tarotbydiana
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About tarotbydiana
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1/32 too few
- Birthday 09/19/1974
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Philadelphia, PA
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United States
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tarotbydiana
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tarotbydiana
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Female
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Interests
Tarot, the Moon, incense, honey, floral teas, herbal healing, Baudelaire, Rimbaud, oracles, Celtic Goddess, plants, black cat, white cat, psychic dreams, dream journeys, 1920s risque, flappers, patchwork dresses, perfume lockets, lavish altars, Indian scarves, crystals, moonstone pendulum, Pre-Raphaelites, hawks, peacocks, bees, swans, herons, deer, bears, foxes, totems, cafe au lait, pomegranates, blood oranges, beauty, decadence, tapestries, stationary, hand-made paper, fizzy bath tarts, essential oils, bath milk, literature
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hither and anon
BPAL
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Favorite Scents
Theodosius, Usher, Madame Moriarty, Mata Hari, Hollywood Babylon, Honey Moon, The Masque, The Telltale Heart, Luperci, The Red Queen, Alice, Batwoman, Scherezade, Peacock Queen, Tarot:Empress, Tarot:Lovers, Tarot: Death, Tarot: Hermit, Moon Rose, Strawberry Moon, Schwarzer Mond, Tezcatlipoca, Szpasszony, Snow Bunny, Ice Queen
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Chinese Zodiac Sign
Tiger
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Western Zodiac Sign
Virgo
Recent Profile Visitors
6,425 profile views
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noumenon started following tarotbydiana
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nenia started following tarotbydiana
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GC imps typically aren't given out at East Coast Will Call. If there is a special LE frimp or frottle (free bottle) offered, these have been at both East and West Coast Will Calls. Carnivale cards are available at East Coast Will Call along with the appropriate Carnivale bottles purchased.
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It's like someone took a bucket of newly picked strawberries and a pail of sugar and hurled the contents overhead and it rained down as sparkling pink glitter. The sugar note is white sugar (similar to the note in Hope and Faith and Sugar Moon) rather than brown sugar (Sugar Skull). It has the fizzy drink quality of Jailbait and the cheekiness of Pink Phoenix. For the lovers of sweet, ambrosial fruit, this is a pleasure. Strawberry is a happiness bearing note for me. I don't find Sticky Pillowcase impossibly foodie. The berries taste picked not smushed down, dehydrated into a chewy rectangle and mummified in plastic with a child magnet logo. The strawberries have life in them.
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I acquired bottle DV previously reviewed by scotchbonnet I can see where she gets rose and honeysuckle. I also detect a subtle milk or cream note similar to Alice or Zarita the Doll Girl. There is an overall milky floral vibe on the skin. It's the type of milk that stays sweet and cool, and unlike the note in original Milk Moon or Obatala that translates to warm milk. If there is rose in this, it's subtle. It has a golden summer flowers and cream feel. It's hard to discern note by note what flowers are present in the bouquet, but it's lovely. In the locket, there is a touch of melon that I don't smell either in the bottle or on skin. I like DV best when it cavorts with my chemistry. This one is certainly staying with me as it's hard to find that perfect sweet cream note with flowers.
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I feel some of the lab's most finely crafted and unusual scents come from the Salon category. It would be worth saving up for an imp set since they can't be ordered individually in imp form. The Death of Sardanapal is luscious and bizarre, so's the painting.
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Limited editions equivalents in the general catalog?
tarotbydiana replied to Absinthe's topic in Recommendations
Snake Oil in the GC is the closest. I also think Mme. Moriarty in the Carnivale has the vibe too. -
Yay! April Fool has the picture of the Fool from the Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot deck. How cool is that?
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Call it a broken heart, a break-up, heartache...
tarotbydiana replied to RocketMelee's topic in Recommendations
I am sorry you are feeling that way. Dove's Heart is very useful. I would also recommend Aunt Caroline's Joy Mojo. -
From my experience of being around dogs, they seem to be more interested in scents than repelled by them. I used to work retail years ago as a sales manager in a department store. I had to be up on ladders, moving merchandise etc and still look fashionable. What I wore a lot of around the holidays were dresses and separates in velvet that has a little stretch to it. It can take much more abuse than any dressy fabric I've ever worn. It doesn't seem to get those wear marks or scratches the way thicker, finer velvet does. You could always pair a stretch velvet top and a pretty pendant with sturdier black pants or a skirt and still look festive enough for your aunt and be dog friendly.
