07/11/2019
MossGreen
21 Reviews
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MossGreen
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Bois Vanilla?
Here I have to do it with a gently soft nose flatterer.
For a long time it was on my wish list, for a long time the ordered filling was untouched in my box after the first test.
In the meantime I got "Bois d'Argent" under my nose and now, since I felt like Bois Intense again, I realize that these two scents are really very close to each other.
The fragrance starts sweetly deep with a somewhat overpowering vanilla note, which is accompanied by stinging alcohol at first the door crashing in.
Direct inhalation of the first sprayer is therefore not recommended!
The alcohol evaporates quickly and leaves soft, cuddly vanilla behind.
Quite soon something sour and spicy comes on, which adds slightly scratchy, but quite interesting green nuances to the somewhat one-dimensional top note.
From this point on, the fragrance reveals its true complexity and shows once again how successful the price-performance ratio of this brand is.
For me it is above all the Myhrre, which forms a team here with the vanilla, in order to dampen the emerging powderiness of the rather quiet iris and to pull a spicy-sweet thread through the fragrance picture I clearly perceive juniper in the heart, although not the sour fruitiness of the berries but rather the aromatic-warm juice of the needles.
Now the longed-for wood is added, presumably enhanced by the warm glowing amber, and the scent can no longer be distinguished from Bois d'Argent.
But it is precisely this one that captivates us with something that cannot be taken away from him: the strangely fascinating radiance of his Sillage. Sometimes he's there, sometimes somewhere else, you can't really get a hold of him. It's like a scented dance.
At Intense this phenomenon turns out to be less fascinating, straighter, simpler.
And a certain golden glow, which fascinates me so much about the Dior, is missing here too.
Apart from these subtleties, Bois Intense is a worthy counterpart.
Even if I would have found the name Bois Vanilla more fitting, because the dominance of the same is unfortunately not to be denied to the scent.
I love the scent of vanilla and here, as already mentioned, it is very skilfully implemented, spicy and powdery, and not intrusive or too sweet If you don't like vanilla, you probably won't enjoy it here.
The shelf life is quite good on me at cooler temperatures with about 8 h, and the Sillage is steady and even, even if I can't judge it well myself, and my "It all smells the same anyway" husband is not a good reference.
A wonderful soft winter scent for a great price, which smells much better than you might think.
For a long time it was on my wish list, for a long time the ordered filling was untouched in my box after the first test.
In the meantime I got "Bois d'Argent" under my nose and now, since I felt like Bois Intense again, I realize that these two scents are really very close to each other.
The fragrance starts sweetly deep with a somewhat overpowering vanilla note, which is accompanied by stinging alcohol at first the door crashing in.
Direct inhalation of the first sprayer is therefore not recommended!
The alcohol evaporates quickly and leaves soft, cuddly vanilla behind.
Quite soon something sour and spicy comes on, which adds slightly scratchy, but quite interesting green nuances to the somewhat one-dimensional top note.
From this point on, the fragrance reveals its true complexity and shows once again how successful the price-performance ratio of this brand is.
For me it is above all the Myhrre, which forms a team here with the vanilla, in order to dampen the emerging powderiness of the rather quiet iris and to pull a spicy-sweet thread through the fragrance picture I clearly perceive juniper in the heart, although not the sour fruitiness of the berries but rather the aromatic-warm juice of the needles.
Now the longed-for wood is added, presumably enhanced by the warm glowing amber, and the scent can no longer be distinguished from Bois d'Argent.
But it is precisely this one that captivates us with something that cannot be taken away from him: the strangely fascinating radiance of his Sillage. Sometimes he's there, sometimes somewhere else, you can't really get a hold of him. It's like a scented dance.
At Intense this phenomenon turns out to be less fascinating, straighter, simpler.
And a certain golden glow, which fascinates me so much about the Dior, is missing here too.
Apart from these subtleties, Bois Intense is a worthy counterpart.
Even if I would have found the name Bois Vanilla more fitting, because the dominance of the same is unfortunately not to be denied to the scent.
I love the scent of vanilla and here, as already mentioned, it is very skilfully implemented, spicy and powdery, and not intrusive or too sweet If you don't like vanilla, you probably won't enjoy it here.
The shelf life is quite good on me at cooler temperatures with about 8 h, and the Sillage is steady and even, even if I can't judge it well myself, and my "It all smells the same anyway" husband is not a good reference.
A wonderful soft winter scent for a great price, which smells much better than you might think.
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