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BPAL Madness!

oakmoss

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Posts posted by oakmoss


  1. I'm currently reading The Edwardians, by Vita Sackville-West, and one of the characters is Lady Sylvia Roehampton, the most beautiful woman in London -- fortysomething, rich, ripe, gracious (on the outside, anyway), sensual, completely feminine, with all a woman's awareness of her many charms and how to use them.

     

    This is her perfume.

     

    So feminine, so elusive, so mysteriously indefinable.... sweetly floral, but with an edge of seduction. This scent is an oyster-silk ballgown worn with creamy pearls that disappear between the valley of Sylvia's perfumed breasts, as she languidly flirts her fan and looks around the room for her next conquest.


  2. I found it by googling: "Fleurs d'Amour" perfume notes. It's about halfway down this page. I also learned that there are a hell of a lot of people out there who collect empty perfume bottles. This makes my habit of collecting full perfume bottles seem entirely less crazy :P

     

    Well, dang it, I did that too. :D Google clearly likes you best. Thanks again. Jasmine is death on me, but I may try Bat Woman if I can find an imp somewhere. It's been on my list for some time.

     

    And I have to admit, I'm tempted to start collecting old perfume bottles. :D


  3. Shoe fetishists, here is your dream blend! :P

     

    Honestly, I love beeswax and all the other good things, but they are completely absent for me. All I am getting from this on my skin is shoe. New shoe, at least -- it's like opening the box of a new pair of nice leather shoes and (when no one is looking) taking a big whiff. Nice for a shoe, not so nice for a perfume. There is something vaguely sickening about it, it's making me a little queasy. Definitely not for me, alas.


  4. What a curious and compelling scent this is! It's a golden wood, with a delicate spice note, as if a smooth wooden bowl had been rubbed with dry spices. It doesn't morph very much, but stays true on my skin. It is one of those where I had to keep sniffing it (the nose glued to wrist syndrome) to try to uncover its mystery -- what does this remind me of??? What does it MEAN?? I'm finding this to be a common theme among the 13 curiosities -- they are not easy to pin down and comprehend. This is one I will be getting a bottle of.


  5. Starts out very herbal, the lavender and anise basically shoving everyone else out of the way (as they do, herbal bullies). Then the pomegranate elbows to the front and turns the whole thing into sort of a musty sourball scent. It's not UNpleasant, just not.... pleasant. An imp is enough for me, but I'm glad to have it as a curiosity.

     

    Edited to add: I just figured out what it smells like on drydown -- it's like a sour-pomegranate candle that has been blown out. So those of you who like the candle-blown-out scents can add this one to your list and see if it does that on you too.


  6. This scent is one of the most intriguing and mysterious I've encountered. In the bottle, the pine pitch whams you upside the head, and I was seriously scared to try it for many days. Finally got up the courage (armed with a nearby lemon in case I needed to take it off FAST) and applied it to my skin. Instantly -- and I mean INSTANTLY -- the pine was gone, and what remained was a rich vanilla spiced with resins, just a drop of honey to make it seductive, a fleeting glimpse of patchouli, a whiff of smoke, and a tingly sense of magic and power. It's like the pine melted into my skin, as ink flows in a tattoo and becomes part of me. This will be a blend I get at least two bottles of before the Carnaval leaves town. One of Beth's all-time best.


  7. In the bottle and on first application, this seemed rather too masculine for my taste, but very quickly it softened into a scent that reminded me very much of Morgause. The same purple-darkness and sense of luxury and mystery, but this blend has a spicy-wood undercurrent too. This is like Morgause's silken scarf that she has been keeping in an aromatic wooden box.


  8. This is wonderful. If you like resin and/or incense blends, you will definitely want to add this to your collection. The myrrh is so soft and velvety rich, and the touch of cinnamon makes it so sensual. It's not candy-cinnamon, it's cinnamon incense, a cinnamon stick, dry and spicy. The throw is good but not invasive, and it lasts a long time. I imagine this will age beautifully too.


  9. I am surprised that no one has mentioned Masabakes. This scent is like nothing I have ever encountered. It is dark and consuming with a hint of currants and a spark to it that my mind connects with mandrake dust. I can't even say that I love the way it smells but it is such a unique olfactory experience that I had to get a bottle for myself.

