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Gil001 – :
La Fenetre Ouverte (The Open Window) by Chateau du Breau
alex2046 – :
@Eurochic
Because it’s a heavy dose of lavender you smell from beginning to end. That’s probably why people voted as lavender being the most prominent tone. If you smell dried French lavender, you’ll get the same musty, powdery floral essence you smell here. The violet livens it up from being dated.
pe109736 – :
@eurochic a company isn’t going to list every ingredient used in a scent, these notes also exist in this fragrance. Thank you.
EmilMailliard – :
I can’t find words to describe this exquisitely beautiful fragrance! One KNOWS they used the best ingredients to be found anywhere. So simple in notes yet SO elegant a scent. Fabulous fabulous fabulous. Try a sample at a store; it can convert non- iris/violet/heliotrope ppl to lovers of same. Just so lovely and sophisticated. A treasure.
Димаf – :
In a way, you can see that all the members of Le Gemme collection are variations on a basis that involves aspects of powdery iris and soft musks. In Ashlemah it gains a purple outline to reflect the stone inspiration, Amethyst, which has a more spiritual and reflective symbolism attached to its beautiful purple color. The connection here between color and aroma is perfect and in fact Ashlemah produces a purple olfactory aura, one that explores the freshness and sweetness of lavender in contrast with a sweet and powdery violet and iris accord, something that almost border a shiny lipstick accord. Ashlemah becomes increasingly elegant and warm in the skin as the times goes, involving the user in what looks like a mixture of musks, iris and a calculated incense to emulate the spiritual aura of the inspiration. It is a perfume whose appreciation for it will gradually grow in the skin and that can not be properly evaluated only by its opening.
ttw986InsuffBooni – :
Ashlemeh, which features the notes Lavender Essence, Iris Absolute and Musk. It is a very elegant, understated scent, but don’t write it off as boring or “dry.” There is lurking sensuality in it,just a bit of sweet juicyness that is pulled off with absolute refinement and aristocracy.
shtrauh – :
Strange and uncomfortable bottle. Far from the Bvlgari elegance. However the juice is very pleasent, but is absolutely the same as Bvlgari Eau Parfumee au The Bleu. Not worthy spending so much money on this one if you can have the The Bleu.
kuzbass – :
This is the amethyst colour bottle. The Bvlgari website says the notes are Lavender Essence, Iris Absolute and Musk.
Please correct the notes here. Thank you.
Ashlemah opens with a bang: Iris, powder, violet, a little bit reminiscent of Insolence. When the blast calms down, the powdery aspect of the white musk comes forward, giving the scent a bit of a soapy feel. And then the real star of the show comes out to shine: the buttery Iris. Some people might call it carotty. It rests on that bed of musk, and the perfume keeps going back and forth between the buttery scent and the powdery touch, making this one of the more interesting Iris perfumes I own.
I don’t get much if any, of the lavender, I wonder why it is the most voted note.
qwertyuiop79 – :
beautiful, my favorite from all of them
you can feel there little bit bvlgari style
(pour femme and le petites & mamas)
nothing spicy, more neutral and powdery
SuSaNiN – :
Ashlemah, (sweet dreams) is based on the amethyst. A stone associated with divinity, spirituality and purity. This perfume is the aristocrat of the line. It is highly sophisticated in nature and wears on the skin with regal beauty. Purple after all is the color of kings. The notes are lavender essence, Iris absolute and musk. No muddle of too many symphonic notes but rather a chamber piece of clarity and beauty. It opens in Lavender but the star in the evening sky is the imperial cool beauty of a lovely iris note. This is held aloft on the skin by a clean clear musk.
(FOR THE STORY INSPIRED BY THIS PERFUME AND MY TAKE ON THE ENTIRE COLLECTION CHECK MY REVIEW ON MY BLOG SCENTS MEMORY)