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BPAL Madness!

feline.by.design

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Posts posted by feline.by.design


  1. This is an interesting scent, probably not one I would have picked out for myself.

     

    On wet, The Grave-Pig smells of patchouli-dirt. The fig makes a sweetness to the dirt smell, like a sort of honeyed dirt or a wet earth smell mixed with juice or fruit.

     

    As it dries on my skin, the patchouli becomes less dominant, allowing for the sweetness of the fig to assert itself, but the undertone of earth still remains--perhaps that's the mushrooms. It's a very dark scent for me, and I could see this being actually quite a sexy fragrance, especially for someone who really wants to smell as if they've fallen asleep in a forest overnight. It has quite an allure to it.

     

    In the end, though, I'm not really sure if it's my thing. I don't really wear patchouli-based scents often enough for me to want a bottle of this instantly, but I can see this really working for someone else who would like a dark scent that maybe isn't so spicy. I may try and test it once more, because it does smell quite nice on me and it has potential to be one of those fragrances that sort of grow on you. It could be a scent that I didn't know I needed, especially since my box is so vanilla, leather and amber heavy.

     

    Hmmm. Again, this one, really interesting. It'll probably take me a while to make up my mind.

     

    Edited to add: I could see this scent being sort of unisex. This would probably smell amaaazing on a fella, especially if somehow he has my identical skin chemistry to make it smell like it does on me. Because, it smells pretty damn good on me.


  2. Hunh.

     

    Copulating Mice at first swipey-swab was a roaring nutfest. The pecans were having a little pecan-party, but then the party was crashed by the lavender, making it smell as if the florals were taking over. It came across as a very 'generic perfume' scent for a hot minute, which was really perplexing!

     

    Within five minutes, however, it morphs into a creamy-spicy fragrance that reminiscent of a very bold chai tea with milk, and then my skin kicks up the cloves like it's going out of style. Copulating Mice eases back into the feisty chai tea territory, or maybe 'punk-ass gingerbread man' territory. It's sweet without being cloying; instead, it's a cosy scent--like if Sudha Segara had a baby with Three Witches.

     

    Ah, I smell edible! Nomnomnomnomnom!


  3. I would like to second that request for a BPAL equivalent to Ralph Lauren Hot. I love that perfume. For me it's the spicy heat of the cinnamon that makes it special.

     

    From all the recommendations I've read on the forum, many BPAL scents that have cinnamon end up being foody (smelling like Red Hots etc.) Can someone recommend a non-foody BPAL that has an element of Woodsy or floral, but with the heat of cinnamon? That would make me a happy camper.

     

    It's an older thread, but this might be helpful for you: Cinnamon girl: Cinnamon discussion from A-Z. I was going to recommend trying Hamadryad, but I didn't realise it was discontinued! Oh, the things I miss from being out of the BPAL loop for a while...


  4. While wet, Burning Vulva smells very lush and fruity. It reminded me of peach cobbler, although it didn't spell really peach. Just sweet and bright, like a sunny day. I suspect the peru balsam and orange blossom had something to do with that, coupled with the vanilla to accentuate the sweetness of these notes.

     

    After it dries down, the scent loses its initial wetness and moves from being something quite nice and very lushly flowery/fruity to something less bright, nearly powdery. After thirty minutes, ah, the vanilla asserts itself. It isn't particularly creamy--more like vanilla dust or powder.

     

    After around forty minutes, it's vanilla-beeswax I mostly smell. Although slightly powdered on my skin, the fragrance still retains a bit of warmth, though not anywhere near the level it initially was at. More like sunset peeking through translucent curtains as you're eating honey off a spoon before sipping a vanilla chai latte, with most of the chai bit covered up by the vanilla, but it peeks out periodically in a gingery form after an hour's wear, keeping the scent warm and cheeky.

     

    Such a difference trying BPAL on the skin makes! It's as if the fragrance and my skin have been discussing on how to mutually express the scent.

     

    Burning Vulva: "I'm going to be sensual and bright and sweet and fruity! There's no fruit note listed, but I wanna do fruity!"

     

    My Skin: "Okay, sure, that's great... but I'm gonna need some vanilla."

     

    Burning Vulva: "Oh, okay, well, here's some vanilla then."

     

    My Skin: "That's good... but I'm gonna need more vanilla."

     

    Burning Vulva: "Oh, oh sure. But I'm gonna have to lose a bit of the lushness I've got going on. Is that okay?"

