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

Lucchesa

Members
  • Content Count

    4,440
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Lucchesa


  1. Dark Lace is really complex and beautiful, with lots of lovely musky tobacco at first.  I get some rich cognac as well, some sweetnes that is not identifiable to me as vanilla cotton candy, and some of the darker earthy notes creeping in.  I have no experience with Black Lace to compare with. But it is not at all long lasting on me, and all that persists is the incense.  I feel like I should probably let this go to someone whose skin chemistry lets it shine better and longer. 


  2. Also Sam from American Gods is patchouli, nag champa, and freshly soaped skin.  

    I can't wear nag champa so I haven't actually tried it, but the notes you want are there.  But a lot of the reviews say it's more soap than the other notes.  

    There was this Dead Leaves from 2016: Dead Leaves, Honeyed Patchouli, and Champaca Blossom 

    And from last year's Lupers, To My Dear and Loving Husband, bourbon vanilla, 17-year aged patchouli, champaca blossom, copal, black tea, frankincense, and agarwood.  But Urd is probably the easiest of the lot to get ahold of.  


  3. Hazelnut is one of my very favorite notes, and I love this so much.  Lots of toasty hazelnut, a little gritty cacao (this is not Nutella on me), some warm tonka.  The pine isn't obvious at first but keeps it from being totally foodie.  So it's kind of an outdoorsy warm roasted hazelnut with an edge of very dark chocolate.  It's a huge comfort scent for me and lasts all day, though any throw is confined to the first hour or two.  Love!


  4. A kind forum friend gave me an Emathides partial, not something I would necessarily have chosen as some of the floral notes can be problematic.  This bottle is now about 15 years old, and any rough edges, any screeching voices or horny beaks, have long been mellowed away.  It's hard to identify specific notes here.  Some amber, yes, and some dark fruit, and something darkly floral, though no specific floral notes are recognizable to me, not even the rose.  It's not about the parts anymore.  It's about a deep, purply, velvety, femme fatale whole that seems very classic BPAL to me.  


  5. I received this from a very generous forumite in a blind bottle swap.  It is all my beloveds — and tuberose. Tuberose and I do not get along. I knew there was a reason I hadn’t sought out a decant. But I couldn’t and still can’t find the tuberose in Night. Nor do I specifically find the cacao.  It’s all inky vetiver and tobacco and dark velvet resins, with the florals kind of non-specifically floating around. It does have great throw, which may be the fault of the tuberose — notes I’m uncomfortable with often have huge throw on me. But it smells terrific. 


  6. I let my decant rest at least 18 hours before putting Sugar Cookie Snake Oil on today.  Applied about 9 am, it's hard to make out at 6 pm, but I've not found any of the snake variants to have the staying power of the GC.  It's a nice foodie snake, sugar and baked goods and musky snake oil.  I'm not getting the spiciness other reviewers have commented on.  This isn't a snickerdoodle snake oil (please, next year?).  I enjoyed wearing this on a long car ride with my daughter to an anxiety-provoking medical appointment for her.  But I don't wear enough gourmands to need a full bottle.  


  7. Auriga opens as lemon amber on me.  It's an appealing combination.  The oakmoss is the next element I can pick out, and with the amber it gives me something earthy as the lemon fades away.  The patchouli and vetiver stay well in the background, though, and this is never as dark as I would like.  It's quite soft on me, with low throw and medium wear length.  A nice earthy oakmoss blend and good for folks who dislike any sweetness in their scents.  


  8. In the bottle, The Avenue smells quite a bit like Dia de los Reyes, one of my favorite chocolate scents.  On my skin, though, the cocoa moves to the background, the clove bud takes center stage, and the whole is wonderfully spicy, warm, and delightful.  There's a little smoke, a little amber, a lovely vanilla, a peppery quality (I am often anosmic to the Lab's pepper note), and a lot of clove. It's cozy and sexy and uplifting, perfect for this dreary rainy day.  


  9. Cognac-Stained Sheet Ghost is my favorite Weenie so far.  It's a soft, pillowy, lace-family vanilla cognac against an outdoorsy balsam and tumbleweed combo that is just full of win for me.  Kind of like Tombstone without the root beer.  Serious comfort scent, cozy, rugged.  But ridiculously lovely.  The wear length is only average on me, but this is worth reapplying. 


  10. I'm astounded by the reviewers who got no red musk and brief wear length.  As usual, red musk absolutely takes over on me and lasts all day.  Once it settles down, it's dry (not fruity) red musk with lacquer, vetiver that is more green than smoky, and polished mahogany.  I'm not sure I'm familiar with black labdanum, but I'm not getting the syrupy cola resin I love. This scent is highly polished, like a woman who always looks completely put together.  Very sophisticated and maybe even snooty.  She's a little out of my league.  I like this, and it might be an excellent power scent, but it's not really me.  


