Jump to content
Post-Update: Forum Issues Read more... ×
BPAL Madness!

Lunasariel

Members
  • Content Count

    364
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Lunasariel

  1. Lunasariel

    The Phoenix, Having Burst Her Shell

    In the imp: Mostly bright, effervescent citrus, but complicated by a sweet, slightly earthy base. Wet: The sweetness is much more prominent. At first I thought this was the patchouli or the tobacco, but nope, it's my old friend amber, my first BPAL love! It keeps the citrus from going sour or the patch from going dirty. My goodness, this is delicious. The patch and tobacco are still there in the base, keeping things nicely smoky and mysterious, but overall, I would call this a citrus-amber scent. Dry: Amber, with a surprisingly tenacious hint of patchouli hanging around.
  2. Lunasariel

    El Dia de los Reyes

    In the imp: Sweet chocolate, so rich I can taste it on my tongue and in the back of my throat. Maybe a touch of cinnamon. Hot damn, never have I been so tempted to disregard the Lab's "for external use only"/"not for consumption" rule. Wet: A definite hint of coffee and the sweetness is more clearly brown sugar, but chocolate is still the dominant note. So it's more complicated, and oddly enough my overwhelming desire to chug the bottle is somewhat lessened. When I took this on the rounds of my family, the result was generally "mmm cookies." Apparently there's a hint of vanilla in here somewhere? Dry: The chocolate fades more and more to the background until it's a primarily coffee scent with some cinnamon - very sharp, but still a little sweet. Dammit, I want my chocolate back! This isn't unpleasant (well, maybe a little - I *do* prefer hot chocolate/tea to coffee), but I miss the scrumptious warmth.
  3. Lunasariel

    Vital Fluid

    In the imp: Now this is an odd little duck. I'm unfamiliar with many of the notes here beyond what Fragrentica and Google can tell me, so I'll be rubbish with picking out individual notes. For now, all I can say is that it's interestingly clean and sharp, but with a sweet, almost soporific, undertone. Wet: The sharpness amps way up upon initial application. (Frankincense, is that you?) However, after just a few minutes, it mellows WAY out, and what is probably the benzoin and labdanum come to dominate. Yummy! The herbal, incensey notes are still hanging around at the edges. Most incense blends tend to put my hackles up (sorry, recovering Catholic over here), but this one is different enough that it feels warm and mysterious, not like someone is about to roust me out of bed at 6:30 to sit on a hard piece of wood in an unheated room for like four hours. Oddly enough, the first mental image I got was the soft-focus filters they would use in the 60s to make women look all unearthly and extra-beautiful. That's what this scent feels like. Dry: A slightly smoky take on the mellow, resinous blend that incense usually dries down to on me. Again like most incense blends, it LASTS. 12 hours easy (although it's gone slightly sour at this point), and overnight more than likely.
  4. Lunasariel

    Seven Herbs Charm

    In the imp: It's hilarious that this is based around a good-luck charm, because I knocked it over twice while I was sniffing it. Anyway, it's a very strong lemon scent. A touch of sweetness to keep it out of Pledge territory, and a bare whisper of other herbs in the background (although these took some determined sniffing to discover). Wet: I'm getting hard lemon candy rather than lemon bars - say, Lemonheads. I can't tell whether this is because I spilled it twice and thus applied more than usual, or on its own merit, but this has some decent throw to it. The herbal notes come out more and more over time, as does a sort of vanilla scent. Dry: OK, now I'm starting to see where all the lemon bar comparisons are coming from. It still isn't straight baked goods to my nose, but the sweet vanilla edge is getting stronger, thus edging the whole shebang into foodier territory. The vanilla even becomes the dominant note after a few hours, although it eventually gives was to a sort of generalized herbaceous scent, where it stays until it fades completely after ~ 6 hours.
  5. Lunasariel