     

    My Skin: "Fine, fine. Just give me more vanilla."

     

    It's like the Saturday Night Live Cowbell skit with Christopher Walken. Just replace "cowbell" with vanilla.

     

    But STOP PRESS!! After an hour's wearing it on my skin, the amber seems to wake up and shoves aside the cowbell... I mean vanilla! I now have a fragrance that seems more like The Lion from Mad Tea Party than The Mouse's Long and Sad Tale. In this case, The Lion is drenched in beeswax, but it's still a bright and warm scent. Whoa. How'd it do that?

     

    Burning Vulva is an interesting one to try, as my skin seems to take notes like vanilla, leather and amber and push them up to the forefront. In this three-for-all note match, it seems that vanilla, along with beeswax, wins the Prominent Note of the Scent award for the first hour, but then in the second the amber sort of yanks back the vanilla and comes into the forefront.

     

    It is a nice skin scent, and as I am quite the connoisseur of BPAL vanilla and amber fragrances, Burning Vulva has earnt a place in my collection as a vanilla/amber fragrance that's fairly distinct from my usual selections from the general collection. Quite happy with it!


  5. In the bottle, A Golden Idol is very prominently a lush vetiver scent. I actually happen to like the note, so I was interested in trying it.

     

    On my skin, however, the most prominent note is the amber, with the rose overlaying it in an interesting embrace. It almost smells leathery on me--sort of smoky, yet sweet and glitteringly earthy. If the vetiver is present, it's adding a certain amount of dampness to the amber and rose. The lavender doesn't come through at all on my skin, but I'm not fussed either way.

     

    The rose adds a bit of modesty to the amber/vetiver mingling, which I find quite a sexy, saucy combination. It's a very golden bright scent on me, more suited to hot summers than cold winters.

     

    It's so amazing the difference one's skin chemistry and what one's nose tends to pick up more. I happen to like how A Golden Idol is interpreted on my skin. It's a good rose scent for me, especially since my bottle of Bearded Lady is on the other side of the Atlantic.


  6. The Soldier was something I worried might smell too foodie/gourmand, as I've had previous experiences in the past with some scents that were just a bit too buttery for my tastes.

     

    I bought a bottle of The Soldier during Yule 2010, and hadn't tested it until just now. When I read the description of it, I knew I had to try it, being a general fan of leather scents (Torture King, Severin), tea scents (The Dormouse, Dorian) and vanilla scents (Antique Lace, The Mouse's Long and Sad Tale).

     

    On first application to my skin, The Soldier smells like a man who went AWOL in a cookie factory--butterscotch, powdered sugar, a slight hint of a buttery rum? I couldn't stop sniffing my wrist, trying to decide whether it was a pleasant sweetness or if it was something that was a bit too much.

     

    About five minutes on, the butterscotch smell faded, leaving a nice vanilla smell grounded by a more solid note or group of notes in the background. Ah, the leather becomes more prominent now on my skin, and The Soldier has become more stern, standing at attention... but there's still a slight sweetness to the fragrance still that tempers The Soldier's stern manner, as if he's still got a few cookie crumbles clinging to his uniform.

     

    This is a reminder for me to never judge a scent by the bottle. As it was in the bottle, The Soldier seemed a bit borderline as far as wearability for me goes, but once I applied it and let it settle for about five to ten minutes--leather cookies! Or a sugar-coated whip. Whatever you wanna go with.


  7. It's so interesting reading the replies on this thread, because with a lot of them I find myself thinking "What? Those don't smell at all alike!"... but obviously on other people's skin, they do. Skin chemistry is so variable...

     

    It's not just skin chemistry. I have a tendency to recommend scents that are in the same "mood" as other scents, thinking that they smell alike, when in reality there are some differences.

     

    I would love it if there was GC equivalent to my all-time favourite LE, Red Phoenix, but I doubt there is. The closest I've found yet is Frumious Bandersnatch, and it's not that close -- RP is a lot muskier and more incensey. Maybe I need to try layering the Bandersnatch with something like Fenris Wolf...

     

    In the meantime, I think I'm just going to hope that this year's BPALiversary includes a Four Years - Four Birdies set, with RP making a comeback. I swear I'll buy at least three bottles this time.

     

    *sigh* I can dream...

     

    Red Phoenix smelled very similar to Blood Moon to me. When thinking of non-LEs though, my mind is sort of drawing a blank. We need a spicier Scherezade with cinnamon, perhaps.

