04/06/2021
Jasminroedig
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Jasminroedig
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Finally, some citrics for me
Citrus notes, after all, people like. They brighten the mood, create wearable warmth in summer and freshen the air. Products in the retail trade like to make themselves more attractive to consumers in this way, be it the room freshener in the bathroom, a fabric softener for the laundry or even a shower gel under the shower of water. Lemon and co are as well known as they are popular and it is this very prominence that bores me, downright puts me off. Too often fragrances with lemon, orange etc remind me of common household remedies that I really can't smell anymore. The nicer it is when I am convinced of the opposite - as just with this one - Arancia di Sicilia
Admittedly, it is here less about the above-described scent of lemon, but much more about the blood orange. Nevertheless, this fruit counts as a citrus fruit for me. It is the main protagonist of the perfume and convinces me with its authenticity. Even if it comes across as very synthetic and squeaky at first, it then transforms into a real blood orange. A fruit whose reddish juice just emerges from the pulp and drips into a chilled glass. I'm on holiday again, the evening sun irradiating people's already tanned skin. The shallow summer warmth draws people out into the fresh air. And, I mean, what's better now than a touch of tangy-sweet lightness on the skin?
Arancia di Sicilia doesn't smother you - no - the scent is anything but dense. Rather, he warms cool hearts, provides a good mood and smiling faces. The fruitiness is rounded out brilliantly, though the only thing I really detect is a hint of cinnamon. And it is precisely this cuddly spice that gives the fragrance its warmth. Briefly, the spices even take over, leaving me to ponder... for a moment. Is this a pure spring-summer fragrance or does it also go in the winter?
But already a short moment later, the blood orange fights out again and lingers- magical.
To break the whole thing down a little:
For me, this scent is still too little on everyone's lips, because this is no ordinary citrus scent that just refreshes you. You get more than that.
It remains a spring-summer fragrance and so I too finally have a citrusy fruit freshener that doesn't bore me, it just makes me happy. He is wearable in any situation and, if you ask me, an absolute Crowdpleaser.
In this sense, happy sniffing
Admittedly, it is here less about the above-described scent of lemon, but much more about the blood orange. Nevertheless, this fruit counts as a citrus fruit for me. It is the main protagonist of the perfume and convinces me with its authenticity. Even if it comes across as very synthetic and squeaky at first, it then transforms into a real blood orange. A fruit whose reddish juice just emerges from the pulp and drips into a chilled glass. I'm on holiday again, the evening sun irradiating people's already tanned skin. The shallow summer warmth draws people out into the fresh air. And, I mean, what's better now than a touch of tangy-sweet lightness on the skin?
Arancia di Sicilia doesn't smother you - no - the scent is anything but dense. Rather, he warms cool hearts, provides a good mood and smiling faces. The fruitiness is rounded out brilliantly, though the only thing I really detect is a hint of cinnamon. And it is precisely this cuddly spice that gives the fragrance its warmth. Briefly, the spices even take over, leaving me to ponder... for a moment. Is this a pure spring-summer fragrance or does it also go in the winter?
But already a short moment later, the blood orange fights out again and lingers- magical.
To break the whole thing down a little:
For me, this scent is still too little on everyone's lips, because this is no ordinary citrus scent that just refreshes you. You get more than that.
It remains a spring-summer fragrance and so I too finally have a citrusy fruit freshener that doesn't bore me, it just makes me happy. He is wearable in any situation and, if you ask me, an absolute Crowdpleaser.
In this sense, happy sniffing
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