Ingredients:
Where to buy Fleurs de Citronnier in the USA?
If you can’t find where to buy Fleurs de Citronnier near you, we can easily help you find a place where you can quickly and cheaply buy.
You can click on “check price” button and find out where to buy to buy Fleurs de Citronnier.
How to find the best price on Fleurs de Citronnier?
We are always ready to offer you recommendations on where to buy Fleurs de Citronnier at one of the best price on Internet.
Please, feel free to follow the “check price” button to find price we chose for Fleurs de Citronnier .
morbidHare5
The search for realistic lemon blossom continues. I expected an authentic blosdom scent but unfortunately that was overshadowed by the dominant presence of soapy musc. A bit disappointed I must say.
solidWigeon7
Pure bliss and summer in the perfume bottle! The drydown is truly wonderful, slightly powdery, luminous, radiant and shimmering. it is classified as an oriental fresh citrus, to me I feel this is citrus for those who don’t really like that olfactory category.
Fleurs de Citronnier is my favorite Serge Lutens fragrance right now AND it’s back in the regular Lutens line, bought my bottle from Luckyscent.
dejectedThrush0
Got a sample of this a while ago and wore it today, it’s a very light scent, nice, lightly sweet floral with some citrus and perhaps a slight hint of muskiness. It actually smells, IMO, a lot like bath and body works aromatherapy ylang-ylang myrrh, though I don’t think there’s any ylang-ylang or myrrh in it at all.
I applied a generous amount around 10:30AM and by 3pm I could barely detect it, I don’t think it had any sillage at all, much more of a skin scent. I do like it, it’s nice, but it just seems a bit too un-special to shell out 80$+ for under 2oz, especially when I have a very similar smelling scent in my bathroom that cost me 15$ for 4oz (smoothing oil from b&bw, very nice.). If I were rich and could purchase every scent I liked I would splurge, but alas, I am not, so I will not be purchasing this full size.
cruelOtter9
Smells like its name: Citrus flowers. I get orange blossoms with a touch of creaminess makes it smell like orange blossom hand lotion. It’s nice but doesn’t dazzle.
offendedFish7
As is often the case, my nose experiences something completely different than most on this one. I get no citrus at all, which is good. I just get a nice, soft, flowery scent that stays that way. I don’t get the soapy or musky notes that others mention. On me it’s just a pretty, simple blossom with sort of a creamy undertone. Maybe that’s the honey, but it doesn’t actually smell like honey. Where SL Fleur d’orange kind of overwhelms, this one stays gentle and is a lovely summer floral that still has good lasting power. If you like summery flower scents like La Chasse aux Papillon (which I love, but the pepperiness bugs me after awhile), this might be a good choice.
lovesickMare5
I was expecting lemony notes, and was amazed to find this smells exactly like Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Lotion for the first ten minutes. I was tempted to put a dollop of the pink stuff on my other arm to compare the two. After a few minutes, the perfume develops some depth, with an undertone that reminds me of Chanel #5. Nice, but still too much like baby lotion for me.
offendedPolenta5
That was rather dissapointing esp for SL! I am sorry to say that it initially reminded me of laundry detergent or a cheap, strong lemon cologne, without even giving me a sense of freshness ( maybe the musk is to blame). It smells rather perfume-y in a an old-fashioned way. After a few hours it becomes a rather pretty but generic soapy smell. Staying power and sillage are good but not full-bottle worthy for me.
pridefulDotterel3
Sicilians have this special ingredient they add to every dessert and pastry they are so good at making: it’s “Acqua di fiori d’arancio”, orange blossom water. It’s something lovely and magic to taste on sweets and candies, and it immediately takes me on an olfactory journey to Sicily. Now, neroli is another name for orange blossom and it appears on so many fragrances. In Fleurs de citronnier, neroli actually overcomes the lemon blossoms, which should be the protagonists if we judge by the name. It’s a pity, because I love the smell of lemon blossoms, a bit less the orange blossoms.
Well, the fragrance in itself is a masterpiece, I admit it: it has that special Lutens quality of keeping notes real, not perfume-y as almost all other perfumers achieve.
Yet I wouldn’t wear it on myself: it reminds me of a raw ingredient more suitable for pastry than scenting, it hasn’t much to do with Serge Lutens’ biggest fragrances, those exploding with smoke, musk, incense, amber and so forth. Definitely sample worthy, not bottle worthy for me.
stressedCaribou6
This is heaven in a bottle for me. It takes me back to being a girl playing with an old bottle of Avon scent on my dresser. I know this is not the hard sell for the fragrance, but it is one of those emotional responses that you cannot deny. I have a bottle and I find it so so sweet and unique. Its drydown is whispery soft and delightful. Fleurs D’oranger is nothing like this–heavy, downtrodden and winter/fall. This is airy and breathy like a gauzy crinkled skirt and suits a warm hot humid clime (which is unfortunately not where I am at the moment). LOVE! and an HG.
jumpyMackerel9
“Kennst du das Land, wo die Zitronen blühn?” – the land where the lemon trees blossom? This place, so evocatively described by Goethe, may now be visited thanks to Serge Lutens. Just spritz on some Fleurs de Citronnier, and there you are. This scent is a ray of pure sunshine, with bright floral notes of lemon blossom, neroli, and tuberose, undergirded by light, sweet honey and musk. Quite a fragile creation, gossamer-light, yet the lasting power is amazingly good. Fleurs de Citronnier never fails to put a smile on my face.