Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron

3.93 из 5
(41 отзывов)

Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron

Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron

Rated 3.93 out of 5 based on 41 customer ratings
(41 customer reviews)

Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron for women and men of Caron

SKU:  7befc36d64c1 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) by Caron is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) was launched in 1923. The nose behind this fragrance is Ernest Daltroff. Top notes are lilac and rose; middle notes are opoponax, benzoin and incense; base notes are sandalwood, amber, musk, vanilla and cedar.

41 reviews for Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron

  1. :

    3 out of 5

    Strongly lilac with faint perfume notes. Very pretty but too sheer and gone in an hour, so definitely is a bath treatment and not a perfume or body scent. Makes me wish they made this in perfume strength because it’s lovely.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Bought this blind early in my search for a great vanilla cologne that wasn’t too feminine. (Btw, found it in Perry Ellis Black Vanilla Absolute). This smells like a barber shop. By no means does it smell bad but it just wasn’t exactly what I was looking for. Floral, barber shop smell is what you’ll get here. I could see it being great in bath water and…possibly…in a hot tub? Vanilla floral might make the water smell great and take the edge off the chlorine. Anyways, smells good just not my cup of tea.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    Royal Champagne Bath was primarly meant to be a bath water additive or splash. Sort of a posh Jean Nate. The size of the bottles(very large) at a relatively low price point compared to other Caron scents of the day support it’s intended usage. It was sold mostly in very large sizes. We also carried some small travel sizes that came in the exact same bottle and label sizes were were sold unboxed. I had male customers who regular purchased the small sized bottle. To me, the beauty of this scent is in the bath.

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    caron says made in 1941. anyways, its interesting that caron website says this is made to perfume the bath water, it was made specifically for some rich guy to replace his champagne baths. not many people takes baths these days, but if I did, I would probably slash some of this in.

  5. :

    5 out of 5

    A great Oriental Vanilla indeed. Rich, warm, seductive, flirty, heavy, modern-and-the-same-time-old-fashioned. Like a warm hug of a long lost friend. I can’t wear it at all, my throat gets thick and a cough alot. If you find it -try it. Its lovely!
    En ljuvlig Oriental Vanilla. Rik, varm, förförisk, flirtig, tung, modern-men-samtidigt-omodern. som en varm kram från en långväga vän. Jag kan inte bära den alls, halsen tjocknar igen och jag hostar enormt. OM du hittar den – prova den. Den är suverän.

  6. :

    4 out of 5

    I was wearing Shalimar today.
    Having showered and readied myself for bed, I decided to try my new beauty, Royal Bain de Caron.
    My immediate reaction was that I couldn’t have done a very good job removing the Shalimar, so I dabbed a little more RBdC on my ankle (not a place I normally bedaub with any cosmetic product, but – well – needs must), left it alone for five minutes, then cautiously sniffed it.
    It wasn’t my imagination; RBdC and Shalimar are definitely similar. They have seven notes in common: opoponax, benzoin, incense, vanilla, rose, musk and sandalwood (according to Fragrantica’s list). Not unexpectedly, RBdC is lighter – but if you like Shalimar, there is a good chance you’ll like RBdC and I think this will be an alternative to wear during the spring and summer, when my beloved Shalimar is too heavy.
    Shalimar is sixteen years or so older than RBdC; Wikipedia notes that Jacques Guerlain, like Ernest Daltroff, “frequently incorporated bases produced by M. Naef and the Fabriques de Laire”. I would lay money on this being the common DNA.

  7. :

