06/26/2019
Taurus
304 Reviews
Translated
Show original
Taurus
Helpful Review
7
The Second is the First Loser
Aigner Sport Fragrance for Men was unfortunately only second in the history of fragrances designed for sport (with the exception of Hattric and Polo, which bear sports terms and sports in their names). After all, eleven years had to pass before Jean Patou's Eau de Sport Lacoste in the late 60s was followed by another attempt at the topic. Nowadays almost every second bottler has something like this in his assortment.
Although I don't know how long Aigner Sport Fragrance was able to hold its own on the market and how well it was able to assert itself, I can imagine that people were relatively sceptical about this fragrance.
The start is relatively fresh and spicy, but without drifting too much into citric. Immediately afterwards a short sprint through the botany with floral beginnings follows, whereby the fragrance then gradually runs out of puff. After slowing down the tempo noticeably, he slowly remains in this soft and cuddly musk plain, as known from Aigner No. 2. This olfactory deceleration also seems to fit in well with that one, but with a sports fragrance it's a bit immature for me. Maybe at the time of its creation they were of a different opinion. Finally, the relationship to the classic Aigner No. 2 is clearly recognizable. They didn't want to take too big a risk.
After that it should take another seven years for Sport de Paco Rabanne to take up the topic again ... apparently with longer lasting success.
Although I don't know how long Aigner Sport Fragrance was able to hold its own on the market and how well it was able to assert itself, I can imagine that people were relatively sceptical about this fragrance.
The start is relatively fresh and spicy, but without drifting too much into citric. Immediately afterwards a short sprint through the botany with floral beginnings follows, whereby the fragrance then gradually runs out of puff. After slowing down the tempo noticeably, he slowly remains in this soft and cuddly musk plain, as known from Aigner No. 2. This olfactory deceleration also seems to fit in well with that one, but with a sports fragrance it's a bit immature for me. Maybe at the time of its creation they were of a different opinion. Finally, the relationship to the classic Aigner No. 2 is clearly recognizable. They didn't want to take too big a risk.
After that it should take another seven years for Sport de Paco Rabanne to take up the topic again ... apparently with longer lasting success.
5 Comments