Showing posts with label perfume. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perfume. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2019

5 Stereoplasm Reviews: Miss Pollywobble - Bumblywitch Fare - Dreaming Kitten - In Pace, In Fiori - La Mia Magia!



Surprise! There's a review set today! I'm not gone, just slow. 2020 might end up being the year of the tortoise for me.

When I got my last Stereoplasm package it contained press samples of their Cozyfoot Cabin series and two of their La Vita a Lecce series. That's what we're covering today!

New year means, for me, tweaks to the review format. Y'all will probably notice some small changes down in the reviews - most notably I've altered how I do my "verdicts". I'm also going to try and get my methods section briefer. Links to the individuals scents will be paired with the reviews now instead of up top!

( P.S. Don't worry, friends - it's faux fur in the photograph. )

On to the reviews:

Methods:

Time rested: A few weeks

Where were they kept: Cardboard box in a drawer.

Was there a risk of scent cross contamination: Minimal - the scents were tested on different days, and skin was not "reused". I do use scented lotions and soaps most days - so small risk.

Bottle (re)review:

It's been a while since I originally reviewed Stereoplasm's 1mls and they've changed a little! I wanted to give a fresh review here. These little bottles are screw tops (yay), and are clearly labeled in a legible font. The tops screw on well, and there were no leaks with this order! I find it very easy to apply a good amount from each bottle. The labels hold up well to standard use.

Reminder: Each nose and each skin's chemistry is different. Your mileage may vary.

Miss Pollywobble [ store link ]

In the bottle: The first thing I smell my brain screams SWEATER. Woolen? Cotten? I don’t know, but it’s got that kind of slightly-stinging textile scent to it I associate with warm sweaters (jumpers for my European friends). Under that is something a touch green and leafy - tea maybe? A dried leaf accord? There’s a touch of something classic and golden-floral to round it all out over a woodsy note (cedar?).

Wet on my skin: Nutty, slightly gourmand and pale-brown note at the top mixing with that sweater-textile scent. Midnotes are still leafy, tea reminiscent green and a bit of sharp piquancy from a classically perfumey floral. Base note of what I’m pretty sure is cedar.

Drydown: The nutty scent dies back quite a bit but is still there mingling with the textile note. Under that is still tea leaves and whatever that classically-perfumey floral. The base is still cedarish. I also am wondering if there’s an alcoholic note in this - there’s that degree of sharpness to the scent. It smells kind of like an androgynous, elderly forest witch who drinks tea and brandy (perhaps not together).

After 30 mins: Stable to the drydown, perhaps a little fainter. Strong scent starts right at skin level - not much of cloud at all. Good for a relatively subtle scent - though I do wish it had more throw to it.
Official Notes: Chopped maplewood, chimney smoke, english breakfast tea, gingerbread and black currant jam.

Oh wow. Okay, let’s run through this. At the top the brown, nutty note is the gingerbread. I don’t know what’s smelling like a sweater to me in here (I’d guess some of the earthy black currant + a touch from the smoke). The black currant jam isn’t terribly sweet or fruity at all - mostly slightly sweet foresty earthiness. The almost-alcoholic sharp smell is the chimney smoke. The tea is the tea. The woody base is the chopped maplewood. The kind of ‘classically perfumey’ smelling note in here is probably some of the maple combining with the smoke and maybe even part of the black currant.

Verdict: For me this is a ‘won’t wear much’ scent. In terms of personal preference the scent reads a bit too ‘mature’ for me in a snuggly, witch-at-the-end-of-the-path way. While I do like smelling like a forest witch I like to think I lean a bit more Granny Weatherwax than Nanny Ogg - and add in a stiff shot of apple alcohol and you’d have a Nanny Ogg scent on your hands here.

The scent’s greatest strength is capturing that kind of ‘cozy’ hygge vibe the collection is going for - it’s greatest weaknesses are the lack of throw and the lack of almost any fruitiness from the black currant. Aside from the smoke, tea, and maple I wish every note in here were a touch stronger.

Bumblywitch Fare [ store link ]

I recall this one having a chocolate chip cookie note.

