01/16/2019
Minigolf
300 Reviews
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Minigolf
2
Timeless cinnamon zone
Yes, it's this shimmering silver bottle that I'm probably the only "Parfuma" to own. And it is all the more delicate to describe a fragrance that hardly anyone knows. But let me try.
In any case the addition Cologne is for the Central European understanding a house-high understatement, because the smell corresponds in durability and perseverance in each regard to a strong Eau de Parfum.
That consists of few, but all the more intensive ingredients. A kind of reduction to the essence, I could say.
With "Zizanie" by Fabergé, however, my nose still has a lot to do to track down the fragrances, as tightly woven as the finest threads in a silk or microfibre fabric is everything. Fine woven and very powdery.
I perceive cinnamon as the very first and intense fragrance. Ground from fresh "bark", gluy, hot and like tiny pointed little needles. Then in the next moment flowing again and reddish-brown shimmering.
Spicy, powdery, bitter and sweet at the same time.
In the "background" in any case earthy patchouli, which "darkens" the cinnamon a little and transforms the "pointed heat" of the cinnamon first interval-like, then more and more consistently into pure warmth. Only a few "glowing needles" glow up.
To the provisional completeness of the fragrance, woody notes are added, in my opinion sandalwood and cedar. They round off the overall picture of Zizanie a little. Reduce the almost dusty powderiness slightly in favour of a fine-grained "sand look". Still warm, still cinnamony-earthy, but a mixture of light and dark brown. A subtle balance between floating heat and down-to-earth heat.
And timeless, no fashion or style "committed", a zone for lovers of "cinnamon" fragrances.
And a high recognition value.
In any case the addition Cologne is for the Central European understanding a house-high understatement, because the smell corresponds in durability and perseverance in each regard to a strong Eau de Parfum.
That consists of few, but all the more intensive ingredients. A kind of reduction to the essence, I could say.
With "Zizanie" by Fabergé, however, my nose still has a lot to do to track down the fragrances, as tightly woven as the finest threads in a silk or microfibre fabric is everything. Fine woven and very powdery.
I perceive cinnamon as the very first and intense fragrance. Ground from fresh "bark", gluy, hot and like tiny pointed little needles. Then in the next moment flowing again and reddish-brown shimmering.
Spicy, powdery, bitter and sweet at the same time.
In the "background" in any case earthy patchouli, which "darkens" the cinnamon a little and transforms the "pointed heat" of the cinnamon first interval-like, then more and more consistently into pure warmth. Only a few "glowing needles" glow up.
To the provisional completeness of the fragrance, woody notes are added, in my opinion sandalwood and cedar. They round off the overall picture of Zizanie a little. Reduce the almost dusty powderiness slightly in favour of a fine-grained "sand look". Still warm, still cinnamony-earthy, but a mixture of light and dark brown. A subtle balance between floating heat and down-to-earth heat.
And timeless, no fashion or style "committed", a zone for lovers of "cinnamon" fragrances.
And a high recognition value.