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Casablanca

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Everything posted by Casablanca

  1. Casablanca

    Gingerbread, Fir, Myrrh, & Mahogany

    On the wand, this is mostly a ginger-edged fir and mahogany blend to me. I don't get baked goods from it there, but... On my skin, it becomes lots of gingerbread instead. The fir and mahogany are now the minor players. I don't notice myrrh at all until drydown, when it starts to peer out. It adds a resinous tone that blends well into the mahogany and spices, not pulling much attention to itself. The baked goods scent lingers but isn't as striking once this has dried. This is an interesting blend that is definitely working better after some settling than it did when it first arrived.
  2. Casablanca

    Talvikuu

    Cold-edged, minty ice and snow flurries on woods. I keep thinking I smell hops, which I seem to amp, and... maybe elemi. I don't know. Definitely hops or something like it, along with birch and fir. Pretty blend.
  3. Casablanca

    Leukophobia

    Chilled lemony white tea. Almost icy. Crisp, clean, and sharp. For me, this goes a little powdery on drydown from white musk. Simple and likable for clean-scent and tea lovers.
  4. Casablanca

    Amaxophobia

    Amaxophobia is unsettling in its accuracy. Actual, specific crushed chocolates (with that thin, waxy "chocolate" that can get a little white around the edges if mushed? yeah), gasoline fumes (cough), motor oil, and new-car smell. Ugh. I mean, shit got real. If this isn't my kind of thing, my appreciation for the moment accurately captured is.
  5. Casablanca

    Allodoxaphobia

    Allodoxaphobia is a fun spice-fruit blend. Peppery boiled cranberries with an airy touch of bergamot. The pepper smells like both pink and black pepper to me. The cranberries smell boiled! (I'm not sure how that works.) The bergamot is the mildest citrus touch, more the orchard breeze than the orchard. I thought this one might sucker me into a bottle, but at least for my tastes, the pepper is a little too strong and the cranberries too boiled. I will enjoy the decant, though.
  6. Casablanca

    Kalahantarika

    A very sweet decanter sent me this as a free bottle. ❤️ My first impression of it in the bottle and on my skin is of jasmine, lots of it. Erm, no jasmine in the notes? Does jonquil smell similar? Oh, OK... From a gardening website: "The scent is reminiscent of jasmine and hyacinth; sweet and heavy." Lots of jonquil, then, merging into some lavender. In drydown I find some faint herbal hint, but I would never guess what it was. And an airy wisp of lemon. Mostly, this is jonquil and lavender now.
  7. Casablanca

    Phonophobia

    From the listed notes, I expected a knockback cinnamon black musk with loads of throw, but actually, Phonophobia doesn't overwhelm. It's not super soft, but it is much more mellow than Christmas crackers, and more mellow than how loud cinnamon and black musk can be on me. The notes are as described: cinnamon and dark vetiver-lemon musk. Sometimes I think I also get a little whiff of clove or other spice.
  8. Casablanca

    V'al Hanissim

    V'al is a glowing, rich, and sumptuous beeswax scent. This beeswax smells yellow with the natural stain of pollen and nectar that bees give it in the hive. The blend is creamy, golden, a little sweet with honey, a little hazy with candle smoke. This one has lots of throw and a long, glorious wear length on me.
  9. Casablanca

    Winter Trees

    Cool, wintry lemon verbena. Lots of it. Then, with the vanilla from the amber, I also have this crossing into lemon-iced vanilla cookie land. Snowy lemon-iced cookies. This is quite sweet and sugary compared with the lemony woods I imagined on reading the notes. Once Winter Trees dries, the woods begin to peer out, almost shyly. The blend becomes sweet and sugary lemon woods, which is more or less how it remains for me for the remainder of its life.
  10. Casablanca

    I Hear You Call, Pine Tree

    Usually, pine is my friend. In December, I made a body gloss using a pine essential oil that came out smelling a bit like ammonia on my skin. It reminded me of when reviewers say that a pine smells like cat pee on them. That pine wasn't a good match. Unfortunately, this is that sort of pine for me. I never pick up any lotus from this one; it's all the pine.
  11. Casablanca

    Mountain Temple

    Mountain Temple smells so much to me like Winter Landscape -- but with much less of the minty snow -- that on the second testing, I put them both on to compare. Winter Landscape: A snow-thick scent, chalky with sandalwood and clove, streaked iron-orange and tonka-brown. Mountain Temple: White sandalwood incense flakes and snow. Yes, they really smell nearly alike on my skin, other than having different amounts and maybe types of snow. The snow in Winter Landscape is much heavier and more minty on me, and the incense in Mountain Temple is stronger. Otherwise, inhaling one immediately brings the other to mind for me. Both blends are wintry and meditative in their mood. I actually prefer Mountain Temple, but they are close enough that my older bottle will likely suffice. Lovely blend.
  12. Casablanca

    Chestnuts & Hearth Smoke

    This is lovely. Warm chestnuts -- woody and a little spicy -- with firewood smoke. This is the smoke of a homestead's glowing red fireplace embers, and I love it. I also get an impression of black iron, like a scolding-hot kettle dangling over the fire. Whether that's real or my imagination, it fits the scene this fragrance paints in my thoughts.
  13. Casablanca

    The Flame of the Bear

    This turns completely to a musty-sock-mistletoe blend on my skin, so I'll just describe the scent before my chemistry gets ahold of it: Crisp bayberry-green fir and a hint of mistletoe. Mistletoe is much more pleasant without my skin than with it. The blend is cool, evergreen-woody, black peppery, and a bit wintry-herbal.
  14. Casablanca