In the bottle: Delicate coffee, chocolate, and a sweet sugared resin. The sugared resin reminds me a lot of the ‘pink sugar’ note that Stereoplasm has used before. There might be a floral buried in here too - something sweet and feminine, but it’s hard to tell under the coffee and chocolate. Touch of creaminess in the scent.

Wet on my skin: Creamy coffee, toast and chocolate layered over resin. With the toast… did this have a poppy-bread note? There might be a floral like heather mixed in with the sweet resin (think an amber) at the base.

Drydown: Coffee-like note dominates. It’s a little sharp - like espresso, but also very creamy and sweet like it’s brown-sugar sweetened (I might be imagining things but something about this is also reminiscent of chai spices). Beneath that is the chocolate and the poppy-seed toast smell. Amber at the base with a touch of what I think is heather.

After 30 mins: Stable to the drydown. This has a strong throw on it as well - kept getting whiffs at arm’s length. Strong scent cloud starts about 2 inches from skin.

Official Notes: Country spice cake, chocolate chip cookies, orange cream and warm hazelnut coffee.
So! The ‘toast’ or ‘poppy-seed bread note’ and the ‘chai spices’ are the spice cake. The chocolate - and probably some of the ‘sugared amber’ notes are the chocolate chip cookies. The orange cream is the creamy scent, and I can see a tiny touch of orange in here - it’s more floral than fruity though. The hazelnut coffee is the coffee I was getting. I’m going to guess the amber/resin I’m getting is part of the chocolate chip cookie accord.

Verdict: Great winter scent! I’m debating how often I will wear it - but I know if this were available in lotion or candle form I’d be lighting that candle up all winter and using that lotion frequently. This scent reminds me of a slightly richer, more complex, slightly lighter-on-coffee version of Sucreabeille’s Cup of Ambition. So if you like that coffee scent you’ll probably like this one too.

The strengths of this scent are its rich chocolate, the contrast of light and airy with dark, rich, and earthy gourmands, and it’s stellar throw. In terms of weaknesses - I can see this perhaps being too earthy-dark-bitter for the people who like sweet scents, and a little too sweet for the people who usually like earthy scents. I also think this would be a scent that’s a bit too heavy to wear outside of cool weather.

Dreaming Kitten [ store link ]

In the bottle: Pink, powdery, soft and lavender-y. At the top I get a soft, powdery note I think might be cashmere (I remember this having some sort of cashmere or fur accord I think). Below that is a bright pink floral and what I’m pretty sure is lavender. All of this is wrapped up in a soft, musky base. The scent is very floral-sweet, powdery, and feminine musky.

Wet on my skin: Pink grapefruit - I think that’s what I was reading as a floral. It’s hardly sweet at all the the fruity nuances only came out once it was out of the bottle. Beneath that is a floral I’m still pretty sure is lavender and that powdery soft cashmere-or-fur note. At the base is musk. The scent smells kind of bubbly-clean and girly. Imagine slashes of aggressively pastel pink, purple, and gray.

Drydown/After 30 mins: Got distracted and neglected to write down the drydown. So! Notes on the scent.

It’s morphed considerably. A lot of the powderiness and sharp pastels have died down leaving a sweetly white floral (reminds me a lot of one of the florals in First Bloom) and citrus musk scent. It’s still quite feminine - but not so much as when it was applied. The creamy musk, white floral and citrus dominate with a hint of soft fur/cashmere and a touch of lavender and a breath of powder.
This scent has an extremely strong throw. Could smell it constantly at arm’s length. Up close the scent cloud begins about 3-4 inches out and is kinda semi-unsmellable because it’s so strong.. But at a distance it’s All Dreaming Kitten All The Time.

Official Notes: Soft bed sheets sweetened with honeysuckle, bergamot, ginger and himalayan fur.

So, the powdery-clean-bubbly-lavender note is probably the ‘sheets’ accord. The honeysuckle is the white floral, the bergamot is the citrus. I can see the ginger in here blending with the citrus and adding some of the creaminess. The ‘sweet fur’ and ‘musk’ must be that himalayan fur.

