Bellodgia Caron

3.76 из 5
(50 отзывов)

Bellodgia Caron

Bellodgia Caron

Rated 3.76 out of 5 based on 50 customer ratings
(50 customer reviews)

Bellodgia Caron for women of Caron

SKU:  2d3abed33fa8 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Bellodgia by Caron is a Oriental fragrance for women. Bellodgia was launched in 1927. The nose behind this fragrance is Ernest Daltroff. Top notes are carnation and rose; middle notes are jasmine, lily-of-the-valley and violet; base notes are musk, clove, vanille and sandalwood.

50 reviews for Bellodgia Caron

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    Out of my carnation collection Bellodgia is definitely a precious pearl.
    Love it in pure perfume, EDT, EDP and Piu Bellodgia versions!

  2. :

    4 out of 5

    Jasmines, cloves, & lily of the valley.
    The above combination formed an insecticide like blend, very jasmine, and quite allot of lily of the valley, then cloves, rose, violets, and sandalwood.
    This didn’t do anything good for me, not really good tho.

  3. :

    3 out of 5

    Definitely a Summertime perfume
    Very very weak for fall or Winter
    oh sO sweet in the summer, so
    soft, delicate, appropriate for
    nighttime with pretty dresses
    frilly tops with shorts or cute
    skirts & sandals. Creamy,
    sweet, floral, w/a touch (a
    hint) of Vanilla. Delighted

  4. :

    3 out of 5

    sexy rich deep strong spicy clove and carnation bomb; the best carnation frag out there

  5. :

    4 out of 5

    Sexy spicy-carnation-vanilla-clove vintage bombshell! This will warm the room you’re in with its over the top glow. It’s Lana Turner and Bridgette Bardot and Ava Gardner rolled up into a fragrance that brings the vintage romance and heat. You’re wearing those dangle earrings, and that wasp waist swing dress with the shoulder revealing ties. Cateye sunglasses, and black liner that makes your eyes gleam. Finishing touch – Bellodgia at all the right pulse points. A perfume enticement that beckons . . . ‘Come up and see me sometime.’

  6. :

    4 out of 5

    Beautiful but fleeting on my skin. Looking to try the vintage if anyone has some to swap.

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    Hi all I have a vintage bottle of perfume marked ‘cologne lotion’ – can anyone explain what this is please? Thanks!

  8. :

    3 out of 5

    Carnation, clove and rich coffee–a grown-up sexy scent. When I wear this, it is always noticed.

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    essendo un’amante del profumo dei garofani, oggi mi sono lanciata nella prova di bellodgia: profumo d’altri tempi (1927) del quale possiedo una boccetta, ahimè, non vintage. non so quindi quanto questa formulazione differisca da quella originale. quel che è certo, però, è che si tratta di una meravigliosa fragranza quasi soliflore di garofano, resa dolcemente speziata dai chiodi di garofano. l’effetto è prorompente e bellissimo, la durata infinita, il sillage notevole. nell’assestamento percepisco anche un che di vanigliato e animale. notevolissimo.

  10. :

    3 out of 5

    A very beautiful and sophisticated perfume. Different in everything comparing to modern department store chemicals–different era, different aesthetics and intellectual conscience…
    After trying “Bellodgia” in EDP concentration, I find it to be very similar to “Apres l’Ondee” in the opening notes. Violet is very noticeable, carnation and rose come only afterwards. I also feel rather prominent civet and galbanum notes (that are not listed), which I always detect in almost all Caron perfumes. Simply beautiful!

