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BPAL Madness!

oakmoss

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Everything posted by oakmoss

  1. oakmoss

    Ysabel

    Isabella I, Queen of Castile and León, was a proponent of education, establishing lasting institutions of higher learning, a patron of scholars and artists, and an enthusiastic sponsor of exploratory expeditions, including Christopher Columbus’ voyage to the New World. She possessed a great military mind, and was integral in the retaking of Grenada, thus sealing the Reconquista. With her husband, Ferdinand, she ruled with equal authority and power, unifying Spain and laying the foundations of the Spanish Empire. HER PERFUME Red carnation, red roses, Spanish cedar, velvet musk, pomegranate, clove, and incense. Lovers of resin scents, offer a low curtsy to Her Majesty! I wanted this blend because I love all things carnation, but to my delighted surprise, Ysabel uses the carnation to spice up a deeply resinous undercurrent that reminds me very much of my beloved Penitence or the Pit and the Pendulum. The roses send up a gentle velvety whiff every now and then, but this is NOT a rose scent, so if roses frighten you, fear not. My overall impression of this is of red and gold, fierce Spanish sunlight, opulence, passion, pride, and power. Magnifico!
  2. oakmoss

    Peach, Peach Blossom, Apricot, Nectarines

    Try Marquise de Merteuil. Opulent galbanum and amber, glistening peach, and a bouquet of French florals, with a merciless undertone of jonquil and heartless vetiver. It's delicious new and ages beautifully.
  3. oakmoss

    How full is full?

    (Moderators, please delete this if it's not appropriate here -- I did go sniffing around for a better place to put it! ) I just got two 5ml bottles from the Arkham collection. One of them is full about halfway up the neck (where the little ledge is) and the other is full to just below the "shoulder." Is that normal, or did the lesser bottle maybe not get as much as it was supposed to? The only reason I care is because this is one I'm 99% sure I want to trade for another LE, and even though I haven't tested it, it rather looks like I did, at least to me. I've only gotten bottles on eBay or in a forum swap before, when I knew they had been tested. What is the normal fullness for a brand-new lab-sent bottle?
  4. oakmoss

    My Happy Day

    Alas, my much beloved notes of currant and carnation are lost in sharp jasmine and eleni, resulting in a "perfumey" scent that is oddly dusty and dry, like an old bottle of perfume found at the back of the bathroom cabinet. I envy those people who got the sweetness and purpleness -- curse my chemistry! This one is going to swaps. :-(
  5. oakmoss

    Epibulia

    Like Lycanthrope, I tend to amp jasmine, and not in a good way. But this blend stayed fruity and sweet on me, a very refreshing summertime scent. The words that came to mind were "tutti-frutti". Epibulia is a floaty soft fruit dream, with minimal throw and a brief life on the skin (my skin, anyway).
  6. oakmoss

    Pine but not pine

    Yew Trees and Yggdrasil might have what you are looking for. Looking over my notes, I'd suggest you use Yew Trees delicately to get that quality of woods without PINEPINEPINE blast.
  7. You know the type of day: you're awakened too early by a phone call that didn't leave a message, or by the sound of the cat hacking up something that you are sure to step in as soon as you get out of bed. In the shower, you drop a 20-pound bottle of conditioner on your toe, and forget to put a towel within reach. It's going to be hot and everything you think of wearing just irks you for a number of reasons. Your day hasn't even started yet, and you just hate everyone and everything on the planet. What scent do you wear? For me, it's Alice, and I feel better already.
  8. oakmoss

    Paramatman

    This blend is a morphing maniac for the first half hour or so. In the bottle, I thought it was going to be the orange blossom scent of my dreams -- almost a single note scent. The orange blossoms of the groves of my teenage years, ahhhhhh! And then it hit my skin. And turned into gloopy soapy something or other than I could not really identify. Another fifteen minutes or so, and the gloop went away, leaving a soft powdery scent that was like burning a stick of incense next to an open window with the warm orange blossom wind blowing in at night. I'm thinking this might age very well, that slightly sharp orange blossom note blurring even more into the resins and smoke.
  9. oakmoss