Verdict: I did not care for this in its initial stages - it read as too soapy-clean to my nose. As it mellowed over time and the honeysuckle and bergamot (two of my favorite notes!) came out I found myself liking it a lot more. As it stands this scent is a ‘wear extremely rarely’ or ‘never wear’ for me partially because I’m not jiving with those initial stages and partially because it’s very, very feminine/girly. If you think that First Bloom was girly (I read is as a more gender-neutral-femme) this is like that times 5. That said it does mature well, and if you like powdery, clean, feminine scents this one is probably worth checking out.

In Pace, In Fiori [ store link ]

In the bottle: Ultra realistic, fresh flowers. I feel like I’m getting lilac in here - but I could be wrong. There might also by hyacinth? Think fresh, purple flowers hanging from vines (there is a touch of green in here). Maybe a bit of white musk at the base? But in the bottle it is just Flower City with a bit of green.

Wet on my skin: Hyper realistic flowers still - you can smell the petals. Very green, very floral in that kind of purple-flower way. A little tropical almost. Greenery is mixed in with the flowers. I feel like I’m getting a touch of musk and a touch of something a little different in here too - maybe a kind of sweet-stone note.

Drydown: Feminine, fresh, super realistic flowers (lilac I’m guessing - and I think another), greenery, stone, something else (I keep waffling on what this is. Is it fruity like grapes? It it resinous?), stone and clean, faint musk.

After 30 mins: Same as the drydown. Still can’t place that one note.

Wears quite strong - scent cloud starts 6 inches from application site and I kept getting whiffs of it throughout the test period.

Official Notes: Bougainvillea, wisteria covered stone walls, green leaves, blossoming black locust tree, sun-baked sampietrini, a cotton dress, orange blossom honey.

Well, the florals are the florals - the wisteria is probably what reminds me of lilac. The greenery is the green leaves and black locust. The sampietrini and stone walls at the stone note - the kind of ‘clean musk’ must be the cotton dress. The orange blossom honey is that scent I couldn’t place that was kind of fruity, kind of resinous.

Verdict: Waaaay too femme for me. But if someone’s looking for a straight floral… the flowers here dominate to a degree that I initially wondered if this had nothing but floral notes. The strengths of this scent are it’s throw, the cloud of florals (flower lovers rejoice), and the subtle notes that come out as it dries down. The weaknesses are that the strength of it can be a double edged sword (apply with care) and that for indie fans it might be a bit too straight forward with ‘very femme flowers’.

La Mia Magia! [ store link ]

In the bottle: Sugared lemons, vanilla, honey (lots of honey), and a tiny touch of something a little medicinal in a strongly musky (think skin or Egyptian musk) base.

Wet on my skin: Lemons and that kind-of-medicinal note come forward. The medicinal note almost reminds me of Stereoplasm’s sunscreen accord. Think… the lemon squares from Lovesick Lake (sugar, lemons, vanilla) combined with sunscreen and honey all in a musky base. I really like this one but I will warn that we’re talking very musky here. I like very musky. Musks and I get along. I know this isn’t true for everyone.

Something in the amount this is blending and the particular balance of the scent reminds me of an Alkemia scent! If you like Alkemia’s musks this one will probably fit broadly into your tastes.

Drydown: Relatively stable to how it was wet. The lemons have died back some and I feel like I’m getting a touch of baked good in here. Still getting the honey and the sunscreen/medicinal note. And musk. A bunch of musk.

With this scent it’s wearing ultra, ultra strong. I actually applied too much of it - I tend to slather for reviews and in this case less it more. If you purchase this I’d advise applying conservatively then working up with it.

After 30 mins: The lemons have returned! Woo! This is probably my favorite balance of the scent. All the elements are still there but the bright lemons are bright again and the musk has calmed itself some. Bright, a tiny bit gourmand in a citrus way, and gender neutral.

As mentioned earlier this has a heckuva throw on it. Scent cloud starts 4-6 inches from the application site.

Official Notes: Velvet carpet, melting beeswax candles, dusty vials of dragon's blood, gilded rosewood wooden mask, labdanum, crackling electricity, well-worn playing cards.