    4 out of 5

    Royal Bain de Caron is a clean, soapy, musk & sandalwood scent, with Oriental flash notes but without the heaviness of a traditional Oriental perfume. Some of the reviews here suggest it’s a luxurious soap or bath oil. I’m inclined to agree but I would also add that it’s a unisex winter fragrance to be worn out in public in the cold months of December through February. I’m in the UK and it’s already clearly winter so I reach for my warmer balsamic fragrances to scent my skin & to match my winter wardrobe of scarves, coats & furs.
    The bottle is shaped like – a bottle. It looks like a bottle of liqueur from the 19th century. Nothing about it is boozy but at times there is something like a rum scent. The previous reviewer was smart enough to detect a similarity to cherry scented vanilla coke. It smells like that or a warm root beer or rum. As such, she is not a dry, dark, introspective, aloof, melancholic or “serious” type of Oriental. She has a sweetness to her and a pleasantness that lingers. Another reviewer also compared it to a bath product for a baby and the “baby head” smell. And who doesn’t love that smell? To me the sum of notes of florals, incense, sandalwood, amber wood & vanilla lean towards a clean regal unisex powder for wearing as a comfort and soothing scent in harsh European winters.
    In this way it does seem to evoke a “Royal Bath”, in the classic sense. She is an 17th and 18th century Netherlands, East European or Russian monarch in her steamy bath, attended by her handmaidens who pour the balsamic oils, sandalwood and floral toilet water into her bath. When she emerges from her bath her fragrance is neither rich nor heavy, just as clean and pristine as one should be after a good bath. There was a time when royals & nobles did not bathe daily & there was no such thing as the shower so they had a once-a-year bath ritual. Throughout the year they masked their foul body odor with heavy perfume oil made up of floral water & musk. A fragrance that comes to mind is the old Medieval Hungary Water.
    The fragrance opens with floral notes of lilac & rose, classic soapy floral smells. I have dozens of lilac & rose scented soaps and this is exactly how it opens. There might be a little unlisted dash of aldehyde but as it lacks in citrus notes it’s coming off as a floral toilet water soap fragrance. The florals are not screechy nor heavy as there are only those two notes. Soon, the fragrance becomes smooth clean musk with an incense, opoponax and benzoin. She is not terribly smoky, but one can still detect an incense. The rest of the notes are comprised of sandalwood & amber. I love the sandalwood in this scent. So there you have Royal Bain, it is a very well composed ancient bath scent for royalty. It’s almost like something out of the Bible. Balm from Gilead, King David & Solomon’s bath, Jewish-Hebraic perfume oil, a gift to the Queen of Sheba.
    I can’t go without mentioning the sweet vanilla & cedar wood which come through in the dry down and turn powdery and pleasant, but not very feminine. I don’t think this is a traditional woman’s perfume but more a unisex bath product type of perfume. Beautiful, and subtle, warm and comfortable.
    This is a perfume I will be wearing as the winter lingers along with my other warm fragrances that are perfect for my skin in the cold. I hope Fragrantica editors write & publish an article on special winter time warm fragrances and if they already have, I must have missed it. Royal Bain is at the top of my list of these classic warm fragrances along with Nuit de Noel & Parfum Sacre which has a bigger fan base. This fragrance is as lovely as those 2 aforementioned Caron perfumes however & are all welcome at my home.
    A beautiful and simple scent of cleanliness and powdery incense. I’m reminded of the old adage:
    “Cleanliness is next to godliness”
    This is that kind of smell! So clean and divine, regal, for kings & Popes.
    And for YOU.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    This is certainly a balsamic fragrance, but also with some fruity undertones; almost a “cherry coke” vibe going on. It is a chilly, rainy day and I thought this would be a warming and cozy fragrance. It is, but not as much as I’d hoped; the fruitiness keeps it lighter and more…joyful? than some balsamic fragrances. There is a powdery vanilla musk that trails behind, like baby’s breath flowers and playdough…it’s a little artificial, I think from the style of vanilla that’s there. My favorite of all time balsamic fragrance is Aviance Night Musk, which is spicy and gloriously rich. This is not so rich, not spicy and not as deep. Longevity is about 3-4 hours, projection is low to modest.

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    Fragrance Review For Royal Bain by Caron
    Top Notes: Lilac Rose
    Middle Notes: Opoponax, Benzoin Incense
    Base notes: Sandalwood, amber, musk, vanilla cedar.
    I see this fragrance as an Oriental bath oil. This is a gorgeous resinous smoky incense based scent. The benzoin, opoponax and incense come together in the heart to give the fragrance a lift and warmth, a caress like a myrrh or balsam poured over your head. Someone compared it to the nicest smelling child’s head after a bath and that’s exactly what I’m getting too. Smells so clean and divine like being purified in the Old Testament sense with balsam and perfumed incense. The scent lasts a long time and gives everything a sweetness around the edges. A vanilla, a rose, a lilac and sandalwood, all around the incense. Just lovely. This is unisex so anyone can enjoy it. Despite the fact that it does wear like a bath oil I don’t pour this into my bath. I think of it as an evening perfume/cologne to put on after I’ve showered about 25-30 minutes before putting on this scent. I wear it with my formal evening clothes and it smells very formal to me. It does smell royal like a king of queen has been bathing and scenting themselves with this stuff before addressing a large crowd that will get whiffs of this beauty on them. A very beloved Caron perfume. Caron specializes in incense. They have done so many great scents that always please me. I love their Parfum Sacre. Gorgeous gorgeous incense.

