenly: evoked coldness. Cool and yet absorbing the warmth of the image like an uninvolved spectator. The incense wafts, weaves threads, dances through the dense-dark notes and appears so fleeting that one hardly notices the advance of the ouds. These are brutal, immense.
I smell oily facets, already feeling the consistency of oil between my fingers, the damp earth of some forests, leaves from which a single drop of water trickles down. A veil lies over the jungle, clouding the sunlight, laying itself like a dark premonition over everything and yet promising no disaster but is merely an impression of the mood that EO Black ignites. Mystically alluring like a grove of old, decayed trees, which develop a scent of their own.
EO Black clearly demonstrates why Ensar is relatively well-known. The ouds are of high quality, the rest is elegantly constructed, which is achieved by very few. Either the oud as an oil is outstandingly fragrant or it is often so blended with various ingredients that the oud alone is not important even if it is listed in the title of the work. Rarely does a fragrance with multiple ingredients that are not named rose or possess an animal origin smell so much like oud and at the same time be so well thought out.
I stand in the deep jungle. Dense foliage holds back the sun. Beneath me, damp, bitter earth, interwoven with myriads of decomposed tree remnants. Into this primal moisture, this bitter note already stemming from the oud, patchouli mixes in. It smells intense. Powerful. Yet never intrusive, as it enters into a symbiosis with the oud, with the jungle. A hint of spicy-peppery nuances flits over - carefully balanced.
But the oud in the inner eye, the jungle, splits. A fork in the path reveals the individual facets, the differences between the ouds from different origins. Suddenly: evoked coldness. Cool and yet absorbing the warmth of the image like an uninvolved spectator. The incense wafts, weaves threads, dances through the dense-dark notes and appears so fleeting that one hardly notices the advance of the ouds. These are brutal, immense.
I smell oily facets, already feeling the consistency of oil between my fingers, the damp earth of some forests, leaves from which a single drop of water trickles down. A veil lies over the jungle, clouding the sunlight, laying itself like a dark premonition over everything and yet promising no disaster but is merely an impression of the mood that EO Black ignites. Mystically alluring like a grove of old, decayed trees, which develop a scent of their own.
EO Black clearly demonstrates why Ensar is relatively well-known. The ouds are of high quality, the rest is elegantly constructed, which is achieved by very few. Either the oud as an oil is outstandingly fragrant or it is often so blended with various ingredients that the oud alone is not important even if it is listed in the title of the work. Rarely does a fragrance with multiple ingredients that are not named rose or possess an animal origin smell so much like oud and at the same time be so well thought out.
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19 Comments
FlirtyFlower 4 years ago
Das klingt nach einem sehr interessanten Duft. Bei Oud wäre ich im Dschungel aber wohl nach Balu dem Bären oder Peppa Pig suchen gegangen... Aber es war eine sehr schöne geistige Wanderung durch den Duftdschungel! Pokal
Delightful 4 years ago
Was für eine großartige Rezension wieder, ich sah Dich zwischen all den Pflanzen im Dschungel stehen, klasse! .. Der klingt so richtig stark!
Cravache 4 years ago
Ein Floud im Wald! Klingt spannend. Ich wusste nicht, dass der Faun auch Oudbäume umarmt ;-)
Medianus76 4 years ago
Das scheint ja heftiges Zeugs zu sein! Wie immer toll und authentisch beschrieben...
Bastian 4 years ago
Klasse Rezension....bin schon gespannt...liegt schon hier....
Brelles530 4 years ago
wie immer fein herausgearbeitet und beschrieben. Der könnte mir auch gefallen...
Bloodxclat 4 years ago
Sehr stark beschrieben - kenne ich noch nicht
Floyd 4 years ago
Für mich einer der besten Ensars. Tolle Rezension.
ExUser 4 years ago
Als Duft pure Faszination … als Parfum für mich kaum tragbar.
Vinyldates 4 years ago
Toll beschrieben bin neugierig der klingt echt gut!
MonsieurTest 4 years ago
Gewohnt fein analysiert und nachgezeichnet.
Gandix 4 years ago
Sehr gelungene Rezension. Bin ich ganz bei dir. Einer, der guten Ensars. Dunkel und aussergewöhnlich.
MonMedusa 4 years ago
Fein bebildert, der klingt wirklich sehr reizvoll!
NuiWhakakore 4 years ago
Klingt nach einem schönen Dschungel, so ganz ohne Rosen...
Pollita 4 years ago
Klingt sehr natürlich, aber ich glaube, mein Fall wär der Duft dennoch nicht. Schön beschrieben.
Ponticus 4 years ago
Deine Beschreibung des Duftes und der Gerüche hier ist ganz große Klasse! Tolle Bilder regen dabei die Fantasie an! Mein Fall ist das Parfüm dennoch nicht!
Seejungfrau 4 years ago
1
Trifft es total.Mystisch anziehend wie ein Hain alter, morscher Bäume, welche einen ganz eigenen Duft entwickeln.
ExUser 4 years ago
1
Der klingt interessant. Patch und Oud in Kombi.
Gschpusi 4 years ago
1
Habe ich Patchouli gelesen? Der könnte mir gefallen

