Arioch
Reviews
Filter & Sort
Detailed
Translated · Show original
Leathered Boredom
I received this perfume as a gift from someone who doesn't know my scent preferences. This nice person occasionally makes one or another gift misstep, like giving a One Million to my father who is over 40 years old. Anyway, as long as it’s well-intentioned...
So now I have a Trussardi perfume sitting at home. And oh boy.. Anyone who knows me knows what kinds of scents I like.. Scents that imitate something or are unusual, ones where you can't even tell it's a perfume. And with "My Land," well... you notice it immediately. It’s a perfume, a men's scent, something you can smell on every corner and can’t distinguish at all.. You just know that the person is wearing perfume.
To do justice to the scent, I’ll take the liberty of quickly noting the dominant ingredients: lavender, violet, leather. That’s basically it. Well, if you like it...
It’s too one-dimensional for me, too conformist. It was a nice gesture from the person, but you shouldn’t gift perfumes without knowing what the person likes.
So now I have a Trussardi perfume sitting at home. And oh boy.. Anyone who knows me knows what kinds of scents I like.. Scents that imitate something or are unusual, ones where you can't even tell it's a perfume. And with "My Land," well... you notice it immediately. It’s a perfume, a men's scent, something you can smell on every corner and can’t distinguish at all.. You just know that the person is wearing perfume.
To do justice to the scent, I’ll take the liberty of quickly noting the dominant ingredients: lavender, violet, leather. That’s basically it. Well, if you like it...
It’s too one-dimensional for me, too conformist. It was a nice gesture from the person, but you shouldn’t gift perfumes without knowing what the person likes.
Translated · Show original
Extinguished Wick or Tealight !?
Here we have a fragrance that attracted me because of its name.
One thing upfront: This perfume is more or less complex in its accords.
Simply saying that what’s on the label is what’s inside, or not, does not do this perfume justice.
The opening is a spicy bomb where you can immediately perceive the accords of the top note. Even a perfume novice could recognize them, they are that prominent.
However, the heart note is where it gets really interesting. As my predecessor already mentioned: Myrrh + Chamomile = Epic. Somehow, the heart note totally reminds me of something, though I don’t know what. A bit like a burning tealight. A bit like when you extinguish the wick of a burning candle. The myrrh is not too dominant but still noticeable. You can tell that this fragrance has a mineral vibe.
The base note, however, doesn’t do anything for me. Too pleasant, too "playing it safe." Sandalwood and cedarwood is a combination that can be found in every second perfume anyway - I don’t need that anymore. It just smells pleasant, but nothing more. Added to that is a very dominant lavender note that you wouldn’t necessarily expect in a resinous perfume... too much of a good thing.
Overall, an interesting fragrance with good approaches, but unfortunately, it doesn’t fully succeed in convincing me. It doesn’t really do justice to its name; I can hardly detect frankincense and the myrrh is only present for a short time. With such a name, one would expect more...
One thing upfront: This perfume is more or less complex in its accords.
Simply saying that what’s on the label is what’s inside, or not, does not do this perfume justice.
The opening is a spicy bomb where you can immediately perceive the accords of the top note. Even a perfume novice could recognize them, they are that prominent.
However, the heart note is where it gets really interesting. As my predecessor already mentioned: Myrrh + Chamomile = Epic. Somehow, the heart note totally reminds me of something, though I don’t know what. A bit like a burning tealight. A bit like when you extinguish the wick of a burning candle. The myrrh is not too dominant but still noticeable. You can tell that this fragrance has a mineral vibe.
The base note, however, doesn’t do anything for me. Too pleasant, too "playing it safe." Sandalwood and cedarwood is a combination that can be found in every second perfume anyway - I don’t need that anymore. It just smells pleasant, but nothing more. Added to that is a very dominant lavender note that you wouldn’t necessarily expect in a resinous perfume... too much of a good thing.
Overall, an interesting fragrance with good approaches, but unfortunately, it doesn’t fully succeed in convincing me. It doesn’t really do justice to its name; I can hardly detect frankincense and the myrrh is only present for a short time. With such a name, one would expect more...
1 Comment
Translated · Show original
Addictive Wolf Urine
A very interesting scent that I have wanted to test for a long time.
Due to its listed ingredients, it made me very curious. You rarely see hazelnut.
I find that you can recognize everything quite well in Mechant Loup. The mineral myrrh is very well showcased here. The combination with licorice gives it a wonderful licorice-smoothness. The honey is dominant without being sweet. Hazelnut and "hazelnut wood" create the most interesting accord in this unusual fragrance. Somehow robust and clearly nutty, Mechant Loup reveals itself to me without one directly coming to the idea of what one would associate here if it weren't stated in the description.
For me, it is not a forest scent, as has been noted here before. I simply find it impressive because it is so unusual. The combination of honey, myrrh, and hazelnut is one that I really like. It smells noble, masculine, a bit fairy-tale-like, and not too sweet.
Unfortunately, the sillage is somewhat low. With a masterpiece like this, one could have applied it a bit more opulently.