  10. :

    4 out of 5

    Ahh! Caronade! On application you get a whiff of lilac first, that goes away soon, thank God, and it is replaced by the most comforting, alluring, delicious, spicy rose deeped in vanilla and resins!!! Oh, my world!!!! This is sweet, but resinous, no fruit salad here, spicy, oriental and addictive. You would want to go smelling your wrist over and over! There is a substantial input of Amber which lends a rather Smoky sweetness to the mix and the vanilla note is more spicy than gourmand, to my nose at least, but the overall effect is amazing! What is it about Caron?? There is a Smoky, resinous element that makes the whole composition unique and sultry. Classic! But, that’s Caron! Amber, cedar and smoke create the most alluring combination that lasts and lasts! In love!!!

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    This is an oppopanax and benzion heavy hitter. The vanilla and the rose are there and very vaguely the piquant note of lilac. I can detect amber but the sandalwood is very faint. Its slightly sweet but more than that it is sort of creamy. I totally get the similarity with the smell of newly washed hair. I can also see why someone thinks its similar to Geurlain l’instant (it would need more rose) It really has good longevity and moderate sillage. I am using it to layer with other fragrances that are poor on longevity or too strong or too spicey (eg Kenzo L’elephant) to soften and round them. It was so cheap but its smells of luxury. Very nice and so comforting like a big cashmere hug!

  12. :

    3 out of 5

    Charming, comforting, pleasant… how many ‘nice’ adjectives describe this unprepossessing scent.
    Bain de Caron is in no way impressive or striking to my nose, rather having a likable, feel-good quality that should not be dismissed. Somehow this is EXACTLY the sort of scent I would mist on the hair of a child just fresh from the bath. Boy or girl! Bain has a creaminess that mimics the best of triple milled bath soaps, yet the balsamic touch keeps it from every becoming sharp or soapy.
    If scents were rated solely on comfort quality, this would be a 10. Highly recommended for that characteristic alone. Look elsewhere for earth shattering beauty or flair. The vanilla puddings of the fragrance world have their part to play too! 😀

  13. :

    3 out of 5

    Преди да го получа, нямах представа какъв е. От мненията тук разбрах, че мирише на люляк и ванилия- доста странна комбинация! Поръчах го “на сляпо”, разбира се. Все пак това е Caron! Още повече- стар, рядък аромат, еха!И когато го пробвах, разбрах, че е много идентичен с
    L’Instant Guerlain!Страхотен е, много ми харесва!Чудесен, ежедневен парфюм, носещ ми увереност, спокойствие и специфично, женствено излъчване.

  14. :

    3 out of 5

    I found this today at my Tk Maxx for a very cheap price, so I decided to buy it, though I couldn’t try it. Normally there is no tester of anything in TK Maxx… but for the price I said ti myself: why not???
    First of all it reminds me a LOT of L’Instan of Guerlain, though is not that good… but has that smoky kind of oriental character that I use to like. So I’m quite ok with it, doesn’t make me crazy, but it’s possible that it will happen with time.
    I don’t find the vanilla so overwhelming as many people says, which is quite good cause I don’t like vanilla at all. But thankfully is not. In fact I even don’t find the fragrance strong at all, I rather say that is quite discreet. I thought it would disappear in a couple of hours, but at least on my skin, the staying power is absolutely remarkable.
    There’s only one thing that I find a bit awkward: the bottle is a bit cheap… I mean the paper label, the cap made in plastic… I would not expect such thing from a brand like Caron.