     

    Oooh, I haven't thought of Masabakes in a long time, thanks! I went back to look at my notes, which say, "This is like Alice's older sister -- the same curious spiciness overlaying earthy sweetness, but with more of an edge, more heat, less light. While I generally wear Alice to put me in a better mood, I think I'd be more likely to wear Masabakes when I'm in a bad mood and don't give a damn." :P


  10. Yes, Strawberry Moon had caught my eye - but to me, it seems almost impossible to find!

     

    I just had to jump in here with a word of caution. More than one person (me included!) have had the heartbreaking experience of having bottles of Strawberry Moon age VERY badly -- i.e., turning to acetone/nail polish remover. In my case, at least, this was a bottle that was stored carefully in a cool dark place, too. I mention this so you don't leap into spending big bucks on a bottle that may have gone bad -- if you find one at all, of course. Ask for a sniffie on a Q-tip or something first. Good luck! :P


  11. Stimulating Sassafras Strengthener is quirky and wonderful. It smells like homemade root beer, it's just delightful.

     

    And if you get into the root beer scents, try Lust. I don't know how red musk, patchouli, ylang ylang and myrrh add up to root beer, but there you are.

     

    I second Marquise de Merteuil -- one of my faves -- and also Bess and Dee.

     

    A couple of people have mentioned Saturnalia as being unique, and I would have to agree: it's the only BPAL scent that made me physically recoil so fast that I actually spilled some on myself. My notes say, "Meeeehhhhh! Mehhhhh! GET IT OFF ME!!" :P


  12. Fun question!

     

    Let's see.... someone mentioned Death Cap, and I agree, it's fascinating and yet very wearable. You might also try Dragon's Milk, Absinthe, Black Opal, Lightning (to get the full-blast ozone effect), Velvet (and if you don't like it right away, let it age), Nosferatu, Eat Me and Drink Me, Hairy Toad Lily, Squirting Cucumber (LOVE this for summer), Strangler Fig -- in fact, really check out the whole Rappaccini's Garden section -- and finally, Gluttony (it's hilarious, an entire candy store in a vial).

     

    And for your impossible dreams wish list, Graveyard Dirt and Lump of Coal. :P


  13. I'm one of those people who can't read the notes before trying a new blend, because my mind's nose will be too influenced by what I'm SUPPOSED to be smelling. Going into this blend without checking the notes, I am intrigued to come upon a BPAL scent unlike any other. Macaroni. Yes, macaroni. Not pasta, not anything fancy, just plain old hot grainy moist vaguely sweet macaroni. This lasts for about ten minutes, long enough to think.... macaroni??? :P And then the macaroni comes off the stove and the morphing begins... and goes on and on and on.... peach, rose (I know, there isn't any, but still), spices... This is one of the prettiest and most interesting blends I've tried in a long time, and I'm looking forward to trying it again now that I know what the notes are.


  14. I really can't do ozone at all, it goes very sharply perfumey on me, but this is nice and gentle. Very much like Absinthe and L'Heure Verte, with a hint of mint and dusty florals. I kept smelling it and smelling it, not sure if I actually LIKED it, but definitely fascinated. I'm glad I got to try it, but I think it's not for me.


  15. On first application, this is almost single-note honey on me. On dry-down, it goes softly amber-powdery, though the honey is still very strong. I'm not sure how I like this by itself (she said, huffing her wrist like a maniac) but I have a feeling it will combine nicely with something that is spicier or more resiny. I will experiment and report back!


  16. Time to revive this thread and see what's new and yummy in the lemon realms! :P

     

    Haloes has a lemony creaminess on my skin, but I am still looking for my dream lemon scent for summer. It's the Love's Fresh Lemon of my youth -- a sugared lemon that stays bright and refreshing, not sharp or perfumey. Like a lemon drop, lemon curd. Suggestions?


  17. Translucent blooms, ethereal white resins, and davana.


    This had a lemony light scent at first sniff, but on my skin it morphed into a powdery fluffy white floral with a faint underwhiff of honey. Very sweet, harmless, not terribly interesting, alas. There are other florals and powdery blends I like better, so I think I'll pass this one along.

  18. This scent is definitely an eye-opener! Good for sluggish mornings and hot doldrum days, I would imagine. On me, it was almost completely minty, with some grapefruit sharpness. Nice to sniff, not so nice to wear -- it felt cologne-y, which is not the same as perfume-y. Light, but with an edge, probably very good on a man. On me, it's a bit off-putting, I'm afraid. Nice kitty -- now, go away. =^..^=

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