    Hellfire

    In the imp: Sweetness (which could come from either ambergris or tobacco) over a strong incense base. This feels like a very masculine-leaning scent, but more importantly, a very substantial one; something that I could really sink my teeth into. Wet: *Much* smokier and more leathery - a definite man-smell. It's still a little sweet, but just enough so that it's still wearable and not pure man-funk - I put this down to the salty-sweet smell of ambergris, although the salty aspect seems to be getting lost in all the smoke and leather and general manliness. I found this one very reminiscent of Dee, which is one of my favorites. However, Hellfire is a bit lighter, much more cologne-y, and the tobacco leans a bit sharper. Like Dee, this one stays fairly close to the skin. Dry: More sweet, kinda boozy, and only a little smoky. It moves more sweet and less smoky as the day goes on. Still reminiscent of the old boys' club, but now maybe it's the younger generation that's a little more open to letting the girls in than their fathers. While I like the scent on its own merits, I kinda have to get it for the name - "Hellfire" from The Hunchback of Notre Dame is arguably the greatest Disney Villain song of all time.
  6. Lunasariel

    Hymn

    In the imp: Definitely a rose-dominant scent, but not your usual single-note rose - there's definitely some incense in there complicating things, taking this out of the garden and into the church. The incense is a little cleaner and sharper than I'm used to, though - hopefully that mellows out once it's on my skin. Wet: The rose goes a bit soapy, like the really nice rose-scented soap or slightly-expired rose perfume a Catholic grandmother would wear. (Not my Catholic grandmother, though - she was very into expensive, designer scents from Chanel, etc.) It starts off with quite a decent throw, but after a few minutes it settles down and opens up into something more incense- than rose-heavy. Thankfully, the slight soapy note is gone, too. The tradeoff, however, is that the throw is much less, but I can live with it. Dry: Interestingly, the florals last longer than the incense this time. First it's faint floral incense, then just faint florals, then a slightly sour skin-scent. This one lasts, though - I applied it at 7 AM, and it lasted all the way through until 9:25 PM, when I took a shower.
  7. Lunasariel

    Dee

    In the imp: The first thing I have written in my notes is "Tonka is chocolate, right?", so there must have been some chocolate there at the start, but I'm not getting it now. There are also strong notes of something sweet-floral-woody (rosewood, most likely, although I don't have much experience with it), something dry and smokey (unsure whether this is the incense or the parchment), and possibly leather? I have literally zero experience with BPAL's leather note, so that's what that uncategorizable extra note is. Wet: A smoky-leather, very masculine scent, but pleasantly so. The leather (I think) also really amps up. There's a lovely warm underlying sweetness that could be the tobacco, could be the leather, or could even be the incense and/or parchment. (EDIT: This is probably the tonka, now that I actually look it up.) It starts very close to the skin, but, unusually, really amps up over the next few minutes to achieve an overall decently-sized throw. (Un)fortunately, this becomes part of my skin-scent within half an hour, so it's difficult for me to distinguish on myself, while others can smell it just fine. Dry: Incense, tonka, and leather - still fairly masculine/unisex (which is hilarious, because the only place I can really smell it for any length of time is in my cleavage), but in a warm, sexy kind of way. Do want!
  8. Lunasariel

    The Antikythera Mechanism

    In the imp: Something woody and sharpish, like fresh-planed boards. There's a touch of something sweet, and something maybe even a little boozy (although that may be the tobacco by association). Pleasant enough, if a bit of a departure from my usual sweet-amber-resins Wet: Strangely, the wood gets much sharper - I would guess cedar or fresh sandalwood, without looking at the notes. Warm, dark vanilla and a smokier, much more identifiable tobacco also come through, keeping this from smelling like Ikea. The woods calm down over time and blend wonderfully with the vanilla and tobacco - these woods are indeed lovely, dark, and deep. Dry: Far from the Ikea that threatened earlier, this is now the den of my grandfather's house up in the wood that his grandparents built themselves: deep and warm, dark and full of the smell of smoke and that sweet smell that wood gets over time.
  9. Lunasariel

