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¼ Mile Winner of this Decade!
I want to draw attention to these two words:
1. discontinued
2. reformulated
To the perfume industry, damn it, erase these two words from your vocabulary.
It can't be right to produce something, make it appealing to customers, and then simply take it off the market or reformulate it. Just create a second or third line if you think something needs to change!
Sorry folks, I had to get that off my chest. Now to the scent, I hope that the manufacturer Gisada does not have these two words in their vocabulary as mentioned.
Ambassador for Men starts off sweet with mango, and you think, not another one of those overly sweet fruity scents that are rather feminine for men, "but then," after a maximum of 15 to 20 minutes, once the engine starts, warms up, and Ambassador shifts into second gear, a blend of green mandarin, apple, mango, pepper, teak, vetiver, and amber comes together.
The scent becomes increasingly masculine; the sweetness of the mango turns more bitter and fresh, and in the third and fourth gears, it says, "I am here, you can hear me, you can smell me, and I am clearing the field from behind."
The green mandarin, mango, light pepper, and amber harmonize with each other until the end, leading to a pleasantly fresh sweetness that lasts a long time.
It is not a purely masculine scent; it retains a slight femininity with the mango from start to finish in interplay with the pepper, which is not that unpleasant pepper that perfume manufacturers have increasingly been using lately to push longevity and projection.
In my opinion, this scent will still cause quite a stir; you have to give it time to develop. I tested it for three days, and lo and behold, it has become one of my top 5 fragrances.
Hats off to the perfumer Mr. Andreas Wilhelm.
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Gainsboro Exception is the best perfume for me
The whole story began in early 1988 and lasted until 1991, as I was searching for "the perfume" for myself and had pretty much tried everything that came my way, such as Zino Davidoff, Davidoff Cool Water, Davidoff Relax, Green Irish Tweed, Dali Pour Homme, CK Eternity, Lacoste Original, CD Fahrenheit, Marbert Homme, Jil Sander Man, Joop Homme, Montana, Tristano by Onofri, Cartier Santos..........
I finally found the scent for me and of course stuck with it; the best part was that it was an unknown fragrance and you didn't feel like you had to smell it on every third person.
The fragrance components harmonized very well together, the top note lasted unusually long
for me, I mostly noticed bergamot and lemon at first, along with a slight sweetness, although
it was never too sweet, rather fresh, floral, and very pleasant to wear. The scent development on the skin was just as good as on clothing. The longevity was gigantic.
You occasionally find a sample here and there, but unfortunately, they have all gone off; the freshness is no longer present in any of the samples or collector's bottles.
My description of this unique scent would be that it represents the transition from spring to summer, you walk in the flower park, butterflies are flying in all colors of splendor, and a light west wind blows, you smell all kinds of flowers that are just freshly blooming, slightly sweet, rather fresh, with a hint of cedar, and you take a deep breath..........