  11. :

    3 out of 5

    Bellodgia (sounds like the Bellagio hotel in Vegas by the way) is a fragrant carnation perfume built on a foundation of Oriental notes of mainly sandalwood and jasmine. The carnation is clearly the dominant note and if you like carnation, this is a very beautifully created carnation. It’s sexy and spicy, aromatic, but feminine not unisex. The rose is also a nice bonus as is the violet but they are taking a back seat as the carnation drives this vehicle on your skin. It’s an over 6 hour drive as the fragrance winds through cloves, some greenery courtesy of the lily of the valley and some animalic accords of musk. The fragrance is very womanly and mature in a beautiful way. It’s balsamic, rich, heady, and very floral. I love Caron perfumes. My absolute favorite is Parfum Sacre. These scents are complex and strong and suited to the expert nose who appreciates all kinds of scents as far removed from all the fruity gourmands in the market today. This is carnation and cloves for days. It’s a floral perfume with an old fashioned and elegant touch. It smells like something out of the 1920’s (think a bolder Arpege by Lanvin). This is classical and sweet but strong, a perfume of high quality. I keep this bottle next to Parfum Sacre. Sacre is my Christmas winter time perfume but Bellodgia is my spring and summer Caron frag.

  12. :

    4 out of 5

    Soapy,very creamy spicy carnation and rose, this is the first impression I got from this gem. It starts softly and develops bolder over time and spicy. The carnation is at the forefront and cloves, smooth and retro. There is a lurking sharpness underneath the cloud of powdery rose, could it be the lily note.. It is not as spicy as Sacre, or smoky, rather a softer old world interpretation. Brings to mind a Lady in her boudoir, dressed in blush silk and lace applying dubs of this scent on her long neck and delicate wrists..Very long lasting with decent sillage. For those who love roses with a retro vibe this is a must.

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    Important lesson for me: while a perfume may be of sublime beauty I may not necessarily want to wear it. Bellodgia (vintage) is an opulent, exquisite carnation. I revere and adore it, but one whiff and I am catapulted straight to a palace in Venice and Bellodgia has flung open the gold and white double doors to the salon to discover me, the unwelcome poor niece, in her domain. She is old, regal, distant, contemptuous, fiercely elegant. She wants me to leave. I do, with my tail between my legs! I am wearing a precious drop of vintage B today and even when it warms up on my wrist it still says a little wearily, I think it would be better if we did not see each other again. Bal a Versailles, Cabochard, Miss Dior, I fall into them and they into me and we know each other instantly. Bellodgia has the butler slam the door as I am bundled out onto the street and the scent of carnations is just a memory! I imagine the women in the film ‘I am Love’ wearing this with aplomb.

  14. :

    3 out of 5

    Opens weirdly with a mishmash of jasmine, lily of the valley, and a big, dull clove straight from the spice rack that anesthetizes my nose for awhile. A creamy carnation begins to bloom underneath but the dull clove and scratchy LOTV won’t quit and this is still smelling pretty strange to me. As the carnation-vanilla-sandalwood creaminess catches up with the clove, it is balanced out much more and brings to mind the sweet spiciness of Big Red gum. I wish it went even more in that direction, but that almost mentholated clove note keeps that impression from being anything other than fleeting.
    I suspect this is a perfume that smells better from far away than it does up close — a creamy, spicy, delicately sweet cloud of scent that is so uniquely retro most people would have no idea it was retro at all.

  15. :

    4 out of 5

    Real old fashioned and strong, carnation and clove are sharp but lasting. More suitable for mature age who grew up in that perfume style surrounding.

  16. :

    3 out of 5

    Vintage Bellodgia is like Pour un Homme without lavender and wild on carnation. And I love that.

  17. :

    4 out of 5

    I love carnations and bought a vintage Bellodgia that came in an 80’s bottle with a floral drawing on the label and a shiny plastic peach coloured lid on top.
    I was hoping for something soft, powdery and romantic but was surprised when a huge amount of cloves opened up this fragrance. It is very sweet, spicy and soapy in the beginning and I can honestly say that I’m not very found of it until it mellows down a bit. After some time the soapy cloves leaves room for powdery carnation and even some other shy flowers dares to enter the scene. It dries down on fading heartnotes joined by vanilla and sandalwood.
    Eventhough I love carnations, I guess I’d like Bellodgia a lot more if it wasn’t for the soapy cloves in the top, and I’m not sure that I have the patience to wait for the carnations to bloom.