    Greed

    In the imp: Primarily earthy. A little sweet-cloying, but a remarkably uncomplicated scent. Wet: Still primarily earthy, but now it's a little smoother, I almost want to say nuttier. Much less sweet-cloying, but with a more smoky-leafy edge. A great fall scent! However, this state doesn't last, and it quickly settles down into an incense-heavy patchouli, with that cloying sweetness starting to peek out again. Dry: Sweet patch. More resinous-sweet than floral-sweet, so I'm more willing to chalk this up to the copal than the heliotrope. Overall, I don't think heliotrope is a good note on me. I know it's supposed to be a little cloying here, to invoke the proper sinful atmosphere, but it does the same thing in Tamora.
  10. Lunasariel

    Dragon's Milk

    In the imp: Resinous and sweet (VERY sweet), with, of all things, a spicy-floral edge. Wet: WHOA NELLY. A too-sweet fruity-floral with an enormous throw that actually makes my head spin a little, and not in a good way either. Heavy and overpowering. Thankfully, this stage doesn't last forever - after a few minutes, it calms the hell down into something a little less abrasive. But man, that stuff is *powerful*. Dry: Wow, is this one a morpher! I was on the verge of scrubbing this one off (first time I'd had that reaction in a while), but decided to tough it out, and I'm glad I did. While it starts out trying to convey the impression of getting beaten up by a kindergarten teacher, it later stops raging and actually turns quite sexy. There's still a chemical-fruity edge if I bury my nose in my wrist, but now it's predominantly a sexy-sweet smell with a spicy edge. Throw is still decent, but now it's at the point where I smile when I catch whiffs of myself throughout the day. I'll age this one to see if I can bring forward the sexiness and dial back the OH GOD WHAT HAVE I DONE initial burst.
  11. Lunasariel

    Snake Oil

    In the imp: Vanilla. A spicy, interesting vanilla, but vanilla nonetheless. With perhaps a touch of lemon, though? Wet: Overall, spicier and less sweet. It see-saws back towards sweetness over time, but for the first hour-plus, I would describe this as a primarily spicy scent. However, my brother said that it smells like nicotine??? ...Which is a bit weird, since neither he nor I smoke. Dry: A sort of vanilla-y your-skin-but-better. Which isn't surprising, since I tend to amp vanilla. Maybe it's because everyone enthuses over this so much, but I wasn't as blown away by this as I thought I would be. A re-test several months down the line does indeed show an improvement - sweeter, warmer, more expansive. So while I feel like I do need at least one bottle to be considered a true BPALista, I'll re-test this periodically rather than reach for it every day. Plus, if the other comments are anything to go by, truly aged Snake Oil is out of this world, so I'll wait for that.
  12. Lunasariel

    Penitence

    In the imp: Sweet incense with an herbal edge. Maybe a bit of a piney zing to it? Wet: A calming, grounding scent, which is a little odd, considering it starts off so sharp. It's doing that thing many incense blends do on me, where it's quite sharp if I deliberately smell my wrist, but if I just catch a random whiff of myself as I turn my head, it's much sweeter and broader. Also like my other incense blends, the sharpness decreases and the sweetness expands over time. Dry: After a few hours, it settles into a soft, sweet, resinous smell that lasts all day, and I do mean *all* day. It's the kind of low-key, almost "your skin but better" scent that is clearly settling in for the long haul.
  13. Lunasariel

    Sin

    In the imp: A strong spicy-earthy scent - about equal parts cinnamon and patchouli, methinks. There is a sweet ambery undercurrent, but it's not immediately apparent. Wet: An initial big ol' burst of patchouli, which quickly shifts to share space with spicy cinnamon, with the soft warmth of amber (and maybe sandalwood?) throughout. Dry: Each note fades in turn, with the spicy-sharp cinnamon going first, and my old friend amber hanging around the longest.
  14. Lunasariel