Okay - wow. Let’s break this down.

The lemon I think has to be the crackling electricity. The ‘sunscreen’ type smell is probably the playing cards. The musk in this is probably the velvet carpet accord and Stereoplasm’s particular dragon’s blood (which in previous scents has gone musky instead of resinous). The beeswax is probably what I was interpreting as ‘musky honey’. The rosewood is probably that little sort of medicinal smell. There’s not much ozonic, metallic, or even particularly resinous to it. The smells smell organic, sweet, and natural.

I dunno in here what was reading kind of gourmand to me (there’s something kind of nutty) and what’s got me thinking ‘vanilla’ - but I’m definitely getting something. I also don’t know where the labdanum is fitting in other than adding a bit of darkness and depth to the scent - maybe a tiny edge of resinousness.

Verdict: I can totally see this as a musky old bookshop or magic shop with some honey-lemon bars on the counter. This will be a ‘wear sometimes in early spring rotation’ scent for me. The scent’s strengths are it’s lovely musks and the kind of creamy, lemony sweetness it embodies. The lemons smell sweet and fresh and not remotely ‘floor cleaner’. The scent’s weaknesses are that I don’t think it matches the given notes on the site perfectly and that it is very, very strong compared to most Stereoplasm scents I’ve tried. It needs to be used conservatively - and actually would make a good EDP/spray scent.

I also think it would make an amazing soap/lotion scent. It’s got this kind of softness and breadth to it that I think would make for a good ‘base’ scent for layering.

Friday, November 29, 2019

A Winter's Ball Day 4: Truth Universally Acknowledged from Deconstructing Eden

It's early - and by early, I mean late for me. I partook of the turkey, of the dressing, of the sweet potatoes, corn pudding, and rolls and I fell into a deep slumber far earlier than I should have, awoke in the middle of the night and then was like 'Aw, nuts'.  One thing followed another and now it's 10 in the morning (very late for me) and I'm getting the post up.

So right now I'm very much in a 'How Human Use Word???' mode. So this intro will be brief. Today we're looking at Deconstructing Eden's addition to the A Winter's Ball set - Truth Universally Acknowledged. Which is kinda special to me because well... I was all like 'omg I hope at least one perfume is called that' and Toni had my back.

This review ended up being kind of special because it introduced me to a new perfumery family: fougere. As far as I know this is my first time smelling a fougere! Fancy.

To cover the bases: This perfume was rested somewhere between three days and a week (closer to five days but not a hundred percent sure). The packaging on this particular lil sample was so hot off the presses that it lacked a label! The big version of this that comes in the box does come complete with label however. (Here is where I spent far too long wondering if a winky-face emoji would be too disruptive to my writing style).

Since this is an EDP (and sealed in a bottle I can't figure out how to get open) I eliminated the bottle sniff section and combined the wet/drydown section... EDPs tend to dry super fast!



Truth Universally Acknowledged 

Wet on my skin/Drydown:  Musk and rich wood.  Sweet, arched with dark browns and golds with a kind of sharp floral edge to it.

So at the top I’m getting a bit of a piquant/sharp floral combined with a spice (cinnamon maybe?) coupled with another floral (kind of reminds me of a rose or even a lotus).  Under that is sweet musk (like a sweet-clove musk or a sugar-musk even) in the middle and below that rich woods with a bit of a citrus bite to them (reminds me of freshly cleaned wood).

After 30 mins: Rose at the top. Smooth and soft now - no sharp edges.  Under that I get a sweet musk (that kind of reminds me of clove), wood of some sort, and a touch of sweet amber. Maybe a tiny citrus bite in there (or something a little bitter) to balance out the sweet.

I do want to note for those with certain preferences:  The sweetness in this keeps verging right on the edge of bubblegummy for me - I think it’s the particular kind of sweet and musk in this. On some sniffs it’ll be like ‘oh that’s rich and musky and dark red’ and on others it’ll be ‘that’s kind of bubblegum’. There’s also like a tiny, tiny bit of powderiness to the scent.