    Rosy Maple

    Love this. Love love love this. Love it. Slightly lemony, drying to soft sugary lemony floral, with an undertone of vanilla. I don't find it as candy-sweet as some of the other reviewers do. I was expecting lemon blossom, not lemon, so the citrus note was a surprise. A light and lovely scent for summer.
  10. Try looking in the Wanderlust section for scents that are evocative of warmer climates, and just surrender to the hot spicy goodness. For example: Baghdad: Amber, saffron and bergamot with mandarin, nutmeg, Bulgar rose, musk and sandalwood. Bengal: A sultry and unruly blend that emulates the ambient scent of the markets in ancient Bengal: skin musk with honey, peppers, clove, cinnamon bark and ginger. Morocco: The intoxicating perfume of exotic incenses wafting on warm desert breezes. Arabian spices wind through a blend of warm musk, carnation, red sandalwood and cassia. Sri Lanka: Indian sandalwood and cedar, and the dry incense smoke of olibanum, gum mastic, patchouli and myrrh. I've found that if you stick with the "dry" spicy or resiny scents, they work in hot weather too. It's when they get buttery or foody that they seem overpowering to me.
  11. oakmoss

    Crowd Pleasers

    The scents that have brought on the most universally positive responses when I am attempting to enable people are Alice, Penitence, and Prague.
  12. oakmoss

    Chaste Moon 2010

    Chaste Moon 2005 is a favorite of mine, and while I know Beth warned us that 2010 was not like 2005, since the descriptions were identical, I had some hopes (and kind of wonder, if they aren't the same perfume, why give them the same name, same description, same listed notes?). ANYway... my first impression in the bottle was... nothing. Literally nothing. It could have been a bottle of water. But I believe in the BPAL magic, so I dabbed a bit of the water on my wrist to see what might happen. After about five minutes, a very faint lily of the valley scent began to emerge, very quiet, very small, like holding ONE sprig of lily of the valley to my nose, with maybe a blade or two of grass to give it some greenness. It's nothing like Chaste Moon 2005, but it's pleasant. It will be interesting to see how it ages, if any creaminess comes out. Some other milk/cream blends do amp the dairy as they age, so we shall see.
  13. oakmoss

    Roses, Pearls, and Diamonds

    This was just rose rose rose on me, a veritable rose parade. I like BPAL's rose perfumes, and this is a nice one, but I was hoping the coconut and orris would add something new -- alas, not on me. I may get a bottle just for the name alone and hope that age brings out the other notes, as orris is one of my faves.
  14. oakmoss

    Watery &/or Aquatic Florals

    Yup, definitely try Prague. It doesn't get much mention around here, but everyone I know who has sniffed it falls in love. It has a very light sweet aquatic undertone with fresh flowers. Not perfumey at all, just delicate and springlike.
  15. oakmoss

    Pine and Evergreen goodness

    You might also like Burial (and it's GC, so you can get an imp). To me, it is very evocative of a damp redwood forest.
  16. oakmoss

    So you're devastated about Antique Lace...

    Try Pink Snowballs (quickly, before they melt away!). Very similar in essence to Antique Lace.
  17. oakmoss

    Pink Snowballs

    Oh, pretty pretty pretty! I tend to like most of BPAL's rose blends, so I'm always happy to try a new one. As others have said here, this is Snow White's identical cousin (they laugh alike, they walk alike....) but she has a softer accent and fades into the corners a bit more. Gentle rose sweetened with vanilla and the faintest hint of the snow note, not edging into the mint zone. If you like Black Opal, Mouse's Long and Sad Tale, and Antique Lace, you will probably like this as well. I am delighted, as almost every other blend I've tried this year has not worked on me -- either too sharp or too musky or just too weird, though I enjoy sniffing things even though I can't actually wear them. This blend is lovely, and I look forward to giving it lots of wrist time in the coming months.
  18. oakmoss