    Visions of Autumn III

    In the imp: Sweet! More honey-sweet than vanilla-sweet. I mean, the vanilla-sweet element is present, too; just less so than the honey-sweet. Maybe there's a hint of muskiness/spice? Mostly, though, it's a very sweet scent. Wet: I admit I don't have the greatest scent profile for patchouli, but I do believe this is heavily-honeyed patch. TBH, though, it mostly reminds me of those complicated, expensive varieties of honey you get at Whole Foods. The vanilla quickly asserts itself, although the honey remains the dominant note. If there is any cinnamon in here, it's pretty well-buried. Overall, I would call this a foody scent, and, as per most foody scents on my skin, one with a pretty decent throw. Dry: Ah, THERE'S the patchouli! But a sweet patchouli - by now I'd say more vanilla-sweet than honey-sweet, which I actually prefer. It's also much closer to the skin, but again, I see this as a plus. It REALLY hangs around, so for 10 hours or so, I've got a lovely skin-scent going.
  15. Lunasariel

    Cathedral

    In the imp: Interestingly, something bitter, sharp, and herbaceous. I eventually discovered a touch of sweetness at the base, but it definitely took more than one sniff to find it. Right now, I'm not getting much of a sense-memory of church, and I grew up pretty heavily Catholic. Wet: Speaking of sense memories, the first thing I get, oddly enough, is my old guinea pig's bedding, which was cedar/redwood wood chips and shavings. The sweet/sharp divide is also a lot more evident - the sweet resins amp way up, but in a good way. At least now they've got a fighting chance against the redwood! The almost-lemony resinous sweetness comes to dominate, but not for a little while. At first it's all sweet resins from afar and sharp cedar/redwood up close, but eventually even that fades, leaving pretty much smooth, slightly smoky, resins. A great cold-weather scent! Dry: See above re: resins. This is my first experience with a pure incense blend, so that might be it, but I swear I smell something almost foody-vanilla-sweet right down at the very end...
  16. Lunasariel

    Chuparosa

    In the imp: The oil itself has a unique pink color to it. It's a sort of omnidirectional floral - if pressed to pick one, I would indeed say roses, but fresh garden roses just after rain, not traditional perfumey roses. There's even a bit of straight-up greenery as a base, to complete the rain-washed garden illusion. Wet: A much greener scent than in the imp. Interestingly, the rose itself veers slightly waxy/perfumey. It quickly veers more sweet-floral than floral-sweet, which I think we have the honeysuckle to thank for. I don't have a great scent profile for honeysuckle, but from other people's descriptions, it makes sense. Dry: Florals pretty much all the way down. I think I may have gotten a brief flash of something ambery way down at the base, but that may have been interference from my coat sleeve, which has had contact with so many different perfume oils that it's probably gained an aroma of its own. This is an unusually short-lasting scent (3-4 hours tops), and maybe it'll be a nice, fresh floral for summer, but I don't think it's going to be in heavy rotation this winter.
  17. Lunasariel

    Morocco

    In the imp: I immediately imagine a sort of reddish-brownish color. Almost the color of cinnamon, which is interesting, because this isn't a very cinnamon-heavy blend (at least not right off the bat). It is very spicy and a little sweet, but not cinnamon-spicy. Wet: Is that incense??? It's warm, a little musky and smoky, whatever it is. The cinnamon-y cassia makes itself known after not too long, giving it a strong "Oriental" vibe. Amber is always a bit Russian roulette on me - sometimes it's powdery, sometimes it isn't; this time it is. I mean, it's not pure powder like Brisingamen became, but there's a definite baby powder note there all the same. Dry: Lovely ambery warmth! Yummy without being in the least juvenile or foody. Sign me up!
  18. Lunasariel

