Armonías

Malena 2010 Perfume

Malena (Perfume) by Fueguia 1833
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6.6 / 10 17 Ratings
A perfume by Fueguia 1833 for women and men, released in 2010. The scent is floral-fruity. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Floral
Fruity
Fresh
Green
Sweet

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
MuskMusk
Heart Notes Heart Notes
BlackcurrantBlackcurrant
Base Notes Base Notes
MagnoliaMagnolia

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
6.617 Ratings
Longevity
6.414 Ratings
Sillage
5.914 Ratings
Bottle
7.021 Ratings
Submitted by Kankuro, last update on 23.02.2024.
Interesting Facts
The fragrance is part of the "Armonías" collection.

Reviews

2 in-depth fragrance descriptions
8
Bottle
5
Sillage
7
Longevity
6.5
Scent
Meggi

212 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
Meggi
Meggi
Top Review 17  
Rustic Earthiness
Mr. Bedel had already presented an idea of black currant in the sibling fragrance 'La Cautiva'. With 'Malena', however, he again proves this powerfully, because the present candidate has considerably more green leaves. It seems as if something is being cut off from the shrub spreading out in the garden. And a little mint is throttled with it. The bitter dough magnolia tone, on the other hand, is only plausible for me because I have read the information. Moreover, since everything mixes with the declaredly pure vegetable musk, it is not quite clear what is or should be, except for the currant, which is beyond all doubt.

The fact that currants, as one of the top garden stinkers, can not only be green, but also prickly fruit, is underlined here by an overemphasis on the acidic over the fruity aspects of fruit. In this respect the (see below) references to grapefruit, pomelo etc. are fully justified. The fragrance goes even further: it becomes bitter in the late morning. The fruity part is almost gone. Bitter like maybe oil from the lemon peel? The closest thing to my impression is actually the biting, pungent smell of mouldy citrus fruit.

I can only reassume that this is the magnolia. Exaggerated - at least if I use my summer magnolia as a reference. She also did this bitterness, but she didn't dress up or emphasize it as much as here.

But like the calm after the storm, all this is over around noon and the scent swings onto a new track. There's no stench left. Unsupported I would now bet on a contribution of sweet-spicy wood. This can't be a coincidence, because the fresh green that is continuously involved shows that we move unaltered in the vicinity of the currant. It is she who gives the appearance of spice. This has succeeded very realistically. And the tongue-in-cheek joke about it is the approach of earthliness, which has openly survived the meanwhile drifts very well. Unexpectedly, 'Malena' presents itself as a quiet, beautiful currant scent. A spike too unperfumed maybe. As if that had slipped first into one direction exaggerated (mold lemon) now into the other. And it's gone quiet. At a distance of ten cm from the skin, the scent is hardly perceptible.

It is remarkable that in the late afternoon a little more fruit shows up again. Not the only Fueguia where already lost candidates for the top note experience reincarnation. Until the evening 'Malena' accompanies me in the end.

All in all, in the sense of a conclusion, I find the scent in the front too grumpy and out back too tame. For an austere ladies' cracker, for example for the evening appearance, it is also a little too rustic, because it lacks polish. Still worth a test, of course.

I'd like to thank the robins for rehearsing.
11 Comments
6
Sillage
7
Longevity
8
Scent
Fluxit

42 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
Fluxit
Fluxit
Top Review 8  
Currant pomelo in a vase
My girlfriend brings in a panicle of currants, fruits, leaves, stalk.
"Don't exaggerate," I say. "Fine. Of course."

A little later she adds a grapefruit.
"Don't exaggerate," I say. "Fine. Of course."

A little later she brings in a vase with flower water.
"Exaggerated," I say. "Of course less beautiful."

The unexpectedly unfresh and geranium-like end of Malena is a little foxing for me.
Nevertheless, the scent remains sympathetic to me. And that's actually due to the base note. Because producing a perfume with a natural currant smell is no small challenge: I'm often annoyed by the cassis scratching or a freshly sour long-windedness. Malena knows how to bypass both. It stings a little, but unsynthethically natural and also not forever long.
In addition, the currant-grapefruit combination arrives incredibly natural, which even for a natural fragrance brand is not automatically given. In its light-footed authenticity it sometimes even surpasses my currant house scent "L'Ombre dans L'Eau", which is more perfumed and cumbersome. Even if I don't like the fading phase as much, I mark Malena as a test recommendation, because I can imagine that the softer base will be appreciated by other noses and thus offers a round natural fragrance.
2 Comments

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