  15. :

    5 out of 5

    THE ROYAL BATHROOM OF PRAYERS
    _______________________________________________________
    Ever since I was a child, I loved lilac. I loved the lilac trees, the lilac bushes, it’s overwhelming strong scent, it’s colour … simply everything. One of the best features, even nowadays, that I simply love about the lilac, is that a lot of people don’t like it.
    It’s almost the same with ‘ROYAL BAIN DE CARON’. With ease Caron built a wonderful lilac shrine. But it’s more that just a shrine. It’s almost a fortress, with thick pillars made of opoponax and benzoin. And the shrine is being guarded by defensive towers made of mysterious imperial vanilla and gorgeous sandalwood.
    At the end of the day, you will come to do, what all others have done before you at a shrine. You pray. You pray and thank the wonderful God of Caron for letting you witness the wonder that is LILAC.
    Overall: Just like religion, ROYAL BAIN is not for everyone. It is inceredibly strong, with huge sillage and even an obnoxius longetivity. It’s powdery, very sweet and very ‘in your face’.
    Longetivity: – 20/10
    Sillage: – 8/10
    All in all: 9 out of 10 points.

  16. :

    3 out of 5

    There are many things I love about this fragrance. One of the first that draws me in is the fact that many online retailers don’t know whether to classify it as a masculine, a feminine, or unisex fragrance. Fragrantica says it’s for women and men. Great. That says it all, about the fragrance’s character anyway — it must be for all genders. The dominant fragrance impression on my skin, what is most noticeable at first, is a sweet powdery lilac with woody undertones. But it’s kind of a ripe melon-lilac scent (just thought of Jasmin-Lilas from Jean Charles Brosseau, but instead of floral, a melon note that I always associate with Edmond Roudnitska). I have a kind of substantial and still growing collection of perfumes, all of which I use and try to study. A perfumer I like, DSH, once told me that it is not important to be able to pick out notes and accords when experiencing a perfume, she said it’s much more important how the perfume makes you FEEL. I think Royal Bain de Caron is a weird perfume, bit on the dandyish masculine side, but really more just a quirky perfume for people who like a bit of an ‘edge’ to their perfumes. A good weirdness. I think the cedar in this is also drawing me in. I often read that people don’t like cedar in perfumes, but I find it mostly irresistible. “Bal a Versailles” and such. “Royal Bain de Caron” is a grand perfume, too. A grand perfume for everyday use. Dynamic, and really (also due to not so strong sillage or lasting power) reminds me of being bathed in sparkling champagne. I know it’s been reformulated and is only a shadow of it’s former self (witness also cheap prices for big bottles) but I am guessing that when these ‘cheaper’ bottles are gone, then even this weak-photocopy-of-a-scent will be missed.
    By me anyway…(I have owned every Caron masculine except for “Yuzu Man”…it took me years to understand that this one (Royal…) was not weak, and was worth owning and studying. I am a true novice when writing about perfumes, I want to share an ‘attitude’ more than anything else)

  17. :

    4 out of 5

    Just bought a vintage bottle.
    I get tonne of vanilla, which dries down to the richest, deepest bourbon vanilla I have ever smelled.
    This may not be to everyone’s taste, but definitely worth sampling.

  18. :

    3 out of 5

    Royal Bain in its modern version is nothing short of a men’s delight. It may be quite different from what it was before, or not quite what it was, but as it is now, it’s a truly delightful floral barbershop-style vegetal of vanilla powdery goodness. I keep waiting and waiting for that dull, rubbery sour note that so many similar cheaper scents eventually have (and usually quite quickly) But Royal Bain never goes there. It remains sweet, floral, and just slightly woody in the base.
    As it evolves over a few hours, it takes on a nice deep fruity edge – almost like the scent of apple peels that have oxidized for a little while – a kind of sugary, ripe sweetness that almost smells a bit like wine or cider, but all in a very pleasant and refined way. The base remains very rich and almost buttery.
    As I type, I’m at about 3 hours wearing time – Royal Bain still smells great, just slightly diminished and gentler now. I thought at first that this might just be something you splash on in the morning to be followed by a proper scent later in the day but this could work as a ‘most of the day’ scent, I think. Spring florals are close at hand!

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    Now I understand why I love Caron scents so much and it’s a quality I’ve found in Patou scents, as well: They all have that liquid gold, honeyed base of musk and resins that gives even the most sparkling, effervescent top florals some heft and warmth. Even dark, chypre notes in Caron’s “Nuit de Noel” avoid seeming macabre because Caron’s warm, honeyed base always makes the blend seem alive, familiar and intimate.
    So it is with “Royal Bain” which smells more like mead to me, than champagne, with its smooth, glossy sweetness and fresh, floral overtones. The lilac note is sweet but not unbearably so and it has a very nostalgic, “plastic doll heads” vibe that I think will resonate, personally, with children of the 80’s and 90’s because that is what toys smelled like at that time. I adore this scent because of that very nostalgic, cozy vibe and also for the salty amber base that reminds me of the ambergris, banana jam and honeyed rose of Jean Patou’s “Joy”. In fact, I’d peg “Royal Bain” as “Joy” with lilac as the starring flower, rather than rose.
    Oh, Caron, you have earned your prestige. Signed, “Another Adoring Fan”.