    Dorian

    In the imp: A fresh vanilla scent with an earthy-spicy undertone, and a hint of (chemical) lemon. Wet: There's an interesting contrast between the vanilla and musk going on here. The vanilla and musk both become much more prevalent over time, with the musk hanging around as an undertone. And possibly there's a hint of soap? (In retrospect, fougeres do *not* play well with my skin, so I'm just glad that it was only a hint.) Dry: There's a strong shift to musk after about an hour, and then back to vanilla tea after ~ 3 hours. The whole thing doesn't last longer than five hours, tops. Maybe I need to revisit this, because I first encountered it (and thus took notes on it) in my BPAL infancy, but...I don't get it. Like, it's okay, but I'm guessing it needs some time to age, because while it's a nice enough scent, I wouldn't put it in my "Beloved Favorites." EDIT: Like Snake Oil, this one really needs time to come into its own, but when it does, WOW. It's a strongly foody scent, black tea and vanilla and sweet sugar (which I first thought was honey, given how it amps on me). Turns out it just needs a few months of aging to make it into my everyday rotation! EDIT 2: After about two years, either my skin chemistry has changed or the oil has. But either way, now I absolutely cannot wear any kind of fougere - the beautiful dark, sweet tea of yesteryear has morphed into pure undiluted soap. T.T Alas, poor Dorian!
  19. Lunasariel

    Tamora

    In the imp: Very, very fruity - I originally thought orange (while testing blind), but nope, that's definitely peach. It's a very rich, opulent, almost voluptuous scent - the amber does a wonderful job of kicking the peach up a notch from the fruity body splashes of my youth. Wet: At first, an interesting spiciness is about equal with the fruit, creating an interesting sort of fruity floriental. ...But then, after a few minutes, I discover fruit, especially peach, is one of my death notes. The sillage is huge, and the peach sweeps all before it. No amber, no sandalwood, no vanilla, only the faintest touch of florals; it's pretty much, as my notes say, "like being punched in the face by a radioactive peach." Dry: After two or three hours, the peach finally calms the hell down, allowing the sandalwood-amber combo to finally shine. It eventually dries down to a pleasant, slightly sweet, woodsy amber, but it's too little, too late - that peach was *intense*, lemme tell you. I'll put this in the back of my aging drawer and let it sit for awhile - hopefully that fruity edge will grow out of its impetuous youth and into something much more subtle.
  20. Lunasariel

    Brisingamen

    In the imp: A more cool-toned amber than I'm used to. Usually I gravitate towards the warm, slightly spicy ambers, but this is something fruity and/or floral resting on a large amber base. Interestingly, something in here reminds me of the string of babysitters I had while growing up, all of whom were some flavor of hippie. Wet: Still sweetly cool-toned, but not actively cold. There's a whiff of traditional perfumey florals with the carnation providing a lovely spicy bridge between said florals and the amber. Interestingly, when I asked my mother for her opinion, she said "baby powder, in the best way possible." And she really likes the scent of baby powder, so...thanks, I guess? It seems that my luck is not with me for this one - sometimes ambers turn powdery on me and sometimes they don't; it looks like this is one of the times they do. Dry: Sweet amber. At first I thought I was picking up on a vanilla note, but soon realized I was getting a false foody positive from the apples. I'm going to age this one for a while, because I REALLY want to like it (amber is my favorite scent family, and apple blossoms are so completely emblematic of/tied up with memories of my childhood I can't *not* love them), but it just didn't light a fire under me like I thought it would.
  21. Lunasariel

    Bastet

    In the imp: A very fruit-leaning amber. I would even go so far as to call it sickly-sweet, even medicinal at times. Wet: I got synthetic fruit, with the amber veering a little too sweet for me, but I've actually gotten a fair number of compliments on this. So maybe my nose is just being a jerk? Dry: Luckily, the sickly-sweet fruit (which, upon retrospect, is most likely the lotus, which generally doesn't play well with my skin) fades after an hour or three, leaving only an interesting spicy-sweet-warm amber. It's still more gourmand-y than many of my other ambers, but in a good way. I'll tuck this one away for a year or so, because I was ALL SET to love this (Bast! Amber! Musk!), but I never really loved it like I wanted to. Maybe some aging will take the edge off of the lotus and bring the drydown forward some.
  22. Lunasariel

