Boreala

Boreala by KoRo
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A perfume by KoRo for women and men. The release year is unknown. The scent is sweet-green. The longevity is above-average. It is still in production.
We may earn a commission when you buy from links on our site, including the eBay Partner Network and Amazon.

Main accords

Sweet
Green
Woody
Resinous

Fragrance Notes

Pine resinPine resin Woody notesWoody notes BerriesBerries
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Submitted by Meggi, last update on 05.06.2022.

Reviews

1 in-depth fragrance description
6
Bottle
7
Sillage
8
Longevity
7.5
Scent
Meggi

212 Reviews
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Meggi
Meggi
Top Review 29  
Neanderthal and Nimerè nut
The Protestant church song poet Joachim Neander could not help the fact that at first a valley was named after him and consequently later also our extinct cousin. The "Nimerè nut" is only my name because I first perceived it as such in 'Taiga Whispers' from the house of Nimerè. Your appearance seems to follow a certain pattern...

Strong needle green with a sweet-fruity touch opens today's candidate. Thuja, I think, but above all pine fits perfectly, to which the provider explicitly refers personally. In fact, I don't remember ever having had a more authentic pine aroma under my nose. And since, in the course of the remodelling of our front garden at the time, I had dug out and chopped up a whole hedge of it myself, I know what I'm talking about. Soon a light resin sweatiness completes the picture in the most excellent way.

And after barely half an hour it is there: the nut like from 'Taiga Whispers'. Very nice. Again inseparably connected with a cautious sweetness, thus less hazelnut-herbal than rather peanut butter-like-nutellig sweetly. A more distinctive needle note has remained on the skin, but no longer as sourly austere as in the front. Only in the course of the next hours she disappears and subordinates herself to the nut.

The "nut". She mainly occupies me. I couldn't figure out what the Nimerè was. Further sites:
Asagiri by Fueguia 1833
'Canyon Rift' and 'Pine Barrens' from the house of Barnaby Black
with restriction 'Evergreen' by Thorn & Bloom.

Does it mean something that all of the above are natural fragrances? The Nimerè is not designated as such - which, of course, does not mean that no appropriate ingredient may be used.

It must be some twist in connection with a strong, at the beginning often acidic-goat-cheese coniferous tree, which either develops balsamic-creamy-sweet ambitions by itself or is supplemented by them. With what? I can only speculate. Float into the mind and are just as quickly half again discarded: Labdanum amber, caramel guaiac, possibly cream sandal... Relevant hints are welcome as always.

There is plenty of time to ponder, because on just that note the fragrance glides into the evening. I like it. But still annoys ...

I thank Fluxit for the sample.
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