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Browsing by tag: powdery

Lorenzo Villoresi Teint de Neige ~ fragrance review

Posted by Jessica on 7 January 2011 75 Comments

Lorenzo Villoresi Teint de Neige

Lorenzo Villoresi was one of the first niche perfume houses that I ever explored, and Teint de Neige (“the color of snow”) was my immediate favorite from its line of fragrances. Six years later, I still wear Teint de Neige regularly, particularly during the winter months. A small decant of this scent accompanied me on my recent holiday travels; appropriately enough, I happened to be wearing it the day after Christmas, during an attempt to return home during a blizzard. On the long, slow ride back to the New York area, I had plenty of time to contemplate Teint de Neige and my reasons for loving it.

According to the Villoresi website, Teint de Neige evokes “the delicate rosy hue of a powdered face. The unmistakable scent of perfumed powders, the fragrance of face powder, the perfume of talc. . . . An aroma delicately permeated by the richness of the natural extracts of precious flowers, recalling the light, images and atmosphere of the belle-époque.” The “sweet, powdery and floral notes” of its composition are jasmine, rose, ylang ylang, tonka bean, heliotrope, and musk. Teint de Neige really does smell like powder — not baby powder, but some fragranced dusting powder that might have been found on a woman’s dressing table circa 1900. In its texture and its construction, it also feels like a Belle Époque gown: heavy, pale, and soft, but “corseted” into place…

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Love, Chloe by Chloe ~ perfume review

Posted by Robin on 9 November 2010 78 Comments

Love, Chloe perfume advert

Chloé, as many of you already know, rejoined the land of the living, perfume-wise, in 2008 with the launch of their eponymous perfume, Chloé Eau de Parfum. I still remember smelling it for the first time and laughing to myself, thinking: ha, that’ll never sell… Of course I was wrong, it sold just fine and then some, and it swept the 2009 fragrance awards. I have nothing to say in my own defense except that even I don’t think I know the first thing about what will sell. I am wrong more often than not on that score (and on countless other scores as well). At any rate, I did not review Chloé Eau de Parfum then and I am not going to review it now; let’s just say that I thought the conclusion in Perfumes: The Guide (“a dilute, dishearteningly synthetic muguet-rose good enough to grace a non-abrasive bathtub cleanser”) was just about right.

So anyway, Chloé followed that up with the Eau de Fleurs trio, which I liked marginally better than Angie did, but not so much as to consider paying actual money for any of them. And now we have Love, Chloé.

Love, Chloé is meant to be about “radiant, generous, spontaneous femininity”, and more specifically about “the olfactory vocabulary of cosmetics”.1 In other words, it’s meant to smell like cosmetic powder — or as they put it, “a lingering powder halo nestles into the skin like a feminine aura…” — and that is precisely what it smells like…

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Dana Classic Love’s Baby Soft ~ fragrance review

Posted by Angela on 13 August 2010 146 Comments

Dana Classic Love's Baby Soft

For my last review during Drugstore Week, I wanted to track down an old drugstore classic, like Coty Sand & Sable, Jovan Jungle Gardenia, or the fragrance I eventually landed, Dana Classic Fragrances Love’s Baby Soft. You’d think this would be easy, but no. Drugstores have really classed up their fragrance offerings.

At Walmart, my first stop, a half ounce bottle of Coty Exclamation was $14. Forget it! Doesn’t that defeat the whole purpose of a cheap thrill? Nine-tenths of the fragrance display was celebrity fragrances and perfume you can find in a department store. I moved on to Walgreen’s. A friendly SA with virulently blue contact lenses attended the locked display case. “Among the older ladies, the Elizabeth is popular,” she said, nodding toward Elizabeth Taylor White Diamonds. “The younger ladies like Jessica, and I absolutely love Dare Me,” she said, referring to Fancy Jessica Simpson and a Baby Phat fragrance. “Have you smelled the Hilary? It’s quite nice.”

For a moment I wondered if Hillary Clinton had fronted a perfume, then recalled Hilary Duff…

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Hermes Eau Claire des Merveilles ~ perfume review

Posted by Robin on 27 July 2010 67 Comments

Hermès Eau Claire des Merveilles

I don’t think the new Eau Claire des Merveilles from Hermès has officially launched yet, but it’s on counter at Hermès boutiques and at Nordstrom. Depending on how you count, it’s the 3rd or 4th flanker to 2004’s Eau des Merveilles, which has already been joined by Parfum des Merveilles and Elixir des Merveilles.

Eau Claire des Merveilles, which was developed by Hermès house perfumer Jean-Claude Ellena, is pretty much exactly as it was described in the press materials: delicate, soft and sparkling, with powder notes and vanilla. The start is wonderfully fizzy citrus soda; that softens into a creamy-sweet (but airy) cosmetic powder, lightly vanillic, with just a hint of the salty woody amber from the original Eau des Merveilles underneath…

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Kenzo Winter Flowers ~ perfume review

Posted by Robin on 10 October 2008 51 Comments

Hellebore rose

Someone made the assertion in the comments recently that flankers are never an improvement on the original fragrance*. I'm sure there are a few exceptions (although I can't think of one offhand; if you can, please comment!), but I'd agree with the rule in theory. Still, there are certainly flankers that I'd rather wear than the original, even if they aren't “better”. Kenzo's Flower Oriental (2005) is one example. I wouldn't argue that it's “better” than Kenzo Flower (2000), but Kenzo Flower, brilliant though the composition may be, wears like a mess of sweet girl-powder on me. I'd just as soon admire it from afar. Flower Oriental added a dash of spice to the mix, and floated the whole thing over a darker, drier base, thereby rendering it wearable for those of us who found the original a tad too ironic for everyday use.

Winter Flowers is Kenzo's latest flanker for the Flower fragrance:

An ancient precious winter flower is the star of Kenzo’s new, limited edition eau de parfum, FLOWERBYKENZO WINTER FLOWERS. This powdery, floral scent is inspired by Hellebore rose, which is known for its startling blossoms and fragile beauty against the stark winter landscape…

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