    Attuning

    [i don't have the lab description for this blend -- I'll add it when I can get it.] Makes you more sensitive to the emotional, spiritual and non-corporeal presences in an area. Attunes you to the vibratory qualities of a place or object. Particularly effective in developing psychometry. In the bottle, this is a rather sharp floral, with notes that my nose identifies as pale rose and ylang-ylang, and maybe a bit of cedar or some other wood to sharpen it up a smidgen. On my skin, it warms with a faint orange underneath, making the floral notes mellow without going powdery. (I'm actually one of those people who like the powdery blends, but this oil is juicier, more fruity.) A very wearable perfume. I use this blend when I'm doing tarot readings for people at a distance, to help me attune to their concerns and their energy over the miles. I also use it when answering email from my correspondence program students. The sense of attuning works in two ways -- first, attuning to the object of focus, such as the student or tarot client, and then attuning in the more cosmic sense, getting in alignment with sacred energy and deeper wisdom. I can recommend this blend on both accounts, to be worn on the skin rather than used in the bottle as an aromatherapy sniffer. The alchemy with my own energy and chemistry seems to be an important part of the magical brew. When I smell Attuning on my wrist, I feel my eyes opening wider, seeing more, seeing farther, and my sixth chakra third eye opening too. A powerful and pleasant perfume blend! Added description. --Shollin
  19. oakmoss

    So you're devastated about Antique Lace...

    I just did a sniff comparison with most of the bottles listed here, and I'd say the closest scents are Mouse's Long & Sad Tale and Black Opal. Which is nice since they are both GC and you can get imps for them to sustain you until Antique Lace comes back.
  20. oakmoss

    How do I buy forum-only oils?

    I joined a year ago and that link has been the same for the Forum Only scents. I think there's been around 4 or so! I have 11 listed in my database, but there may have been more I didn't record because I knew I wouldn't be ordering. The ones I have listed are: Agape Cake Smash E Pluribus Unum F5 Gladdener of All Hearts Irrelevant and Disturbing Surreal Crawdad Dream Lilith Victoria Lilith vs. the Giant Crab Lilith and the Jarocho Mlle. Lilith, Fortune Teller Tabella
  21. oakmoss

    'Tis The Voice Of The Lobster

    Trying this without reading the notes, I detect a berry-rich fruitiness, with melon wafting underneath. Prickling through here and there is what my mind's nose interprets as pink pepper -- reading the notes now, I have no idea what that might be. Two hours after applying, all fruit is gone, leaving a faint trace of musk. Nice, but I don't love it. Something to play with now and then in imp form.
  22. oakmoss

    Under the Harvest Moon

    Musk is my enemy, but I wanted to try this anyway, for the name, for the other notes, and in the spirit of eternal hope. Alas, as with most scents that include musk, this one goes toward generic perfume on me, though still pleasant. I was reminded of both Wings of Azrael and Wilhelmina Murray, which I like better, but all three have that sense of melancholy memory... a scent that is almost fading already when you put it on, fading into a memory of dried flowers. If you can wear musk, this is probably a good bet for you, as the other notes do fight to survive and I'll bet they are lovely on someone without my chemistry!
  23. oakmoss

    Aquatics

    I love the idea of aquatics, but they rarely work on me -- they go sharp or soapy all too often. Exceptions are Selkie, Sturgeon Moon, and The City in the Sea. Sea of Glass was one of my biggest disappointments, and I still buy an imp every now and then in hope I will have magically become able to wear it.
  24. oakmoss

    Alice's Evidence

    Since my mind's nose is always so easily influenced, I like to try on new scents without going back to read what the notes are first. Last night I applied some of Alice's Evidence at bedtime and then spent the next half hour being distracted from my book trying to figure out what the heck I was huffing on my wrist. It was so familiar, but elusive.... autumnal, spicy, apple-y... dreamily thinking about Alice's evidence, the stolen tarts... but this scent isn't buttery (thank goodness!) or nutty, as so many baked goods scents are. Finally it hit me -- this blend is exactly like mulled apple cider. Not apple juice and not boozy or thick like rum, but tart, spiced, warm, rich but not gooey. It's the perfect autumn scent, the one I've always hoped some of the Halloween blends would be, but weren't quite. My verdict: I need a bottle of this!
  25. oakmoss

    Whoso List To Hunt

    Loved the idea of this, and really looked forward to it, so I bought a bottle right away. In the bottle, lovely rich spicy resin, with a bit of rose. On my skin, again, that delicious resiny goodness -- it reminded me of my beloved Penitence with a dash of rose. For about 30 seconds. Then the musk or something began a chemistry experiment on my wrist that turned into awful rotten stems that have sat in a vase for weeks. Really unpleasant, all traces of spice gone, just dankness and sourness. It's off to swaps (I wrote "swamps" which is about right) for this one, alas.
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