Bertrand Duchaufour is truly a great perfumer who increasingly hits the mark for me. Respect - clear recommendation to buy.
Due to its listed ingredients, it made me very curious. You rarely see hazelnut.
I find that you can recognize everything quite well in Mechant Loup. The mineral myrrh is very well showcased here. The combination with licorice gives it a wonderful licorice-smoothness. The honey is dominant without being sweet. Hazelnut and "hazelnut wood" create the most interesting accord in this unusual fragrance. Somehow robust and clearly nutty, Mechant Loup reveals itself to me without one directly coming to the idea of what one would associate here if it weren't stated in the description.
For me, it is not a forest scent, as has been noted here before. I simply find it impressive because it is so unusual. The combination of honey, myrrh, and hazelnut is one that I really like. It smells noble, masculine, a bit fairy-tale-like, and not too sweet.
Unfortunately, the sillage is somewhat low. With a masterpiece like this, one could have applied it a bit more opulently.
Bertrand Duchaufour is truly a great perfumer who increasingly hits the mark for me. Respect - clear recommendation to buy.
2 Comments
Translated · Show original
Summery Grass Clumps
Annick Goutal, the plant queen of fragrances, presents us with a vetiver scent that I have only just discovered. Simple like almost all vetiver perfumes, they have simply named it Vétiver.
The market offers a wide range of options for vetiver scents. Annick Goutal has quite well captured what vetiver is, namely green. The top note is my favorite here, as it really comes across as rooty. Over time, this vetiver becomes much more pleasant and, yes, associations with spices arise. What exactly Burmese spices are supposed to be, no one can tell me. Spices that were bought in Burma or what?
Basically, this representative of green grass is quite summery. It somehow totally reminds me of the sea and sun. I like the drydown, as the supposed sandalwood-tobacco-tonka bean note creates a scent that differs from most other vetiver perfumes, which in the drydown all just smell the same. In my opinion, there could have been a bit more tobacco.
While Annick Goutal's creation doesn't quite reach the level of Etro's or Lubin's variant (for me), it is definitely worth experiencing for anyone who likes vetiver!
The market offers a wide range of options for vetiver scents. Annick Goutal has quite well captured what vetiver is, namely green. The top note is my favorite here, as it really comes across as rooty. Over time, this vetiver becomes much more pleasant and, yes, associations with spices arise. What exactly Burmese spices are supposed to be, no one can tell me. Spices that were bought in Burma or what?
Basically, this representative of green grass is quite summery. It somehow totally reminds me of the sea and sun. I like the drydown, as the supposed sandalwood-tobacco-tonka bean note creates a scent that differs from most other vetiver perfumes, which in the drydown all just smell the same. In my opinion, there could have been a bit more tobacco.
While Annick Goutal's creation doesn't quite reach the level of Etro's or Lubin's variant (for me), it is definitely worth experiencing for anyone who likes vetiver!
Translated · Show original
Leave the Church in the Village
Avignon blablabla.. The big Catholic city blabla and the perfume blabla...
From a marketing perspective, CdG is on the right track: They name the perfume after a city that was a religious center. To evoke associations.
Now, I don't care to chew through the history of the city for the thousandth time, as is the case in every description text from CdG; and also with many users on the internet. It's nice that CdG is interested in history, but it's about the perfume.
Therefore, my comment will not reference any French churches. I have neither been to France nor do I know why those should smell so much different than ours.
Well. Avignon is an incense perfume, or at least it is supposed to be. In Central Europe, it cannot be denied that Christianity is historically very rooted. Many people know incense only from their childhood or from church. That's a shame. When one thinks of incense (here), one automatically has those huge cathedrals in mind, which shine with their typically European impressive architecture. Incense (at least the kind we are talking about here) is, however, an Oriental. Resin that is harvested in the East and has been smoked and otherwise consumed there for thousands of years. To associate incense uncompromisingly with churches (yes, there are also Oriental churches) and Europe would be wrong. One should keep that in mind - and that's why I also find the name of this perfume not so happily chosen. But since it is a concept series, I want to overlook that.
Now, CdG wants to sell us a "European" incense.
Does Avignon smell like incense?
First of all, it should be said: Incense does not always smell the same. There are different qualities and different types. If you burn cheap incense from the esoteric shop for 2 euros a bag, you can be sure that during the burning you will get more scent substances from the combustion. I have noticed this, as I am a poor student and cannot afford high-quality varieties.
Anyway. Since I have long hair, the smoke settles and gets trapped in it. Sometimes when I go outside into the fresh air and am walking around in my own scent cloud, I actually smell nothing. But then suddenly, for a second, a scent rises to my nose that is clearly the incense. And that is the scent of Avignon. This one second flash of the qualitatively inferior incense (that I burned before) - from that the fragrant essence that you really have to search for among all the burning scents. If you take that one second and put it in a bottle, then you have Avignon.
I assume that if you burn good incense, you will get an even more intense comparison because then that good fragrant essence comes out much more.
