Jenjin Report post Posted December 19, 2023 (edited) He’s just pretending to be cold! A milky plastic shell of frosted blue spruce, illuminated from within by 40 watts of glowing amber. Edited December 24, 2023 by Jenjin Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
HerbGirl Report post Posted December 20, 2023 Well. It definitely fits the description! The spruce is fierce and for the first 15 minutes the amber fights with it đź«Ł. Then it calms down a bit, spruce always strongest, but never quite smells 'good' to me. The plasticky element is definitely present which gets the point across but might render it unwearable for me. This would, however, make an excellent room spray. Might have to try this in an oil warmer... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ghoulnextdoor Report post Posted December 27, 2023 If this scent could be a book cover, it would 100% be an R.L. Stine Goosebumps book.  Inside its plastic sarcophagus, a spectral sentinel stands guard, shimmering with the trapped souls of forty dead watts. Enchanted with its kitschy charm, you inhale deeply…and are immediately hit with a damp slap of mildew, the smell of dusty basements and rain-soaked attics. Not pleasant, exactly, but…intriguing, summoning whispers of forgotten winters, of attic dolls weeping silent tears, of cobwebs spun with memories. The scent of time clawing and gnawing at plastic and wood, turning memories into dust. Softly, a chill creeps in. Not the icy bite of winter, but something deeper, more unsettling. Flowers, pale things like ghosts blooming in the snowman’s hollow chest; the sweet decay mingled with the mildew beneath the fake plastic sun of the snowman’s smile. But there is warmth, too, hidden in the depths. Amber, like sunbeams trapped in honey, a counterpoint to the decay, a whisper of life clinging to the skeleton of memory. The snowman’s heart, beating faintly in the plastic ribs. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
doomsday_disco Report post Posted December 29, 2023 (edited) On me, this is mostly about the spruce throughout wear, although it is strongest during the first few hours of wear, before the amber and plastic notes join it, but then are beaten back by a frost note, which ends up being the dominant note by the end of the day, overlaying the spruce. I think the amber in this may be a sparkling variety, and the plastic, while present, is not as strong as the plastic in Vintage Dracula Blow Mold. The frosted part of the blue spruce seems to be something like the snow note from NYC/Snow Bunny/Marshmallow Snow, which is to say that it is a sugared, sparkling, evergreen-infused snow, that's chilly, but not minty, yet it's different because the evergreen component is already a part of the scent.  This does go through a phase when the amber and plastic try to gain strength and battle with the spruce, which makes it veer into a somewhat sour evergreen scent on me, but fortunately, the spruce wins out, and the frost smooths things over so that it's pleasant again.  Although I'm not very fond of that wonky phase of the scent, I really enjoy the spruce in this, so I'll keep it around for a while and see how it ages. I agree with HerbGirl that this would be even better as an atmosphere spray. Edited December 29, 2023 by doomsday_disco Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
deadlyves Report post Posted January 16 I get mostly spruce. Spruce tinted by other things, particularly the amber that rounds it out, but mostly spruce nonetheless. I don't get plastic, which is a good thing in my book. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
samanare Report post Posted February 4 Almost a spruce/evergreen single note on me. I do get a little bit of amber, but the spruce note is by far the strongest. Reminds me of a real evergreen wreath one might get during the winter. It's pleasant, but simple and doesn't stick out among the evergreen scents I already have. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RoseThornAndOak Report post Posted March 17 Yeah I agree with HerbGirl and everyone here this is pretty fierce spruce. For me it basically stays that way only softening slightly. It's nice but more of an atmospheric for me but might layer well. Not much plastic really. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Little Bird Report post Posted June 17 I want to love the 'blow mold' scents, but the literal plastic note makes them hard to wear. If I say a scent is plasticy, I usually mean I dislike it. It takes fragrances into a cheap, candle-like scent category for me. Vintage Snowman is a sharp evergreen and ice scent, more aquatic/ozone than minty. The touch of plastic makes it smell like an old, forgotten evergreen candle turning to dust in the bottom of a christmas box in the attic. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites