12/05/2018
Minigolf
301 Reviews
Translated
Show original
Minigolf
Hot top, cold bottom... or was it the other way around?
So I picked out a scent to test, describe, categorize, visualize... but I don't know where to start.
One thing is certain: the perfume has two faces. Two sides, as separated from each other, but somehow together. The first time I dab on it (I have a mini of it) I feel a kind of heat, like hot orange juice steaming towards me.
In it becoming one with some jasmine and another warm fruit.
After this first phase, "Scapa Of Scotland" seems to cool down almost abruptly, as if ice-cold water was poured into it. No, water alone doesn't...it's more like ice cubes containing strong moss and wood extracts that melt quickly.
This "state of aggregation" remains for a longer period of time, although it bubbles inside, as if something is coming out, jolting, squeezing, straining.
To finally make it. Something rosy, almost spicy, with moss fragments and wood chips hanging from it, bizarrely shaped. Infused with red, green and brown.
And... warmer than just before. As if sunlight were pushing into a cold column.
The wooded coolness gives way to a summery warmth, amber and vanilla are the heating. They form the background and make the "Rosentroll" that was created before appear less surreal, the fragrance comes into a balance that unites both the warmth and the cold, still bubbling softly...
cool-warm-cool-warm.... but much more subtle. But... does that still want what out???? I don't know.
One thing is certain: the perfume has two faces. Two sides, as separated from each other, but somehow together. The first time I dab on it (I have a mini of it) I feel a kind of heat, like hot orange juice steaming towards me.
In it becoming one with some jasmine and another warm fruit.
After this first phase, "Scapa Of Scotland" seems to cool down almost abruptly, as if ice-cold water was poured into it. No, water alone doesn't...it's more like ice cubes containing strong moss and wood extracts that melt quickly.
This "state of aggregation" remains for a longer period of time, although it bubbles inside, as if something is coming out, jolting, squeezing, straining.
To finally make it. Something rosy, almost spicy, with moss fragments and wood chips hanging from it, bizarrely shaped. Infused with red, green and brown.
And... warmer than just before. As if sunlight were pushing into a cold column.
The wooded coolness gives way to a summery warmth, amber and vanilla are the heating. They form the background and make the "Rosentroll" that was created before appear less surreal, the fragrance comes into a balance that unites both the warmth and the cold, still bubbling softly...
cool-warm-cool-warm.... but much more subtle. But... does that still want what out???? I don't know.