  18. :

    3 out of 5

    First time I used Bellodgia was in the mid-Eighties. I got my hands on a big bottle of it and went through it as fast as I could, in a heavenly, estrogen-drunk haze. What I didn’t realize then was that I’d fallen head-over-heels in love with…… CARNATION…. Did you ever notice that there’s almost the word CARNAL in carnation? Well, that’s how the 1980s Bellodgia made me feel- carnal, fern-green and cherry-blossom-pink at the same time… A sweet, sultry, long-lasting sillage with a deep musky vanilla secret, waiting to be discovered at close range. Mmmmmm……
    I just tried it again, and I still adore it, but this time it opens on me with a wide, theatrical jasmine. Ta-da!!! Jasmine, people!!! Meanwhile, in the background, I see a polite, ladylike carnation quietly waving at the audience. The jasmine keeps the carnation upstaged for the entire ride on my skin. As Bellodgia fades away, a long dramatic afternoon later, I check for the musky, vanilla underpinnings… Where are they? I think Ms. Sassy Jasmine chased them away on my skin. Lady Carnation has long since retired to her fainting couch. For some reason, perky lilies of the valley start to tap-dance on my skin… Then I just want to take a shower and sniff a big bag of kona beans to make it all go away.
    Not sure if my body chemistry changed, or my sense of smell, or the formulation, or all of the above. No matter.
    Old or new formulation, this is a must-try for the scentanista. Put it this way: if you knew that you couldn’t see the original Mona Lisa, just a photo of her, would you refuse to take a peek at the photo? The photo wouldn’t wallop the emotional punch and cultural baggage of the original painting, but how sad would it be to have no idea at all what the Mona Lisa looks like?

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    Amazing reading the reviews here and how much our taste in scents is related to memories and emotions.
    I love Perfum Sacre more than any other perfume I’ve ever smelt and have been so excited to try other Carons, thinking that perhaps they get better and better and that I have found the nirvana of perfume.
    Unfortunately for me they all remind me a bit of Youth Dew??? I really don’t understand why, I haven’t smelled Youth Dew for 15 years or more and I never much liked it then. I think there is a note that jars with me but I’m not sure what it is? Carnation maybe?
    But I Love carnations in my garden, why wouldn’t I love it in a perfume. One of the eternal mysteries.
    Maybe Love will grow?
    But have to say thank Caron for Sacre – eternally grateful.

  20. :

    4 out of 5

    This scent is a real classic, from 1927, but it is classic in the best possible way. It is lovely. I remember my mom’s friends wearing this scent and I loved how fresh and cool it always smelled. Our school principal wore this scent, too, and all the school kids loved getting hugs from her because she was nice and soft and she smelled good, hard to do in the Southern summers with no AC.
    My review is for the eau de parfum, which has very nice projection and sillage. I was initially not totally in love with the carnation, but I like the difference of it. It has a green, spiky, not so sweet floral, “notice me” element to it that makes Bellodgia very distinctive. The spice is wonderful. I layered this scent with a modern scent, Andy Tauer’s L’Air du Desert Morocain and the combination was divine. I was afraid the Tauer would dominate the Bellodgia. Actually it was the other way around! The dry spice in each fragrance complemented the other and I ended with a classic with a very modern twist, quite lovely and fun to wear.
    By the way, I think a man could totally wear this and it would smell divine. It has such a fresh, green note to it, I find it more unisex than feminine today.