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The Black Swan is a very dark purple to me.
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Before I even unwrapped this soap, I was in love. An eyeball peers, a frog leg pokes up, a bone floats, pink worms slink, a fish skeleton wiggles from within the rim of a giant cauldron, sloshing with green liquid and frothy bubbles. The best soap label ever! What is beyond the festive wrapping is even more of a delight. The soap is pleasantly herbal in a fresh and mellow way. I am reminded of the 2007 version of Hunter Moon as well as the Buck Moon of yore, sans musk. The green clay adds a teensy bit of texture, not enough that I would consider it exfoliating. Cauldron Gunk has a smooth glide over skin. This soap seems the most moisturizing of this year's Halloweenies. I could imagine using Cauldron Gunk all year round. I truly wish this soap would enter the Trading Post catalog rather than tempt us only briefly as an LE.
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On the initial application, Creepy smells like I smeared a heap of caramel on my wrists. In the next phase the apple was invited and the two socialized and mingled. Rum and coconut are notes that can be difficult for me, but neither were standouts. They wore feathered masks to the party. They seemed to mix with the apple and create the scent of a gourmet fizzy drink: a sweetened, carbonated apple cider. The caramel note haunted the air around me, a sweet-faced ghost, but when I pressed my nose to my wrists, I was greeted with sparkling apples. I can imagine wearing Creepy into the winter holidays. It would be a pleasurable scent to accompany leaf trodden walks and fireside gatherings.
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Metallic Pearl A regal, ambitous plum metallic pearl. I purchased my bottle of Morgause Claw Polish at Will Call. It's not yet up on the BPTP site so there's no lab description at present. Morgause is a sumptuous winter berry shade. It's a metallic polish with a high shine finish. I imagine Morgause would appeal to many people as the personality of the color morphs depending on one's demeanor and attire. It's not pink. It's not plum. It's not red. Take an overripe raspberry and a plump blackberry and crush the two together. The juices would blend to form Morgause. The color would succeed at a family luncheon as well as a sexy rendezvous. The power of Morgause lies in the intent of the wearer. I would recommend a base coat and top coat to prolong the life of the polish. Although I find the solid gloss shades have a little better staying power than the metallics, I am truly pleased with the longevity of every BPTP polish I have tried. After three days of manicure abuse, I have one tiny chip earned by unravelling a firm knot in a length of velvet ribbon. I have committed many other such manicure horrors and Morgause can handle it.
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I will admit that butter is an unkindly note once it comes in contact with my skin. I typically prefer not to have the butter note in the same zip code with my person. This year, however, I was able to buy the whole pumpkin plunder. I found Pumpkin#1 a little too sweet for my skin but it's beautiful in the locket, where I tend to keep gourmand scents. I was surprised at how balanced this blend is. The pumpkin and the jasmine tea are the most prevalent notes with the pear and the wine grapes adding a sparkle of nectar. Pumpkin #1 reminds me of the beginnings of fall when bartlett pears and sugar pumpkins begin their appearance in farmers' markets and my fruit bowl is arranged to overflowing. It's a fresh and proper scent, like having a pear tart in a tea house at 4 p.m. on an autumn day.
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- Pumpkin Patch
- Pumpkin Patch 2007
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I saw it at will call and it has the standard Rappaccini's Garden label with the floral motif. Still pretty, but no toad.
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I've had trouble with some of the pumpkin scents of the past because the butter note has been too prevalent for my chemistry to handle. I was interested in trying the BPTP pumpkin soap mainly to find a usuable form of the lab's pumpkin for my skin. I find this particular pumpkin to have a strong buttery top note when dry. When the soap meets water, the butter seems to subside and the smell of a carved jack-o'lantern emerges. It's the true fresh pumpkin smell I have been craving. While I love the soap in the tub, the smell of it dry is too strongly buttery for me. I combat this by keeping it in a drawer between uses. I wonder if the nuttiness the other reviewers are reporting is a hint of the shea in the soaps components. I used my bar of Pumpkin Soap in the bath. The red clay colors my skin in a pinkish terracotta for a moment and then it dissipates into the water. Washing with the soap feels like a spa beauty treatment.