     

    -doreen


  8. Twilight smells nice. It smells similar to some blends in the Somnus collection. Perhaps that may be why it isn't particularly remarkable to me. The fragrance is nice, but it doesn't make me go "Hey, Martha!" or have me bowled over. It's a nice scent, and I could see why someone would like it, but I have enough scents that are similar in mood and feel to hold onto this imp.

     

    Definitely good for those of you into clean floral scents, though.

     

    -doreen


  9. I received this as a free imp from the Lab, and I'll be buggered if I can find it anywhere, so I guess it's something that's unreleased. Because it's a three-letter word, I was unable to do a search on the forum's search engine. I looked through about half of the likely candidates of the categories that might have something called Tum, and, well, no luck.

     

    Hence, with some trepidation, I bring you... Tum.

     

    Tum goes through seemingly eight or nine different scent notes before settling on some sort of "burnt wood" smell. I sniff again, and the intense smokiness has lightened up significantly. I smell woods and sap interwoven together to create a crisp autumn majesty. The scent is getting sweeter, almost honeyed, and this is all happening within the course of a mere couple of minutes. Do I smell fruit? Oranges? I'm not so sure. The hint goes away when I try to pin it down.

     

    Then I get the scent of an extinguished candle. It's faintly, faintly sweet, like sugar water, and a touch smokey. I think there was a little bit of a berry fragrance in the mix as well. Maybe raspberries?

     

    It smells like a fantastic autumn fragrance that I would likely wear at any and every time.

     

    -doreen


  10. I smelled the almond note before I was knocked away by the cinnamon. Whoa! This scent is the closest one I've found to resemble fireball candies! The cinnamon is sweet, almost syrupy, which could be the influence of the almond.

     

    Inferno isn't something I think I'd wear, but it makes me have a craving for some Red Hots right about now. I think it would irritate my skin too much, as I've been noticing some cinnamon scents have been doing lately.

     

    Definitely something for the bold!

     

    -doreen


  11. Tiger Lily is a beautiful, light floral. The sweetness is barely there, and the flowery element isn't pounding you over the head. Excellent for the summer heat. I really don't get the soapy quality mentioned in other posts. Just light flowers with a twinge of green and sweetness.

     

    I'm quite fickle with florals, so I don't know if I would get a bottle of Tiger Lily in the future, but for now, I will keep my imp. The florals I am normally attracted to are the lighter blends, so this one is definitely worth considering.

     

    -doreen


  12. This one came out too fruity and sweet to me. A friend of mine and I both came to the consensus that I smelled like a candle store.

     

    I couldn't tell that there was a green tea note in this one; it was cloying on my skin. Another analogy was that of a melted piece of candy.

     

    Not for me.

     

    -doreen


  13. The initial reaction to the first sniff of the oil on my skin: "Whoa... smells like bubble bath."

     

    Actually, it doesn't, though this is a sweet floral without being too cloying or heady for me. There is a sort of bubbley note that seems to make the whole oil giggle, but it's quite a feminine scent.

     

    I like the way it smells, but I don't know if this is a fragrance that would suit me. It reminds me too much of bubble bath for some reason or another. However, I do have a friend who loves rose scents, and I think this might be her cup of tea. I'll pass along this imp (which was kindly passed to me) to see if Marie and she will make friends.

     

    -doreen


  14. This is interesting. I smell something at first that smells a lot like... soap?! Not something I quite expected from an oil that contained leather. After about a couple of minutes, though, the leather gains its ground. This smells nice, but I have many, many leather scents from BPAL, and this one so far doesn't strike me as notable nor particularly desireable. There's a definite sweetness to the fragrance I'm sort of ambivalent towards.

     

    I give it a moment and there it is: Perversion. It's leather and coconut mingled together in a happy union. A-ha! That is what makes you different, my pet. Coconut works for me in some scents and I've had it go horrible on me in others, but this works well. I don't know if I need to add to my retinue of leather scents that I already have in bottle form, but I will surely keep the imp to see if it will suit me. Perhaps in the future I may invest in a bottle, but for now, I will enjoy this lovely imp.

     

    -doreen

     

    Edited to add: Who am I kidding? I love leather, so I'll likely wind up getting a bottle of this, too.