  21. :

    4 out of 5

    The current EDT, Caron Bellodgia starts out with the smell of incense that’s very similar to Caron Nuit Noel, but lighter. Then the florals bloom, mixed with cloves, enveloped in soft musk. Quickly thereafter, strong carnations burst into bloom, sweet, soft, spicy, and heady. Suddenly, a beautiful puff of sweet powder emerges, blending all of the notes in this perfume together, and you are enveloped in the most elegant blend of soft spices and florals, encased in creamy clouds of vanilla and sandalwood. At this point, Bellodgia settles down into a gloriously blended opulent powdery skin scent that lasts up to 12 hours. If sprayed in your hair, the scent is especially noticeable, long after it dries down to a skin scent.
    It’s soft and lightly powdery, but thanks to the cloves and spices, it’s not too sweet to be a unisex fragrance.
    Bellodgia smells expensive, intruiging, deep, rich, unique, and can easily be worn in a crowd without offending anyone. Simply beautiful !

  22. :

    3 out of 5

    I have tried every formulation of this fragrance vintage and new in every strength and it just disappears on me. I love it but it just doesn’t last on my skin.

  23. :

    5 out of 5

    Vintage Bellodgia is a rare type of fragrance; it is both warm and spicy and light and airy. This lets it occupy a unique space in a wardrobe, as it can be worn in any weather without becoming cloying.
    Let it be known that “light and airy” here does not in any way mean lacking in depth; the vanillic/animalic base is sexy and alluring. In many ways, this fragrance is to carnation as Pour Un Homme is to lavender.

  24. :

    5 out of 5

    I do find that the old ‘controversy’ Guerlain Vs Caron, (Guerlain*= cocotte frags and Caron= lady ones) with Bellodgia should put the matter in a sort of balance or draw. I can’t see in it, all this ‘ladylikeness’. I’ve got an oldish (not unfortunately a proper vintage** one, that I had already met once) so that I cannot find it so ‘innocent’ at all, anyway, times are changed and I like B. very much, all the same. My not blind love can be expressed through some positive points: 1) a huge presence of my beloved note: carnation, so evident during the 3 classical phases; 2) a good persistence (definitely more accentuate in the older versions, but still right) 3) it’s lack of ‘popoularity’ here, where I live. It’s not so common among people; 4) I believe this is one among the nicest oriental-flower-chypre not so simple to house -for me. 5) It matches both my skin and my chemistry perfectly! What can you ask more?!
    As typical of many old scents, it can be used indifferently by ‘girls’ and ‘boys’, only the personal alchemy (and taste as well) should dictate the choice.
    * To be clear my heart beats for Guerlain ; )
    **A sort of ‘liquid bomb’, a true masterpiece in the history of perfumery.

  25. :

    4 out of 5

    A review of the vintage parfum:
    Being vintage I thought maybe it wouldn’t be as strong or as fresh being the age of my bottle is thought to be late 20’s early 30’s. However, once I opened the bottle, an amazing floral bouquet whispered out. Once I put it on, the first thing you smell is the most amazing carnation. Its fresh and green, and ridiculously lovely. The rose helps to buoy the scents, the violet provides some lightness, and the jasmine rounds it all out. It it feels like your sticking your face into the most amazing and fresh bouquet of flowers.
    However, its not cloying, or overdone. I used 2 dabs and 6 hours later can still smell them. The base notes are just to die for, I smell that amazing sandalwood, and musk.
    The musk, though present, is in the background. You do smell the warmth of the musk but its not dominant. Its not until after its been on for about the 5-6 hour mark that I can pick out vanilla.
    If however one gets an opportunity to experience the vintage, they should take it, its a wonderful olfactory trip.