    Neptunite Phoenix

    Neptunite is a dark, salty oceanic blend on the imp wand (Elder Gods/Cthulhu-like in mood) and develops its flowers on the skin. Wet on my skin: Dark, salty ocean, black musk, and black orchid, mostly. Jasmine steps up after a few minutes. And dry: The salty ocean continues strong, but the flowers dim somewhat. This blend brings to mind the homicidal mermaids in Rolling in the Deep.
  15. Casablanca

    Andradite Phoenix

    Loads of musk, especially red, with champaca. Strong. As Andradite dries on my skin, I find mahogany and amber coming out, also. But unfortunately, the Lab's red musk also then starts to do the icky thing it does on my skin. I had to try. This is a blend for red musk lovers.
  16. Casablanca

    Inesite Phoenix

    Wet: I love this combination of the sugary rose, red currant, green cognac, vanilla, and guava. The cognac and vanilla are like a dignified procession, a stately Lace -- but they blend well with currant and guava that want to skip and frolic, and rose that's just being girly. Inesite is primarily sweet and fruity at first. Dry: The fruitiness has settled down into the cognac and vanilla, as if wrapping itself in a comforter for the night. The blend is also more musky now, and a little powdery. I think this may be more girly than I will need for a bottle, but I'll really enjoy this decant.
  17. Casablanca

    Benitoite Phoenix

    Benitoite reads as a quirky musk blend to me: hard to pin down, like its inspiration sky. I get a cool, aquatic, blue-green musk. It smells "almost" a lot of things — almost camphorous, almost minty, almost like a conifer. Then, as it begins to dry, it goes super salty, and I wonder if it has a salty something-or-other in it from Halite. Benitoite in this phase smells like salty ambergris and strange cool musk on my skin. I really amp whatever the salty ambergris-type thing is. I tend to amp salt, and it pretty much takes over for me.
  18. Casablanca

    Native Gold

    Mineral birch beer. It's a bit sparkly-fizzy, maybe from the aldehydes. A fizzy sarsaparilla with a little cedar after drydown.
  19. Casablanca

    Halite Phoenix

    Salty salt-land salt. The rest of the blend smells like ambergris and -- yes! -- warm corn chips. (I mean, this kinda reminds me of golden retriever feet? Because they always smell like corn chips? I don't know why...) The intense salt and ambergris, though, remind me of the briney scent of the Jersey shore when the tide is out. There's even something a little kelpy or mineral here, but I'm not sure if I'm imagining it because it's true to the mental image. Salt isn't my bag of chips, but salt lovers should check this out.
  20. Casablanca

    Magnetite Phoenix

    This really does put across the idea of iron. Nine out of 10 dwarves would choose Magnetite. On me, this is warm, gray, metallic iron with a blend of labdanum, vetiver, frank, and patch. Iron and labdanum are strongest on me, which gives this something of a metallic cola vibe, but grounded in earthy woods and minerals. I wouldn't be surprised if a little black musk or cologne were in this mix, but there's not much specific getting out through its mighty Labdanum-Iron Wall. Magnetite is an iron fortress.
  21. Casablanca

    Colemanite Phoenix

    Purple-flowering desert sage, sweet dandelion, and dried brush. My first, one-second impression of this was actually just the color purple. Purple and sweetness, then the sage and flowers followed. The dried brush and a little sand appeared in drydown. What this reminds me of? Actually, Carlin... the sage and purple-ish heather and thistle smells I found there. But that was a scent of the moors, and this is a desert.
  22. Casablanca

    Epidote Phoenix

    Freshly on, Epidote smells like a wind from within sun-speckled forest depths. Fresh green pine (a little sticky with its sap) over mosses and rustic redwood dried and warmed by the sun. Sometimes the fresh pine and rough redwood combine in my nose to remind me of dried, rust-colored pine needles. The sunny forest feel of this reminds me most of Theoi Nomioi. I can also see a comparison to Forest of the Empress, my favorite forest blend. I also think I will need to retest this just to be sure I don't need a bottle for the forest collection.
  23. Casablanca

    Clinochlore Phoenix

    Wet: Deep black currant, with a glow of sugared pink roses, and hints of almond and shimmering abalone. The sugary pink roses bring a potent girlishness to a blend that otherwise behaves as a lady. The blend develops its musk in drydown on my skin. Pink rosebud musk indeed... the drydown for me is mainly a deep black currant and sugared pink rosebud musk. The musk eventually calms down, which is a relief. Dried on my skin, this blend is black currant dominant, glowing with sugared pink roses, iridescent with abalone, grounded by little dark moss. A different and intriguing fragrance. I'll need to work out whether it's too girly to be a black currant go-to for me.
  24. Casablanca

    Californite Phoenix

    I love the mineral theme of this year's anniversary blends. I had to try one called California Jade. First applied, this is quite pretty. I find a lot of mossy greenery and a crystalline hint of spearmint. The greenery reads as a bit aquatic and damp, but in a fresh way. Behind these hangs an airy musk -- perhaps a white musk. I hope this doesn't turn white-musk powdery. In drydown, this is a soft, mossy-green spearmint. It goes a little powdery, but doesn't get crazy. Occasionally... I seem to catch a little anise lingering in this mild green haze after it dries. This is a mild greenery and mint blend that becomes a bit powdery and herbal when dry.
  25. Casablanca

    Honeysuckle & Patchouli

    As others have said, this begins life as a deep, rich honeysuckle. Honey-sweet and heady. Kneel before Queen Honeysuckle. After drydown, the Queen sweeps out, leaving a hint of sweetness and a mild patchouli behind.
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