  20. :

    4 out of 5

    seriously, is it drinkable?? smells so sweety yammy !!!
    (not sure if i want to smell that yammy though :D)
    historical for sure!

  21. :

    5 out of 5

    This is as classic as floriental amber gets but for all it’s ‘classicness’ it’s quite odd.
    Dated is the word for this one, seriously dated. The floral opening (must be lilac?) is actually quite pleasant but not to my taste. Then the heart of this fragrance is opoponax, benzoin and vanilla.
    It’s very balmy and powdered I sort of love it. Royal Bain represents the warm elements I love in perfume but somehow it’s not something I could wear.
    I can’t explain it…there’s a certain stigma to it.
    On my skin a bit strange but I could imagine it being incredible in a hot bath so I’ve purchased it for my girlfriend for christmas.

  22. :

    4 out of 5

    After reading Luca Turin’s review slamming the modern formulation as a “metallic flower”, I got a hold of a vintage 1961 bottle of this fragrance. Comparing it to the current version, it’s less sweet (but still pretty sweet) and richer and smoother. It’s different, but not very different. They still smell alike – it’s not like it’s been warped into something unrecognizable or anything – I don’t get LT’s hate. The vintage “Bain de Champagne” is nice to have, but the modern version is perfectly fine too.

  23. :

    4 out of 5

    I bought this fairly cheaply at TKM and it is such a lovely sweet fragrance on me. I keep reaching for the bottle, and just want more! It feels quite addictive to me. Oh dear…

  24. :

    4 out of 5

    Tried this today from a splash bottle in TK Max.
    Lovely tobacoo type scent lighter than Tabac Blonde.
    Nothing like Kenzo Flower on my skin.
    Sillage is minimal.

  25. :

    3 out of 5

    Oooh, this was a nice find!
    This was one of those spur of the moment blind buys, you know the ones, you are browsing through an online retailers catalogue and add a couple of things you’ve been meaning to try to your basket, when you see it “people who bought this also bought…” and it is something you have never heard of, so I thought, sod it, at this rate I may wind up on the streets but at least I’ll smell good!
    Fun bottle, mine is the 125ml splash edt. I mean, it is verging on the tacky, but in a fun way. The scent itself is really beautiful, sweet but not in a gourmand, fruity or sickly way. Elegant, feminine, pretty, gentle, I like this a lot, the only reason it is not a “love” was that I have only just tried it, so need to see how it wears (day off today so it hasn’t had a true test run yet!), and because I am less keen on the splash bottle. Ok so I have 125ml, but it isn’t the easiest bottle I found I had to basically shake it into my palms and apply, like an aftershave. Except not to my face. But it is not the most efficient. I may decant some into a little atomiser.
    I tried this in the bath today, added a capful to the water and it did smell lovely and luxurious. Himself even decided to join me 😉 so at least it didn’t repel him! Left a gentle lingering scent on the skin for about an hour after. I then applied some a la the method described above, and it lasted about 4-5 hours I think. Little hard to say as it turned cool tonight so I put on yesterdays jumper with traces of violet blonde and cabochard on it!
    This was very nice. Would like in an edp spray. I will be interested to try other Caron scents on the basis of this.

  26. :

    5 out of 5

    This really does have a brief champagne “sparkle” at the very top that seems to involve honeydew. The middle starts to resemble C. Howard’s square violet-flavored candies, which are very unique in their sharply floral smell and taste. Later on, a base of mostly vanilla remains, with a little leather and flowers. This one is too feminine for me, though it might not be for some guys, and a lot of women might like it. I could see the appeal of its “old money” flapper-era nostalgia, not the least in its unique bottle, but I personally couldn’t use it; it’s just too over-the-top sweet and anachronistic.