  15. Khajuraho is, on my skin, a very soft, powdery vanilla with sweetened woodsy tones. I had tested from a decant at a Meet n' Sniff I had with Fyre and though I liked it quite a bit. So I went out in search of my own bottle to buy.

     

    The vanilla is probably the strongest note on me, and it smells lovely. It's a light, airy vanilla dusted by the petals of flowers and tamed by the sandalwood I can barely smell.

     

    Quite enjoyable! I'm glad I found a bottle with the forums.

     

    -doreen


  16. Whoa! This is sharp!

     

    At first, the swab of skin is revealing a pine forest. It's incredibly evergreen, with an astrigent tang to it, kind of like the witch-hazel mentioned in an earlier post. As the scent mingles with the skin chemistry, it loses some of its sharpness, but it's still an incredibly crisp scent.

     

    Dublin's actually quite boozy; this smells like a potent drink with gin in it! Or is that just me...

     

    I can see this being very refreshing on a hot day. I saw aedes' comparison to Snow Moon, and I'm getting that, too. The same bright, cold florals are in this as well. I can see why this was called a good Christmas/Yule scent. It's as if snow has fallen on the evergreen.

     

    All in all: Dublin's not great, but not bad, either. I'll keep my imp for days when the Florida sun gets to me, but for now, unless I sell or trade my bottle of Snow Moon, I think I'll hold off on getting a bigger bottle of Dublin.

     

    -doreen


  17. It smells a little like toothpaste that's lime-flavoured. I kind of like it, but it's making me a little queasy. Sometimes I get a little queasy with mint. The Star Tarot oil was one I liked, but the second or third time I wore it, I got this queasy feeling, and I couldn't wear it again. Spooky sort of got me the same way as well.

     

    But The Mock Turtle's Lessons smell clean and nice. Something tells me there should be a soap of this fragrance: a nice, green soap scented with lime and mint and a little vanilla lurking around to sweeten it up.

     

    This is a good fragrance for hot weather. It's quite gender-neutral as well; I can see a man wearing this just as easily a woman. I don't know if the Mock Turtle is big-bottle material for me. It's likely going to be one of those where I hold onto the imp, but I never feel like wearing it. Hmmm...

     

    -doreen


  18. Whoa, when wet, Coyote smells like some sort of tea. Definitely a grassy scent, but absent of clorophyll. The amber comes out, though, rich and roaring. There's a note that smells a touch like soap, but in a good way, preventing the amber from being too cloying. It dries down a bit to a softer amber-musk fragrance that I'm loving. Very pleasant.

     

    Wait... is this test spot itching?

     

    I really wanted to try this scent because of my enjoyment of many of the amber blends the Lab has. The fragrance doesn't disappoint in the least, although I can't shake how the test spot on my skin seems a liiiittle itchy. I'll have to try this again to make sure there's nothing that's irritating my skin. It's not like the burning sensation I had with Spooky; that was a true allergic reaction to something or another. With Coyote, it doesn't burn, but it itches a little. Hmm... I'll have to think about this longer.

     

    Scentwise, though, it's an ace.

     

    -doreen


  19. Whoa! Super pine! I like it!

     

    I love the smell of pine needles, and this is that fragrance amped up 100% when wet. Yew-Trees is quick to dry on my skin, but it still smells lovely. It's a very clean smell, and I enjoy its crispness.

     

    But wait... what's that in the background I smell? Maybe it's the berries... there's something that smells kind of waxy and warm that's killing the Pine Chill party I've got going on with Yew-Trees. These aren't sweet, fruity berries, but more like green berries with a hint of sweetness and a coat of wax. Yew-Trees is starting to smell more like a candle on me than the fresh pine it was before.

     

    Peh.

     

    It's not bad, but in the end, it wasn't for me. If only it was just straight pine, which is a strange complaint considering those who got nothing *but* pine from this. Oh well. I'm sure this imp will find someone who will love it.

     

    -doreen


  20. Gah!

     

    :::sniffs arm again:::

     

    Gah!

     

    :::sniffs arm again:::

     

    Gah!

     

    :::makes a face:::

     

    I've got it. When wet, it smells like the inner mystery of a spitoon.

     

    Off the bat, I'm glad I didn't get the Great Sword of War in a 5 ml format, as I did with Death on a Pale Horse and the Bow and Crown of Conquest (and as I wish I did with the Scales of Deprivation). But, being the good little BPALer I am, I wait patiently for the oil to mingle with my skin and hopefully produce a more pleasing fragrance.