    The Little Wooden Doll

    In the imp: Warm, sharp sandalwood, soft florals, and a general sense of old lady perfume. But *rich* old lady perfume, the kind who travels the world and wears designer clothes. Wet: There's an initial burst of sandalwood, but it fades to the background pretty quickly. Instead, there's something I can best describe as fruity amber - it starts out a little fresh/aquatic/green, but then what I assume is the rose quickly becomes rosehip jam. Thanks to BPAL's particular brand of alchemy/ESP, it does feel very motherly. Dry: The sandalwood comes back to the fore, followed by amber. While I'll hang onto my imp and see how it ages, I don't see this one being in heavy rotation for a while - a little too maternal for my tastes.
  23. Lunasariel

    Embalming Fluid

    In the imp: My first thought: "ethereal." Sweet, cool, and smooth, with hints of lemon, herbs, and maybe something vanilla-sweet. Wet: The lemon and herbaceous notes are definitely much sharper. I could see some people finding this a great cooling scent for sticky, humid summer days; sort of the olfactory equivalent of a cool drink and a pool. But I like even my cool summer scents with a little more meat to them - this one feels much too faint even for that. Dry: Pretty much fades to nothing after an hour or two. I found this kind of a non-scent - it has too little personality to stick around. While I do tend towards the "less is more" theory with regards to perfume (too many olfactory-sensitive people in my family), this was too little even for me.
  24. Lunasariel

    The Caterpillar

    In the imp: Sultry, lush florals; primarily jasmine. I'm A-OK with this, since jasmine is my One Floral to Rule Them All. There's a hint of bergamot to keep things from getting *too* dark, but in general, it's a very mysterious, almost-heavy-but-not-quite scent. Wet: Very much the same as ITI: the jasmine continues to dominate, with the bergamot providing some brightness and zing to counteract all that languid, indolence. So while it has much more gravitas than the screechy drugstore perfumes of my youth, it's a definite "perfumey" scent, nonetheless. Unfortunately, after about half an hour, something distinctly soapy starts to develop. Ever since Venustas, which I was 100% set to declare my HG scent, veered straight Dove and stayed there for eight hours, I've been super wary of anything even vaguely soapy. Dry: Alas, the soap settled in to stay. I mean, it's a nice-ish soap - you would find it in the cleaning aisle at Target, but it would be called "Arabian Nights" or "Night Garden" or something. Dangit, I really wanted to like this one, too! Oh, well, maybe it'll age well?
  25. Lunasariel

    Al Azif

    In the imp: Resinous and very sweet - I guess this could be called sinuous, but sinister, not so much. There's also a definite note of cinnamon spicing things up. Wet: Unexpectedly cinnamon-heavy! There's also something foody-sweet in there, but it's definitely a very cinnamon-dominant blend. In fact, my first sense-memory is that of the vanilla- and cinnamon-scented pine cones they sell at Fred Meyer around this time of year - they keep them in huge bins right by the door, so as soon as you enter you're hit by what starts off as a pleasant cinnamon-vanilla scent, but then gets STRONGER AND STRONGER OH GOD. I got this as part of the Incense Imp Pack, but I'm not getting an awful lot of incense here. (Of course, it could also be that I'm relatively unfamiliar with BPAL's various incense notes and blends.) Dry: Thankfully, it dries down to something sexy-sweet within half an hour. The incense does eventually come out, and by the end (about 7-8 hours later - about average for me) it's actually a mostly sweet, resinous incense blend with an ever-so-slightly-spicy edge.
×