Wears pretty close to the skin - strong scent cloud starts an inch or two away.

Official Notes: Rosewood and mahogany bookshelves, Russian leather chairs, a simple eau de cologne of English lavender, Bergamot, and fougere accord, a glass of cognac, a river of scotch, and tobacco absolute.

Interesting! So let’s break this down:

The rose is the rosewood - I’d say is smells more like the flower than the wood to me. The sharp floral at the start I’d bet good money is the lavender. The leather is a tiny touch in there blending with some of the later scent.

I’m going to bet the ‘sweet musk’ and ‘spice’ notes I was getting are the fougere and cognac - and I’d bet it was the cognac that sometimes went a little ‘bubblegum’ to my nose. Because I’m still learning a lot about perfumery I had to google what fougere is - and I’m guessing ‘sweet, musky, spiced, powdery - like a clove musk’ is my nose’s best attempt at describing that scent without knowing what it was! The scotch is what I bet I was interpreting as an amber, and the mahogany is the smooth wood/resin at the base.

Oh, and the bergamot is that nip of bitter citrus I was getting. I’m not sure how the tobacco absolute fits in - maybe it’s adding some of the sweetness?

It’s a pretty gender neutral scent - wasn’t sure where else in the review to note that, but, in my book that’s often a plus.

Verdict: Torn! I need to spend some more time with this one. This one excited me when I put it on, and when I got a non-bubblegum sniff. I was less excited about the bubblegum-sniffs. As the scent wears longer though some of the bitter undertones are coming out to balance out that sweetness. As it stands this scent is either a ‘keep my sample but don’t upsize’ or a ‘eventually upsize after spending some time with it’.

You can get this scent as part of the A Winter's Ball set found [ here ]! The set is on the pricey side (it's a luxury box!). However! Sucreabeille is also running a sale right now (11/29/19) and this would push you up into some of the higher tiers all on its own... so you'd get a box of lovelies and a bunch of other swag along with it.

Monday, November 25, 2019

A Winter's Ball: Day 1 - Lizzy's Fine Dark Eyes from Sucreabeille

So! Day 1 of A Winter's Ball. We start with our heroine, Elizabeth Bennett.  Of all the features that caught (and held) the enigmatic Mr. Darcy's attention it was her eyes that captivated him initially.  So often in our culture we hear praises sung of light colored eyes - hazel, green, blue and even sometimes grey - but it's unfortunately kind of rare to hear the beauty of dark eyes discussed.

Elizabeth's eyes are special because they show her soul, her wit, her intelligence and her strength. And they're famously a beautiful rich dark color.

For this review I'm going to do things a bit differently -  y'all know my methods and my opinions on Suc's drams can be found in my archives. So, I'm gonna cover the relevant different bits up here: I rested this dram for roughly a week and I think the packaging on this is lovely!


Lizzy’s Fine Dark Eyes (Sucreabeille)

In the bottle:  Ginger. Sparkling, crystal ginger. A lot of the time ginger in indie perfumes is not recognizable to me - it lacks the bit of sharpness real ginger is and falls a little flat. This is beautiful, sharp, fresh ginger. Behind the ginger are some uh… other things? They’re harder to pick out. A spray of florals? Bergamot? Hard to tell. Amber base I think.

Wet on my skin: Ginger is more muted but still there, still quite fresh.  Layered over what’s definitely florals (they also smell fresh), something sweet (honey maybe?), and a tiny touch of bitterness that screams ‘bergamot’ to me. Resinous base that’s either a wood or an amber - golden in color.

Feminine (but not overly so), refined smelling, somewhat traditional in terms of perfumery - but lots of shimmering golds, soft whites, and smooth browns.  Appropriate given the subject matter.

Drydown:  The ginger is back - still not as strong as in the bottle, but it’s definitely the first thing I get when I sniff this. Behind it is the… flower or bitter citrus. Something along those lines. Touch of sweetness and then that resin. Wears strong on the skin with the scent cloud starting about 3 inches away.

After 30 mins: Still wearing about the same as the drydown. Sparkling ginger, floral/bitter citrus type smell, bit of sweetness, and resin.  Dry, sweet, mature (but not old - just ‘grown up), elegant and feminine.

