Category: Fragrances
Brand: Ungaro
Ingredients:
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culturedAntelope8
This has all of the gloriousness of the late 80’s/early 90’s in one bottle. The resins and the fruit with amber, cinnamon, and patchouli? Heavenly. If you love vintage scents I urge you to hunt this one down. I blind bought it for a steal and I am so glad I did! The plum and peach open this one out, and in that almost ‘dusty’ way that the 90’s had with fruity scents (trust me, I prefer that over some of the fruit offerings we get these days!). On me the oppoponax is strong (in the best way) and it mixes with the amber, heliotrope, patchouli and cedar for an almost masculine resiny cloud. I have gotten so many compliments this morning! Cinnamon and carnation add a hint of spicy and I get orchid and jasmine wafts along with a tiny bit of ‘soapy’ that I’m ok with. This is truly a masterpiece. Well-blended but each note is like music to my nose. (If that makes sense). Ok, enough rhapsodizing! If you get a chance to try this one, I say go for it! Very worth it.
(crosspost)
pluckyOryx1
This was one of the first fragrances I met in my expansion into perfume madness. It came in an impressively huge sample vial, and I wanted to like it. There were reasons to. It had a number of stages, starting with sweet, roseate floral, passing through an increased chypre base into a ylang-ylang & sandalwood based incense mid note, and ending with mostly sweetened incense.
Fragrantica states: “Sparkling breeze of bergamot, grapefruit, coriander, mandarin, peach and gourmand plum greets you at the beginning of the composition. The heart follows with orange blossom, Damask rose, jasmine, carnation, heliotrope, orchid, seductive tuberose and ylang-ylang. Base notes include amber, benzoin, cedar, cinnamon, musk, opoponax, patchouli, sandalwood, velvet vanilla and Tonka.”
Of all that, there were (fortunately) no breezes greeting me, nor did I require a restraining order for a disembodied heart. Aside from all that, I got the bergamot, plum, and maybe a bit of peach, then orange blossom, rose, and heliotrope. I’m guessing a chunk of initial sweetness came from heliotrope and plum. Some tuberose may also have passed through in the floral thick of things. In the early middle and then throughout, I strongly got the ylang-ylang and sandalwood combo, a powdery sandalwood, that works into an incensic vibe. I definately got the spices, opoponax, patchouli, sandalwood, and vanilla, and they became stronger through the drydown.
Overarcing this, a whole lotta’ sweetness going down, up, sideways.
Senso is an 80’s powerhouse, and the bottle is exquisite. But, um, there’s kind of a lot of it. Senso could be pretty on the right person, and it smells rich and lovely, but it has big shoulder pads, a large hobo bag, really big and tottery spike heels, huge hair, alot of vivid makeup, and a penetrating voice. Maybe the cloud-spray technique would work.