  26. :

    4 out of 5

    Before smelling Bellodgia, I had no idea that it contained one of my favourite floral notes, carnation. Perhaps I read it somewhere beforehand but I had quickly forgotten, so this fragrance served as a nice surprise.
    Like most Caron fragrances, Bellodgia has that distinctive classic appeal. While wearing this fragrance, you are guaranteed to feel elegant and refined, almost like a Queen decked out in an array of exquisite jewels.
    The carnation accord is rather strong, supported by the smallest hint of heavenly jasmine. Essentially, Bellodgia is the scent of a beautiful woman. All women should feel compelled to try it.
    Although quite floral and powdery at first sniff, an additional element of spiciness, (provided by the cloves and vanilla), prevent Bellodgia from becoming too predictable. I like this surprisingly sensual twist, as I believe it adds some extra appeal.
    It’s a little similar to Fragonard’s Billet Doux, but perhaps a tad more intense and thick. In that regard, I can only advise that Bellodgia be applied with a light hand. I don’t find the sillage ‘too much’, but then again, I love all the heavy hitters.
    The lasting strength is wonderful. On clothes and coats, it remains a constant reminder of your last wearing. Even though I haven’t had the opportunity to test the vintage formulation, this newer version is certainly not ordinary. I highly recommend.

  27. :

    3 out of 5

    Now that I have tried it I recognize the scent, or very similar from the dressers of my great-aunts. It is a distinctly old fashioned smelling perfume. Powdery carnation and a soapy clove.
    Unfortunately for me, also smells a bit like the floral talcum powder I would find in my grandma’s bathroom in a large round blue or soft green container with a big powder puff. Does smell surpisingly clean and is pretty but is so vintage smelling that it ages you to wear it.

  28. :

    3 out of 5

    This is a cold, not dark scent for me. Full of carnation, little bit cloves and maybe jasmine? Very good for the blond haired youngsters of us. Loud, long lasting and pretty. Perfect for warmer days.

  29. :

    5 out of 5

    Carnation, clove and vanilla. I was in heaven looking at the notes. After one sample vial I am feeling a little down. It seems that the combination of lilly of the valley and jasmine (which always manage to smell like poo poo) break through after a few minutes. This leaves the cloves and carnations batteling it out.
    There is a certian skankyness which I would normally find appealing but I think that there is too much going on here. Each of the notes are of good quality (especially the jasmine) But I belive that both jasmine and lilly of the valley must work for you to enjoy this.

  30. :

    3 out of 5

    The descriptions and reviews of this sound really fascinating – is this too floral for a guy to wear? Can anyone recommend a male or unisex scent that would mimic this? I also love carnation, this sounds like a great scent combination.

  31. :

    3 out of 5

    I read reviews that it is strong and lasting heavy frangrance, and I get jealous. On my skin the lasting power if about one hour. It begins as a very beautifull floral scent, but then suddenly: soap and sugar. Even my work colleague, who normally comments all new fragrances, couldn´t recognize any! Is it the reformulation? I bought the EDT, that could be also the reason.

  32. :

    4 out of 5

    vintage smell. I gave it to my mom, she likes it.

  33. :

    4 out of 5

    Just looked at my bottle again and I’m still wondering if it’s authentic. The top doesn’t fit over the spray very well. As in, if you pick up the bottle by the top, it comes off. Fortunately the bottle didn’t break.
    Well, if a copy, it’s a good one. It just doesn’t last on me.
    I’m sure I paid less than $20 for it, so…lesson learned.

  34. :

    5 out of 5

    This was also my mom’s favorite back in the 70s. I remember taking my babysitting money to the perfume counter and buying it for her for Christmas, birthdays, and/or Mother’s Day. I loved it at the time, but it seemed too old for me.
    Well, a couple of years ago I bought a bottle of the EDT on eBay, and I still love it. But it just doesn’t last in this form on my very dry skin – maybe 2 hours.
    I just got out the bottle and looked at it, and I wonder if it’s counterfeit? It doesn’t have a label on the bottom, just the front. Huh.

  35. :

    4 out of 5

    Bellodgia is far too sweet for me, but if you want a lovely carnation try Comme de Garcon series Red
    “Carnation” it is lovely.