I specifically paid attention to this because I really wanted to see if Avignon really smells like incense after all the comments. The answer is: yes, but it depends on the incense you compare it with.
Avignon is my favorite perfume and has now become my signature scent. This is mainly due to the lightness that this perfume displays. For example, Cardinal gets on my nerves after a day (due to the aldehydes), but I want to wear Avignon every day. There is simply nothing about it that makes you tired of the scent. It lasts for hours and the chemistry makes it possible that Avignon does not stick to you all the time. Rather, it comes and goes. It wafts into your nose every now and then and then it's gone again.
Does Avignon smell like church incense? Well, as I said, it has a lot to do with association and imprinting on Christianity. The quality of the incense also plays a role. I hardly believe that churches use high-quality incense, so I am somewhat divided in my opinion here.
Avignon can evoke the association of church in one if they have been in one that burned a good quality of incense. Avignon is a perfume and has other ingredients to offer than just an incense essence. So I find it much sweeter than any scent you would find in church. I cannot understand the comments that label Avignon as dry.
I think CdG has created a great perfume that most people like. Some find it too strong. For me, it is balsamic, meditative, and a bit dark (if you know Cardinal by Heeley for comparison, you know what is meant by dark). Avignon is the all-rounder of incense scents that fits any occasion without being mainstream. If I imagine I want to smell like a church, I can do that with Avignon. But if I imagine I just want to smell good and not like something specific, that works too. Avignon is just somehow everything and yet special. Let your associations run free, but then try it without them. You will see that this scent fulfills what it is supposed to in both situations.
From a marketing perspective, CdG is on the right track: They name the perfume after a city that was a religious center. To evoke associations.
Now, I don't care to chew through the history of the city for the thousandth time, as is the case in every description text from CdG; and also with many users on the internet. It's nice that CdG is interested in history, but it's about the perfume.
Therefore, my comment will not reference any French churches. I have neither been to France nor do I know why those should smell so much different than ours.
Well. Avignon is an incense perfume, or at least it is supposed to be. In Central Europe, it cannot be denied that Christianity is historically very rooted. Many people know incense only from their childhood or from church. That's a shame. When one thinks of incense (here), one automatically has those huge cathedrals in mind, which shine with their typically European impressive architecture. Incense (at least the kind we are talking about here) is, however, an Oriental. Resin that is harvested in the East and has been smoked and otherwise consumed there for thousands of years. To associate incense uncompromisingly with churches (yes, there are also Oriental churches) and Europe would be wrong. One should keep that in mind - and that's why I also find the name of this perfume not so happily chosen. But since it is a concept series, I want to overlook that.
Now, CdG wants to sell us a "European" incense.
Does Avignon smell like incense?
First of all, it should be said: Incense does not always smell the same. There are different qualities and different types. If you burn cheap incense from the esoteric shop for 2 euros a bag, you can be sure that during the burning you will get more scent substances from the combustion. I have noticed this, as I am a poor student and cannot afford high-quality varieties.
Anyway. Since I have long hair, the smoke settles and gets trapped in it. Sometimes when I go outside into the fresh air and am walking around in my own scent cloud, I actually smell nothing. But then suddenly, for a second, a scent rises to my nose that is clearly the incense. And that is the scent of Avignon. This one second flash of the qualitatively inferior incense (that I burned before) - from that the fragrant essence that you really have to search for among all the burning scents. If you take that one second and put it in a bottle, then you have Avignon.
I assume that if you burn good incense, you will get an even more intense comparison because then that good fragrant essence comes out much more.
I specifically paid attention to this because I really wanted to see if Avignon really smells like incense after all the comments. The answer is: yes, but it depends on the incense you compare it with.
Avignon is my favorite perfume and has now become my signature scent. This is mainly due to the lightness that this perfume displays. For example, Cardinal gets on my nerves after a day (due to the aldehydes), but I want to wear Avignon every day. There is simply nothing about it that makes you tired of the scent. It lasts for hours and the chemistry makes it possible that Avignon does not stick to you all the time. Rather, it comes and goes. It wafts into your nose every now and then and then it's gone again.
Does Avignon smell like church incense? Well, as I said, it has a lot to do with association and imprinting on Christianity. The quality of the incense also plays a role. I hardly believe that churches use high-quality incense, so I am somewhat divided in my opinion here.
Avignon can evoke the association of church in one if they have been in one that burned a good quality of incense. Avignon is a perfume and has other ingredients to offer than just an incense essence. So I find it much sweeter than any scent you would find in church. I cannot understand the comments that label Avignon as dry.
I think CdG has created a great perfume that most people like. Some find it too strong. For me, it is balsamic, meditative, and a bit dark (if you know Cardinal by Heeley for comparison, you know what is meant by dark). Avignon is the all-rounder of incense scents that fits any occasion without being mainstream. If I imagine I want to smell like a church, I can do that with Avignon. But if I imagine I just want to smell good and not like something specific, that works too. Avignon is just somehow everything and yet special. Let your associations run free, but then try it without them. You will see that this scent fulfills what it is supposed to in both situations.
6 Comments