  27. :

    4 out of 5

    A nice inoffensive scent

  28. :

    3 out of 5

    My god this is sweet! As a femele wearing this, I’m shocked to think that this is supposed to be for men and women! When someone described this as ‘tooth rotting’ I assumed that it would be sweet and slightly heady and floral like Penhaligons Ellenesia but ‘tooth rotting’ really was quite accurate and not a overstatement!
    On the other hand, I’m not saying I dislike it, it does have a nice lilac bush scent with rose and vanillaa subtle hint of incense, almost candied. But I believe you really need to be in the right mood for this as a perfume. I wouldn’t touch it with a barge pole if I felt a headache coming on but on occasion it would make a delicious sneaky sweet indulgence!
    As for price, I got 250mls of this for just under £20 from eBay, so very good value for money if nothing else! It’s a pretty recent formulation and might I add that it was a splash not a spray!
    Would I buy it again? Probably not, as whilst I like Caron a a house and their unique scents, I would rather stock up on their ‘parfum sacré intense’ as its a bit spicier and easier to wear.
    As for a bath product I will test it and update soon!
    UPDATE:
    Well despite my initial shock over the sweetness, I just can’t help reaching for this on a regular basis! It really rather grew on me! I’d happily buy more if I’m honest now as not only do I like it as a EDT but it does make for a gorgeously scented bath.
    Rather surprisingly I even had really good feedback from my husband and mother which is rather rare!

  29. :

    3 out of 5

    There is something about this perfume that keep me coming back….I am having quite a lot of bottles myself and Royal Bain was always out of my pick but irronically there was also nothing that could make me miss madly. I even went angry on that day when I miss her so much but could not find her anywhere, turned out she was borrowed by my girlfiend (Royal Bain rocks on women too) Arghh!!!

  30. :

    5 out of 5

    I like Caron….too. But I didn’t like this one. It may be the current formulation, since I haven’t tried the vintage. The current one smells too artificial and synthetic to me.

  31. :

    4 out of 5

    it is increadibly gorgeous delicious parfume – if i would call it – it smells of “caramel”, “bon-bons” “ananas” – it simply say nothing. The smell has a big palitre of notes…it smells delicious, happy, expensive, musky and vanilly. It is also one of Caron’s creation which EVERYBODY like without exception (as most of the Caron’s scents are not everybody taste – but they ARE ALL trully UNIQUE experience and gorgeous!) I LOVE CARON!!!!

  32. :

    3 out of 5

    What an odd scent. I don’t quite know how to describe it, lilac which gives me a very “old fashioned” vibe, like the charm of lilac bushes sharing their scent through an open, lace curtained window. This perfume feels “shady & cool” despite all of the warm, resinous ingredients. It is a very soft scent on the skin, as previous reviewers have described. I’m really having quite a feeling of nostalgia here, how the cool scent of lilac bushes in the shade melds with resins & vanilla here, I would have expected to be absolutely repulsive! But, it is really beautiful! I’m surprised, & taken aback to be honest. It’s dainty, well mannered & old fashioned in the best possible way. Not for everyone, that’s for sure. I have a feeling a lot of sweets lovers would not be enchanted by this contrasting elixir, but I’m definitely intrigued enough that I think I want a bottle! It reminds me of simpler days, sunshine, lace & lilacs. Warm skin, a pleasant nap on a crochet pillowcase, this beautiful scent. Delightful! It’s very close to the skin, so do not expect sillage here, this perfume is for you. It’s definitely for me! I think I want to try it in the bath too. It progresses to a sweeter & softer scent which eventually starts to lose the cold edge of lilac & settles to a delightfully comforting skin scent.

  33. :

    4 out of 5

    I don’t smell the ‘precious vintage’, i try the current version and this is Caron at its worst. I’m not saying this smell terrible, it has a pleasant dry down, just i was expecting a better scent.

