10/26/2021
Lioncourt
60 Reviews
Lioncourt
1
The opposite to indifference in a smooth way: bottled
It has reminded me of a well-known (and mainly recognised as that) olfactory "bomb" such as Red Tobacco de Mancera.
I suppose it is the balm & rose combination that gives that peculiar smell that does not smell of either of the two things separately.
What remains after the striking entry is a powerful amber base and I'd say musky or sweetened in a way that I don't know whether to attribute entirely to the declared vanilla.
It is unisex to dress with personality, with interesting effects to show off in social settings where it might be desirable.
Unfortunately, it obviously lacks the overwhelming force that Red Tobacco had when it became a legend and still falls short of the performance that Mancera perfume still has today.
It does have a decent, standard niche duration, but it doesn't have a good silage or projection.
As an attention-grabbing perfume, it is going to need a very pronounced over-application, with repetition from time to time, so it can surely become very expensive.
I suppose it is the balm & rose combination that gives that peculiar smell that does not smell of either of the two things separately.
What remains after the striking entry is a powerful amber base and I'd say musky or sweetened in a way that I don't know whether to attribute entirely to the declared vanilla.
It is unisex to dress with personality, with interesting effects to show off in social settings where it might be desirable.
Unfortunately, it obviously lacks the overwhelming force that Red Tobacco had when it became a legend and still falls short of the performance that Mancera perfume still has today.
It does have a decent, standard niche duration, but it doesn't have a good silage or projection.
As an attention-grabbing perfume, it is going to need a very pronounced over-application, with repetition from time to time, so it can surely become very expensive.