Category: Fragrances
Brand: Unlisted Brand
Ingredients:
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needyOrange8
I am at a loss to describe this fragrance – can a fragrance be a warm, enveloping spicy rose and still be fresh and sparkling? Sweet, but not cloying, this is a marvelous fragrance! There is citrus, rose, vanilla and whatever note makes this a “chypre”. Comforting bursts of cinnamon waft engagingly, weaving in and out of the perfume. I get a hint of powder in the drydown – not baby powder but fancy powder. This is a “big” scent but not overwhelming. Don’t overspritz – no need – it lasts and lasts. It sings on the skin and has lovely silliage. See, Andy CAN make a gorgeous fragrance without birch tar! While the rose is definately present, I am awful at trying to describe it – it is perhaps closest to the candied rose of Rose Brulure but fresher. It is not a Montale rose, certainly not a sour rose or a L’occitane rose. If you showed me all the notes in this scent, I think I would shrug and think to myself “rose, cinnamon, bay leaf….WHAT?!?! This will NEVER work” and yet is does – all the notes are discernable but blended together beautifully into a sum larger than all the parts. Well done! I feel “grown up” when I wear this special scent and will treasure it.
joyfulKitten4
Chypres are my fragrance Kryptonite. They’re almost always too heavy on me, too stuffy, too matronly…just too much. I’ve tried making friends with Mitsouko and other beloved chypre classics. In fact, I’ve tried, re-tried and tried again. We don’t click. I wish we did, and I’m sure our rift is due to the lowbrow nature of my nose, but whatever. When a sample of Andy Tauer’s new Une Rose Chyprée landed in my mailbox, I stared at it suspiciously for a few days before working up the courage to apply it.
Good lord, the man is a magician. How does he do it? It’s a deep, spicy rose, and still obviously a chypre, but there’s a smooth doughy vanillic base that keeps my oriental-loving nose glued to my arm. I don’t get much of the citrus listed in its notes, and judging from reviews I’ve read on blogs, I think I’m in the minority on that. It’s fabulous. The drydown is sublime. It’s not exactly a mating of Le Maroc pour Elle and L’Air du Desert Marocain, but it’s many of my favorite parts from the two blended together. I can’t wait to see what he comes up with next.