  11. Last Tavern is a typical red musk on my skin in that it doesn't leave a whole lot of room for anything but red musk -- smoky red musk in this case, almost bitter at first.  It's a dry, not a fruity red musk, with lots of hearthsmoke.  I never get much amber, but the whisky does emerge after a couple of hours (this lasts all day).  If smoky, atmospheric red musk sounds like your jam, or you want to smell like a tavern in another century or your favorite fantasy novel, this is perfect!


  12. Strawberry!  This was frimped to me, so strawberry is not a note I gravitate to, but I've been trying unsuccessfully to find a blackberry that stays realistic on my skin, and this is quite a realistic strawberry.  The red musk does not run away with things -- in fact, it's some of the most reticent red musk I've encountered.  It's there, but it lets the fruit shine:  mainly strawberry, with tartness from the currants.  This is fun and young at heart. 


  13. I kind of love this.  Testing blind, I wasn't able to pick out any of the notes except for amber and some kind of evergreen.  It's obvious there's a whole lot more going on, but it's seamless.  Looking at the notes, I can say ok, there's the earthy sweetness of the fig, there's the cypress and balsam, but I really can't isolate the tobacco or ambergris or bay leaf.  It's soft on my skin, not overtly masculine but unisex.  BoneBone's greenish gold -- her whole review, really -- is very close to my experience of this one.  I wish it were a bit stronger but that may come with age. 


  14. A Skull, A Music Book, A Snuffed Out Candle smells more like spring than like fall.  It's a sweet floral anchored by the beeswax, with a gentle sandalwood and no discernible leather on me.  Decent throw and it lasts all day on me.  I will keep my decant because I love beeswax scents of all kinds, even spring floral ones, and this one is certainly lovely, but I was hoping for leather. 


  15. I got lots of dead leaves in the opening, but they were entirely supplanted by one of the sweeter honeys that I have a hard time wearing.  Or maybe it was the honey and cream combination -- I agree with artisjok that this is reminiscent of Snake's Kiss (when I tested it, I was thinking WHAT is the scent it's making me think of?, and that was it exactly).  Snake's Kiss did not end up working on me, and neither does this DL, as the honey/vanilla/dairy combo veers into cloying territory on my skin, and there are not enough dead leaves to pull it back.  On the plus side, it has good throw and wear length. 


  16. I wonder if The Initiator is getting stronger with age.  I did slather, having read the reviews, but I was rewarded with quite nice throw and decent wear length.  It's a beautiful churchy resin scent, mostly frankincense, with some sweet gum, which does not smell like bubble gum on me; the cinnamon barely registers on my skin.  Lovely for meditation or anytime you want to harness that whole western spiritual tradition thing. 


  17. Big Red chewing gum!  Eventually the clove struck more of a balance.  It's like the potpourri my mother used to buy at Christmas.  Or, knowing her, immediately after Christmas, on sale, to use the following year.  What Santa's workshop might smell like. 

     

    I don't have particularly sensitive skin but can't, for instance, wear Inferno because it gives me a skin reaction, and I had no problems with Cinnamon & Clove.  It wears close to the skin (normal for me) but lasts a few hours. 


  18. Something in Great Basin Woodnymph goes badly awry on me.  Instead of grass and hay and dry cacao, I get urinal cake.  Hints of the other notes, but mainly that sickly public toilet smell.  I wasn't in a position to scrub it off, and eventually it mellowed to something more bearable, Tonka has never done this to me before -- some kind of weird combination effect?  I'll be passing this decant on to someone whose skin chemistry will let them wear it more gracefully. 


  19. Lights, Camera, Something is lovely on me -- a lemony lavender with lots of cardamom and soft vanilla, which is not as foodie as it sounds like, even though, as usual, the lavender is fugitive on my skin.  It's comforting and uplifting and lasts a good long time. 


  20. It's All So Damn Beautiful didn't quite work on me.  It's overbalanced towards the oakmoss and petroleum on my skin.  The lavender is just a whisper on me, which is not uncommon with lavender for me, but I was hoping for more opoponax and amber, which also barely registered.  It is lovely and unusual in the imp, so like doomsday_disco above I may have to try it in my scent locket. 


  21. I tested The Crossed Keys blind, and it started out really green.  I was sure it would have ivy or dandelion or grass or some such note -- I totally see where Irish Sea Mermaid got cucumber.  Is that gum acacia?  This smells nothing like, say, Penitence (frank & myrrh) on me.  This is a blend where the parts are subsumed into the whole and can't be pried apart.  And the whole is kind of quiet and still and cool.  I'm super glad I got to try it (thanks, @Teamama!) but it's not something I see myself wearing often.  


  22. This was passed on to me by a generous forum friend, so it's not my usual thing.  I got a lot of orange blossom and sweet rose bound by a creamy vanilla.  The sandalwood was missing on me, nor could I pick out the labdanum or prune, and if I could have picked out the notes I would have wanted at the forefront, those would have been the ones.  But if floaty orange blossom-rose-vanilla sounds like your thing, soft and creamy and innocent, that's what I got, with relatively good throw and great wear length.

×