10/15/2023
Aspasia0
25 Reviews
Translated
Show original
Aspasia0
2
The scent of childhood?
Whenever I have no inspiration how to start a fragrance review, I look at what the marketing department of the brand has come up with so to the fragrance. This is usually quite funny and bang, you have a hook.
About Lukomorie, Carner writes:
"Part of the "Dream Collection," the perfume at hand is a fragrance that evokes the innocence of childhood and makes us dream again with its sweet notes of caramel, sugar and blackberry."
Aha, once again be young, so very young, is thus the motto. Interestingly, they blather what about caramel and sugar, but do not list that in the fragrance notes and attention spoiler: you smell nothing of it.
But what do you smell or better said I instead?
The fragrance actually starts pretty well as a freshie, with grapefruit and bergamot nicely balanced, citrusy, with a slight fruitiness. Really well balanced, neither note becomes too dominant and harmonize well together.
After this first prelude, which could have lasted a little longer, follows quite quickly a rose note with a hint of pepper. Also still quite nice.
But it does not take long and the fragrance continues to change. The citrus is unfortunately lost, as is the pepper. It remains the rose, which is now coated by a once again not very authentic smelling blackberry fruitiness and already we are back to the omnipresent flower-fruit mix *sigh*
So childhood dreams are not for me, because ultimately Lukomorie just serves the current trend wave, too bad.
About Lukomorie, Carner writes:
"Part of the "Dream Collection," the perfume at hand is a fragrance that evokes the innocence of childhood and makes us dream again with its sweet notes of caramel, sugar and blackberry."
Aha, once again be young, so very young, is thus the motto. Interestingly, they blather what about caramel and sugar, but do not list that in the fragrance notes and attention spoiler: you smell nothing of it.
But what do you smell or better said I instead?
The fragrance actually starts pretty well as a freshie, with grapefruit and bergamot nicely balanced, citrusy, with a slight fruitiness. Really well balanced, neither note becomes too dominant and harmonize well together.
After this first prelude, which could have lasted a little longer, follows quite quickly a rose note with a hint of pepper. Also still quite nice.
But it does not take long and the fragrance continues to change. The citrus is unfortunately lost, as is the pepper. It remains the rose, which is now coated by a once again not very authentic smelling blackberry fruitiness and already we are back to the omnipresent flower-fruit mix *sigh*
So childhood dreams are not for me, because ultimately Lukomorie just serves the current trend wave, too bad.