Very mild throw, scent cloud is the same as is described in the drydown.

Official Notes: Orchids and chamomile blend with lavender, ylang ylang and hyssop. Peach blossom, sandalwood, and sparkling aldehyde bring lift and depth.

I am deeply, deeply shocked this doesn’t have ginger in it. What? W H A T? It smells exactly like ginger.

SO I’m guessing the ‘ginger’ is the aldehyde, chamomile, hyssop and lavender. The floral/bitter citrus smell I’m gonna guess is the orchid/peach blossom. The sweetness is probably the ylang ylang since they can go so sweet. The resin at the base is the sandalwood.

Verdict: Okay, so, I really like how this one smells but I don’t think I’ll personally upsize from the dram because it’s a smidge too feminine for me. It’s probably the most ‘refined’ scent I’ve tried from Sucreabeille to date though - and would be very wearable in an upscale workplace or at events. Also - ginger fans - this smells like real, honest to God, ginger.

You can get this scent as part of the A Winter's Ball set found [ here ]! The set is on the pricey side (it's a luxury box!). However! Sucreabeille is also running a sale right now (11/25/19) and this would push you up into some of the higher tiers all on its own... so you'd get a box of lovelies and a bunch of other swag along with it.

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

5 Sucreabeille Yule Reviews! Belsnickel + Fouettard + Gryla + Krampus + Perchta

Originally I was gonna review a set of purchased Sucreabeille scents on Friday because Andrea had asked for some feedback on her catalog and I'd been sitting on these since June? July? Some obscene amount of time anyway. But then a package slid into my mailbox with these five Yule scents and-
Well.
I've gotten this vibe this year that we're all ready for winter. Even people who normally are not Christmas' biggest fans are ready for some solstice action this year. We all seem to want to set something on fire (candles, yule logs, bonfires, the turkey that we don't actually wanna eat) this year.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it was just me - but as soon as it ticked into November it's like a switch flipped. I'm ready to gaze out over endless snowy expanses with the golden eyes of a snowy owl as black trees reach into a sky speckled with infinite stars. I am down for some celebrations vis-à-vis the triumph of light over dark.
I'm gonna gamble that I'm picking up on something in the collective unconscious and the solstice bug has been biting harder than usual this year.
So.
I made an executive decision to instead wait 24 hours after these arrived and start reviewing them. That, and, spoilers, Krampus smells kinda like clean eggnog and I thought people ought to know about that.
The perfumes covered in today's review are:

