11/17/2018
Minigolf
295 Reviews
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Minigolf
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9
Sandalwood Rose Soap.....
...as I know her from the past.
In many places in the 70s and 80s there were such small Orient shops, which ran many "Indian" and "Afghan" shops. From colourful cotton blouses to flowing robes and pants to the finest scented oils and soaps.
And such beautiful fragrances in small flacons and the soaps to it I had already at that time always once again zugelegt.
Nowadays you can look for these shops with a magnifying glass, but luckily there are brands like "Al Haramain", "Swiss Arabian" and last but not least "Rasasi", which carry such "old-fashioned beautiful" perfumes and which are not too expensive.
I experience this fine surprise also with "Khaltat al Oudh", which I swapped here. A delicately spicy woody bitter rose determines the whole smell process. However, it does not remain static and uniform at a certain fragrance level, but slowly changes through different "phases".
From the slightly dominating woods in the beginning to a slightly dominating rose about in the middle to "hand giving" notes like amber... then fine patchouli with some musk... finally rose sandal again, delicately soapy, with a tendency towards the flowery-herbal-sweet.
A fragrance characteristic that can only be brought to bear through the interplay with the "idiosyncratic" sandalwood. Because this wood has so many olfactory facets and tones that it can even be considered an independent perfume.
And if, as it looks with "Khaltat al Oudh", still the real one was used, it is always much nostalgic smell for few coins.
With moderate to good shelf life and Sillage.
In many places in the 70s and 80s there were such small Orient shops, which ran many "Indian" and "Afghan" shops. From colourful cotton blouses to flowing robes and pants to the finest scented oils and soaps.
And such beautiful fragrances in small flacons and the soaps to it I had already at that time always once again zugelegt.
Nowadays you can look for these shops with a magnifying glass, but luckily there are brands like "Al Haramain", "Swiss Arabian" and last but not least "Rasasi", which carry such "old-fashioned beautiful" perfumes and which are not too expensive.
I experience this fine surprise also with "Khaltat al Oudh", which I swapped here. A delicately spicy woody bitter rose determines the whole smell process. However, it does not remain static and uniform at a certain fragrance level, but slowly changes through different "phases".
From the slightly dominating woods in the beginning to a slightly dominating rose about in the middle to "hand giving" notes like amber... then fine patchouli with some musk... finally rose sandal again, delicately soapy, with a tendency towards the flowery-herbal-sweet.
A fragrance characteristic that can only be brought to bear through the interplay with the "idiosyncratic" sandalwood. Because this wood has so many olfactory facets and tones that it can even be considered an independent perfume.
And if, as it looks with "Khaltat al Oudh", still the real one was used, it is always much nostalgic smell for few coins.
With moderate to good shelf life and Sillage.
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