05/18/2023
Julipet
36 Reviews
Julipet
2
Immortal Maiden Elven-Fair
This is a beautiful scent and unusual experience. I wear this for the first time in nearly a year of owning this fragrance. I tested and admired it, but couldn’t imagine it on myself until these warm days of late spring.
This if something very ethereal. My first association as I sprayed it on a test paper was Galadriel. If Tolkien’s elves were real this is how they would smell. At first, it’s piercingly fresh, bright, and clear, like a ray of sunlight on a sparkling snow patch in a spring forest. Then, slowly, the snow thaws and you can feel clear water drops on a green lush moss between the tree roots. After a while, it warms up even more and a delicate white flowers emerge from the mossy roots with a clean, sweet smell. The scent makes me think of snowdrops and lilys-of-the-valley, but this is some exquisite strar-shaped fantasy flower.
The most prominent notes here are citruses, moss, and lily, creating a beautiful contrast of warm, cool, bright and shadowy. This scent shimmers and rings in the air like elven laughter. This picture of enchanted forest stays with me the whole day: sunlight peering among the branches, melting snow, clear spring water bubbling along the mossy bank, tiny white flowers reaching up towards the sunlight.
The name doesn’t do it justice. There is nothing opulent, spicy, or woody here to justify “Sultane” or powdery to justify “pearl”. Despite the ginger and cardamom in the pyramid, I wouldn’t call it spicy. This scent is light like air and transparent like the clearest gem. The only thing that fits well in the title is “white”. White snow, white magic, white flowers.
Elegant, magical, out of this world. This is ethereal femininity. I can imagine young brides and ballet dancers wearing this. Not my style, but so beautiful.
This if something very ethereal. My first association as I sprayed it on a test paper was Galadriel. If Tolkien’s elves were real this is how they would smell. At first, it’s piercingly fresh, bright, and clear, like a ray of sunlight on a sparkling snow patch in a spring forest. Then, slowly, the snow thaws and you can feel clear water drops on a green lush moss between the tree roots. After a while, it warms up even more and a delicate white flowers emerge from the mossy roots with a clean, sweet smell. The scent makes me think of snowdrops and lilys-of-the-valley, but this is some exquisite strar-shaped fantasy flower.
The most prominent notes here are citruses, moss, and lily, creating a beautiful contrast of warm, cool, bright and shadowy. This scent shimmers and rings in the air like elven laughter. This picture of enchanted forest stays with me the whole day: sunlight peering among the branches, melting snow, clear spring water bubbling along the mossy bank, tiny white flowers reaching up towards the sunlight.
The name doesn’t do it justice. There is nothing opulent, spicy, or woody here to justify “Sultane” or powdery to justify “pearl”. Despite the ginger and cardamom in the pyramid, I wouldn’t call it spicy. This scent is light like air and transparent like the clearest gem. The only thing that fits well in the title is “white”. White snow, white magic, white flowers.
Elegant, magical, out of this world. This is ethereal femininity. I can imagine young brides and ballet dancers wearing this. Not my style, but so beautiful.