  34. :

    4 out of 5

    I have the reformulated EDT of RBdC as pictured.
    OK so I was half expecting a total disaster with this one…which it isn’t BUT it is VERY unusual.
    ON THE SKIN:
    The scent is very mild, more like an EDC than an EDT in my opinion. Initially there is a blast of tooth-rotting lilac-rose-loukhoum floral scent that almost resembles bubblegum. This recedes relatively quickly into a very soft powdery incense, I get a tiny bit of amber, but not near enough for this to be a love.
    RBdC rapidly recedes to a skin scent but lingers gently on the skin for quite a while with a gentle vanilla incense which occasionally you might catch a whiff of. Not unpleasant but in no way is this going to knock you off your feet.
    Longevity: 5.5/10
    Silage/projection: 2/10
    IN THE BATH:
    Now THIS is more like it!
    When poured into the bath this scent is transformed, you can sit basking in the scent of a lilac bush, eating rose-water scented sweets and letting wisps of pale incense float past you.
    When you finally drag yourself from the hot bubbling waters a cool splash of RBdC over your skin and you feel like you are wrapped in a pastel blanket, ready to curl up by a warm fire and drift off into pleasant dreams.
    Luxury factor: 8/10
    Bath quality: 9/10
    IN CONCLUSION:
    I highly recommend this as a luxury bath scent to be used on special occasions but as a skin scent there are better perfumes out there.
    In fact, I added the tiniest hint of musk from my aroma chemicals and it makes the scent stick around far longer on the skin so perhaps there is good potential for layering here with a fixative, but alone this scent is a very cute, simple cologne with unicorns on the bottle!

  35. :

    3 out of 5

    Well, what a weird perfume. I can’t speak for the modern reformulation as I’m wearing a vintage spray version, probably about 1965-ish, when it was still called Royal Bain de Champagne (slender bottle with a black top, and so much resin crusted around the nozzle that I had to clean it out with a toothpick). The top notes were startlingly green and unpleasant, like a snapped daffodil stem, and it took a good half hour for the more delicate lilac notes to come out. But what I get above all, to me, smells like hay absolute – Chergui on steroids – and is utterly delicious, with a grassy, tobacco-y, smoky quality. Now, about two hours in, it’s becoming sweeter, with more of the skin-scent feel that I like so much in Caron perfumes – butter-vanilla-toffee-amber oozing from the skin. But what on earth is really in this? I have four sprays on my wrists and that is two too many – this is a perfume that needs a light hand, as it’s very strong.

  36. :

    3 out of 5

    I remember smelling this on guys and thinking yum-yum. One day I bought a bottle because I wanted to smell yummy too! Maybe the formula changed or my dislike of vanilla and sweet are more defined. Alas, it wasn’t for me.

  37. :

    4 out of 5

    A present, modern Bain. It was one of those scents good for my personal days of laughter, because I could smell lemonade when I wore it, and people around me – “something nice, of sweets and cream”.
    Tried vintage. Lemonade with champagne or champagne with lemonade?
    Nice, I like this scent.

  38. :

    5 out of 5

    Caron’s old bath candy beats Penhaligon’s Hammam Bouquet in luxurious development and costs much less. I am very pleased with my bottle which is the reformulated version. There are several Caron fragrances I would buy again, and this one, because it fills an old romance niche, is one of them. Carry on Caron 🙂

  39. :

    5 out of 5

    Royal Bain de Caron for me was a major disappointment. The wonderful champagne design bottle is really nice and fun but beyond that there is not much to say. Too light of a touch and what does touch me is the sweet powder that for me just does not sit right. I like powder in some other scents but not in Royal Bain de Caron
    The ingredients such as opoponax, benzoin, incense, sandalwood and rose seem like they would create a wonderful old world magic and even majesty but alas it falls short. This was a blind buy for me and usually I have been successful in that endeavor. You have to expect a few disappointments along the way when you blind buy so I will save this for maybe a nice after shower splash. (It really fades fast on me.) and then layer something more to my liking over it.
    It doesn’t smell bad. It just doesn’t have panache. There is no mystery to this light watery concoction.
    Two silver stars **

  40. :

    3 out of 5

    Royal powdery floral vanilla, that’s what this perfume is, however I could swear I smell some civet among the ingredients. Therefore, despite all very comforting pleasant sweet notes, Royal Bain is not so easy to wear IMO. But choosing the rigt time, I always find it excellent, specific and so unusual powdery soft. Actually I love it!

  41. :

    5 out of 5

    It’s always fun to review perfumes from the house of Caron, because everyone knows that everything that anyone says may well be true—about their specific formulation! In this case, my generous vial of ROYAL BAIN DE CHAMPAGNE bears the original name (before the champagne police filed another law suit, or did this one precede CHAMPAGNE/YVRESSE?) and came in a box with the reference/batch #Q6961492 GE.
    All of this means, of course, that I can blather on

Bain de Champagne (Royal Bain de Caron) Caron

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