     

    :::waits five minutes, then goes in for a sniff:::

     

    Oh, no, honey. The spitoon smell is gone, but now I get something that smells like Pepto pills. Seriously. Maybe mandarin doesn't work for me with out other scents, or maybe it's the saffron. I don't know, but it's like weird Grandma candy that came from a different decade. It smells sweet, but it also smells dusty, and not something you'd want to put in your mouth.

     

    Well, the Great Sword of War is certainly a very unique fragrance. It doesn't work for me, but that could be due to a bad combination of my nose and skin chemistry. I don't really want to smell like Pepto-coated Granny candy, and that's what the Great Sword's givin' me. Maybe it senses I'm not much for war.

     

    -doreen


  21. Thin, dark, and shadowed. A scent that offers no sustenance, comfort or satiety: lemon peel, white sage, frankincense, lavender fougere, sandalwood, vetiver and labdanum.

     

    The first sniff of the Scales makes me wonder why I didn't just get a 5 ml rather than this paltry imp, as I did with the Bow and Crown of Conquest and Death on a Pale Horse. It smells warm and cozy. I seem to smell something that smells like leather on my skin, but it might be the frankincense or sandalwood or labdanum, or a combo of the three. Or maybe it's the sage. In any case, it's stellar.

     

    I love this, I really do. It smells more masculine on me than it may on others, and my nose is definitely picking up the more "macho" notes over the lemon peel.

     

    Can't... stop... sniffing my arm...

     

    *aaaah*

     

    Well, looks like I'll have to get a bottle of this one. Thus far, the three out of the four Come and See scents I've tried so far have been eerily fantastic on me. I've got one more to try tonight and if all for work well, I'll be convinced I'm some sort of horsewoman for the apocalypse or something. Even though I can't ride a horse. A moped or scooter, maybe...

     

    In any case, the drydown for the Scales of Deprivation is excellent. It's woodsy and sexy and love. I'll wear this when I'm plotting destruction.

     

    -doreen

     

    Edited to add Lab description and that I want babies with this scent.


  22. Uhm...

     

    *snff*

     

    I can't really smell this for some reason. When I put it on, I could smell the light floral, but I think my skin's sucked it up, or it's just incredibly light. I think I might smell honeysuckle, but I'm not too sure. I agree with ivyandpeony, as it does remind me of Eos, which is a blend I've been thinking about buying for a while because I like my imp so much.

     

    Ah, now, after about a couple minutes, I can smell it. Ghagiel definitely smells close to Eos, and I think having a bottle of this has definitely supplanted my need to get the other. The fragrance is light and very appropriate for the warm weather, as it isn't cloying. There is a heavier base note that is a bit woodsy, but not very thick at the three-minute mark.

     

    I've had it on for about ten minutes now, and it smells different enough from Eos for those who have the bottle to give it a whirl. There's a noticable sort of "skin" scent to Ghagiel, which I find interesting. I can see the comparisons to Juliet as well. The floral is definitely in the honeysuckle/jasmine family, so beware, oh Jasmine-haters! This might not be for you, but I wouldn't discourage trying a bit of it anyway.

     

    Ghagiel's a keeper, although I hadn't expected it to smell like a light spring day. "Uncontrolled energy, nihilism, narcissistic illusion?" Wow, sure smells pretty girly. I'm imagining Ghagiel in the form of a blonde maiden with a light, gauzy sundress and a straw hat, picking flowers in hell. "La-la-la, I'm a little demon, la-la-la."

     

    -doreen

     

    Edited to add: Oh, you know, Lycanthrope's right. This might just be narcissus in this fragrance.


  23. I have found love. Love, I say.

     

    Enraged Bunny Musk smells sort of like vanilla cupcakes on my skin, and has thus far lasted five hours on my skin and it's still going strong. It's a sweet, tasty scent that isn't overly foody on me.

     

    Wet, it's a light musk melded with brushes of herbs and light florals with vanilla. Dry, it's very vanilla, reminiscent of the Antique Lace bottle I smelled at the Orlando meet n' sniff (that would be Fyre_in_Winter's bottle). I really like it when vanilla works good with me, because sometimes it gets baby powdery, but Enraged Bunny Musk doesn't get like that at all.

     

    Hoarding instincts are sprouting within me, but I'm managing to fight them off for now. Still, it's very tempting.

     

    Me encanta. Daisuki desu.

     

    -doreen

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