Methods
All perfumes in this review were allowed to rest for at least 24 hours (some were rested 48+ hours) after arrival. The perfumes were kept in the dark in a plastic box if small enough. If too large for a box they generally sit on top of a bookcase or bedside table, or inside of a drawer. I did crack them open to sniff them directly after arrival, and with a couple to do an initial test. The reviews are not based off of these initial impressions - though if a rest did change the smell I’ll note that.
I’m doing a half-hour skin test with each perfume. They are always applied to skin that has either been washed or hasn’t had perfume on it that day. Sometimes I will run one scent on one wrist/hand/arm and the other on the other wrist/hand/arm. When I wash my hands for review purposes I wash with Dove sensitive skin, honeysuckle Meyer’s Clean Day or citrus Doc Bronner’s.
Before doing test periods I often wear or play with other scents in my collection (that I wash off). I also am often wearing scented lotion on my feet and ankles (that I do not wash off). Sometimes I wear scented hair products simultaneously. Theoretically there could be cross-contamination.
For oils: Each sample was gently swirled before application. Then applied directly to skin - typically the top of my arm or the back of my hand.
Each review is written without looking at the notes in that moment. Frequently I will glance at a perfume’s notes beforehand. At the end of the review I will list what the official notes are and comment on how I think they interacted.
Bottle Review
You can see my review of Sucreabeille's 10ml bottles [ here ].
A reminder: Each nose is different and each skin’s chemistry is different. Your mileage may vary.
Belsnickel
In the bottle: So as mentioned above I was gonna stick it to The Man and review these all but fresh outta the mailbox. But I’m glad I ended up waiting 24 hours because… this one morphed! Originally it was all black-black-black earthy scents dominated by a super strong, black coffee.
Now it’s still got all that there… but it’s died waaay back. You get this initial hit of coffee and then the scent opens up into marshmallows and coconut cream underscored by dark, earthy and black-resinous notes.
Wet on my skin: Coffee sweetened by marshmallows and coconut, scorched wood, and something kind of like… between latex and skin? Almond maybe? So at the top you have the sweet notes, then under that the burnt wood and the kind of skin-latex scent. (Maybe it’s another kind of nut? Chestnut? It’s kind of got the nut-meat odor to it)
Drydown: And the dark smells and that weird nut-latex smell have mellowed! What’s at the front now is coconut and marshmallow underscored by coffee with a faint hint of nuttiness and burnt wood in there.
After 30 mins: Going strong and about the same as the drydown! I’ll admit, this one gave my a bit of a scare with how it smelled wet - but it dried down super nicely.
Good throw on it - gotten whiffs throughout of coffee and coconut in particular - strong scent cloud starts about 3 inches out.
Official Notes: Hot espresso with juniper berries and brown sugar
So the hot espresso is the coffee - and the juniper berries must be that odd note that smelled kind of nutty and kinda latexy at first. The sweet note is the brown sugar. I’m betting the burnt wood smell is where the juniper berries and brown sugar are mingling. I have no idea where I’m getting coconut (maybe the espresso is a coconut espresso?).
Verdict: Keeping my 10ml. I will warn that for some people this could be a challenging scent depending on how it dries down - but I like this one as a sweet coffee scent from Sucreabeille even better than Cup of Ambition.
Fouettard
In the bottle: Oranges at the top underscored by a piquant herb - a mint or lavender or something - with a resinous base. Something like a sandalwood. There’s something creamy in here too - might be part of the resin or might be separate. Creamy, citrusy, almost medicinal.
Wet on my skin: From a distance a thick buttery smell and then as I get closer WHOOF medicinal to the point of almost being alcoholic.
At the top - strong, piquant herb - think a medicinal lavender or a piquant wormwood mingling with oranges. Under that a creamy scent and then a resin that strongly reminds me of sandalwood - creamy, golden, and a tiny bit earthy.
Drydown: Clean, slightly medicinal and slightly powdery. Oranges at the top wreathed in that medicinal herb. Under that is the creamy-slightly-powdery smell and the resin I’m pretty sure is sandalwood. This scent would be nice as a kind of creamy-oranges soap.
After 30 mins: About the same. Maybe a touch muskier, but stable to the drydown otherwise. Wears quite strong - plenty of throw. Strong scent cloud starts 6 inches away or so.
Official Notes: Bright oranges and vanillas with a playful splash of red rose
I am not sure what went so medicinal in here! Maybe one of the oranges, or one of the vanillas? But I definitely got orange as in this-smells-like-orange juice, and I can see vanillas adding both creamy and powdery elements.
I can totally see the rose as being the musky kind-of-like-sandalwood smell when it’s put in front of me. Paired with the oranges and vanillas the rose reads more golden than red.
