Category: Fragrances
Brand: L’Artisan Parfumeur
Ingredients:
Where to buy Skin on Skin in the USA?
If you can’t find where to buy Skin on Skin 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 Skin on Skin.
How to find the best price on Skin on Skin?
We are always ready to offer you recommendations on where to buy Skin on Skin at one of the best price on Internet.
Please, feel free to follow the “check price” button to find price we chose for Skin on Skin .
mereCod8
This one opens up on me in a sweet burst of waxy iris (very much a lipstick scent!) and I LOVE that. Sweet and waxy right off the bat? Sign me up!
That starts to fade within about 10 minutes into a softer musky suede scent—still a hint of sweetness but no longer waxy. I get a little hint of the whiskey but this is far less boozy than I may have liked, once it’s on my skin. No lavender is present, which is fine with me as I love the blend and balance of what DOES show up as the scent warms and evolves.
I’ve had it on for 4.5 hours and it is indeed a skin scent, but a very pleasant one. Unique, and a keeper, but not in my top ten. As far as this line of L’artisan goes, my heart still belongs to Rappelle-Toi.
(crosspost)
insecureMallard7
This was like a partial Dzing. I swear they must have used the same leather or musk aromachemical. As a result, it seemed like only part of a fragrance. What was there smelled slightly plastic. I smelled zero whiskey or florals.
cockySardines6
Now, that’s weird. I bought a sample to try before buying. I was looking for a fragrance that would be close to the skin like those perfumes that you can’t tell if it’s the person that smells that good or if it’s some kind of perfume that blends perfectly with the skin. When I tried it for the first time I thought ‘I’m sooooo buying it right now’ but then I decided to try it for a second time before buying. Second time left me unimpressed. On the very next day though I got to wear the very same blouse that had ‘Skin on Skin’ on it. I couldn’t stop sniffing it! So, I used up the last 3rd of the sample and I’m buying it ASAP. It seems that it works well with my chemistry. For me it’s expensive leather, whisky and all. I’d say try before you buy it. It’s probably a love or hate fragrance. I don’t know if this will be of any help but I’m extremely pale with dry sensitive skin. If it works for you then it’s gonna be super addictive!
crummyFerret1
This certainly has sufficient strength and sillage. But I can smell the same harsh leather accord perfumer Bernard Dufauchour used in L’Artisan’s Traversee du Bosphore, an ingredient which ruins both fragrances for me. While some bloggers have reporting getting a desirable whiff of fine leather gloves, I get a scent memory of a certain gamey tannery in Morocco I once visited. Beautiful bottle but try before you buy.
grizzledOwl0
I like the work of Bertrand Duchaufour, I like LArtisan but I am rather underwhelmed with this new line from of the house.
Skin on Skin smells like the lovechild of two former Duchaufour creations, namely La Traverse du Bosphore and Cuir de Nacre. With Traverse du Bosphore it shares the slightly watery suede note but leaves the sugarspun notes out. With Cuir de Nacre, it again shares some chic, urban leather notes but the prominent ambrette note that adds an interesting sheen – even though I can not do ambrette- to the leather in Cuir de Nacre is missing. Of flowers, I get iris which seems to be trendy nowadays, especially coupled with leather.
Skin on Skin does not perform well on my skin, either. With a small dab I am able to sense what I have tried to describe above. With a proper spritz, I literally smell like a dirty cowhouse, a mix of unhappy animals and dung.
Definitely a no for me, I hope it performs better on others.
amazedSardines3
I tested Skin on Skin without reading the notes and immediately it reminded me of L’Artisan’s earlier masterpiece, Iris Pallida. It has a similar orris accord, though weaker, and Skin on Skin is much muskier than Iris Pallida. Still, if you can’t get ahold of the latter, Skin on Skin might be an acceptable substitute for some folks. When I went back and read the description of what this scent was *supposed* to be, I was a touch outraged. It would have been so much better if they hadn’t gotten cowardly with some bold notes. Where is the suede, L’Artisan? Whisky? Pah! And nary a hint of saffron.