Verdict: Not my thing personally! But if you know someone who wants to smell like a clean creamsicle with a bit of a medicinal kick to it (heck, that someone might be you) then give this one a spin. A pass from me.
Gryla
I recall this one having vanilla and black pepper as notes. A while ago Andrea assured me that their black pepper was an accord that didn’t contain the actual plant - so allergy safe for me!
In the bottle: Vanilla, something a little sharp like mint, a spice (probably that black pepper) and something thickly sweet and kind of gourmand. Like vanilla pudding - or buttercream.
Wet on my skin: Thick, almost alcoholic vanilla gourmand with some spice. Like Bailey’s Irish Cream with spice (probably black pepper). Tiny bit of something minty at the edges but it’s pretty much lost in the Ultra Thick Vanilla.
Drydown: Black pepper at the top - fairly strong - over soft vanillas (no longer alcoholic smelling) with a bit of something extra. The extra is that tiny touch of something mint-like and also something creamy verging on powdery. It gives a scent a delicate, slightly refined character under the spice.
After 30 mins: The biggest difference from the drydown is the more it wears A) the more that mint-like smell moves forward and B) I feel like I’m getting a salt note in here with the pepper. It might just be the frequent pairing of salt-and-pepper in day to day life fooling my nose though.
Otherwise the scent is about the same - black pepper, salt and that minty-herbal smell layered over creamy-and-slightly-powdery vanilla.
Official Notes: Two vanillas swirl with sharp peppercorns
So - the pepper must be what smells almost salty to me. I’m not sure what has that kind of herbal-minty vibe unless it’s one of the vanillas… or the way one of the vanillas interacts with the peppercorns. The powdery-creamy must be another of the vanillas.
Verdict: A simple scent that I think will go over well with people who are fond of black pepper and wintery vanillas that have a kind of classical femme vibe to them. Not so much my thing - so a pass from me.
Krampus
In the bottle: Eggnog. With nutmeg. I recall this having nutmeg.
Wet on my skin: Eggnog. With nutmeg. Over something with a bit of a sharp woody bite to it … Or is that just part of the nutmeg?
Drydown: Eggnog - a little on the lighter, cleaner, slightly powdery side … with nutmeg. And maybe some wood in there at the base. It’s surprisingly delicate for a Krampus themed scent.
After 30 mins: Heavy nutmeg layered over eggnog and a kind of clean, textile scent. Surprisingly delicate and pale.
Official Notes: Rich vanillas, freshly ground nutmeg, Christmas spices, children's tears
The rich vanillas, nutmeg, and Christmas spices must be what smells like eggnog with nutmeg. The children’s tears must be that clean, surprisingly delicate note that reminds me of the textile scents that Suc uses sometimes
Verdict: I liked this one best in the bottle when it was eggnog city - but with how it dries down while I wouldn’t wear it as a personal scent I would totally use it as a soap. Can I do a one human write in campaign for a Krampus soap? The world needs Krampus soap. UPDATE: Right before posting this I saw that the Sucreabeille FB group was voting on what products to have as bath/body during December and right now Krampus is at the top of the list. Y'all... please help me make Krampus soap a reality if you're a member of the Suc FB group.
Perchta
In the bottle: I remember when I read the descriptions of these scents a while ago that one of them was a green one and… this is it I’m pretty sure. It’s green.
At the top I get green apple and green fir (or mint, not sure) layered over green grass. The greenest grass. Are you missing green in the middle of a landscape of gourmands and snowy whites? Perchta has you covered. In green.
Wet on my skin: An initial wave of GRASS. Like, how a lawnmower smells after cutting the yard levels of grass. After the initial slam you get the mint and a bit of apple. But this is like Grass The Scent with some nuances in there.
Drydown: The mint and apple are a little more prominent but this is still Grass City. If you need a lawn (with that trademark strong-sharp-bitter-green freshly cut grass has) with mint and apple skin in it… here’s your scent! It’s green! It’s slightly bitter! It’s vegetation smelling!
After 30 mins: Still very grassy but I’m getting a touch more apple now. But still grass-apple-mint. Powerfully green.
Official Notes: bright grassy greens, fresh basil, crushed peppermint
Oh hey it’s basil not apple skin. I guess basil smells a lot like apple skins do? Anyway, the rest of it is… yup greens and peppermint. I want to note that the mint is a subtle edge to this and not overwhelming… but the grass in this is quite powerful.
Verdict: If y’all have spent any time reading my reviews you already know where this is going. I don’t like the smell of fresh cut grass and that’s like 85-90% of this perfume. It’s pretty straightforward, and I figure those of you who want a fairly straightforward GREEN GREEN GREEN scent will already have determined if this is for you or not based on the info above. A hard pass from me though. UPDATE: So, there were a couple of hours between writing this and posting. The perfume is still wearing strong with a solid throw but the grass is much more subdued now - it's all sweet basil at a distance and up close it's sweet basil with a hint of mint and some grassy nuances.