  36. :

    4 out of 5

    i love bellodgia, its clovey pepperiness subsumed into rolling waves of carnation that scent lake como.
    my partner always takes a look at the catbox, tho, to see whether it needs emptying.
    (c)2011 daisy morant

  37. :

    4 out of 5

    Carnations have been in bloom at my parents for a while now and I’ve had bunches in vases perfuming my bedroom. I had almost forgotten how much I love their smell. So a few weeks back I took a risk making another “blind-buy” by bidding on a bottle of vintage Bellodgia.
    The reviews here convinced me I’d probably like it. Well today it arrived and I must exclaim “WOW”. This is strong, heady stuff. But wonderful! The fragrance is delightful – the carnation a true delight. My bottle is meant to be used but it could only have been a few times as it looks full. The box has flowers on it and the bottle is rectangular with a large, chunky gold lid that has irregular lines ingrained. I don’t know when this version was in production, perhaps the 1960’s – 70’s? The insert has a picture of a girl that looks to be of that era. Sometimes I cheer for eBay but sometimes I pull my hair out. Today I am cheering.
    What a treat Bellodgia is. I’ve never seen it here in Adelaide/Australia. Very little Caron at all. These reviews can be an incredible guide, so thankyou for your comments everyone. I am thinking of following Sherapop’s idea of layering with vanilla also.
    Try it if you like carnations, you may be amazed.

  38. :

    3 out of 5

    (Note: I’m reviewing the vintage “parfum de toilette”. I’ve heard that tragic things have been done to the reformulation.)
    This is a lovely carnation whose sharpness is softened by vanilla and musk. Clove opens as it warms and stays with the scent for hours, giving it a milky quality. I will use an odd word to describe it: it’s extremely amiable.
    Sillage: 4-5 ft; I get many compliments
    Durability: 6-8 hours for this formulation
    Fabulosity: a drink with your best friend
    Price to value ratio: high
    8/10

  39. :

    4 out of 5

    I’ve always been interested in Caron’s fragrances, because this house has a lot’s of big perfume hits back in the 10’s or 20’s.
    Despite my desire to buy blind some Caron’s great fragrances, I have been ignoring them for a long time duet to the almost depressed and Overly Exaggerated comments about Caron’s reformulation. Like: ‘’Caron ruin fragrance legends with reformulation’’ ‘’Now Caron’s fragrances smell horrible’’ ‘’ I have such lovely memories of it and the new formulation defintely doesn’t have nothing of the original’’
    Thanks God! I Don’t Take this So Serious and decided to purchase some decants.
    and guess what?..
    I make an order of almost 20 good fragrances, 5 of them were from Caron, and let me tell you, that this 5 beauties, smell far better than the others fifteen, and also so much better than a lot of fragrances out there. I Don’t try to say ‘’Things Don’t Change’’, I know that they change, everybody change and Guerlain and Chanel change too, but they are still pretty. And finally I don’t work for Caron, Caron don’t even exist in my country. I only jugde what I smelled.
    Bellodgia Edp Review:
    What a lovely and unique fragrance! To me this starts with a fabulous sweet carnation bouquet, and then change to a powdery and incensy carnation. It’s really complex and delicious.
    If you smell closely, you can notice may be certain similarities between this scent and Parfum Sacre, but Sacre makes more emphasis on Rose and Spices.
    Give it a try! It’s a must-sniff for sure. Lasting power is good.

  40. :

    5 out of 5

    Ah bummer…I bought an old bottle of bellodgia (maybe .3 oz) from Ebay. I tried to decant it into something new, and the spray cap was so old that it got stuck. I quickly whipped it off and put my thumb over the tube, but the juice just exploded out.
    so this is a review of what was left on my hands.
    But really, at this point I’ve smelled so many vintage Daltroff creations that they all start to smell the same. I think I’ve exhausted my adjectives on how to describe them.
    Carnation. One of my favorite florals. Bellodgia is its star performance.
    Clove. Yes please. This wears really well on me, not too heavy, not too spicy. Just right.
    Vanilla. When paired with Carnation and handled by Daltroff it doesn’t get any better.
    I haven’t tried the newer versions, but it’s on my list. More to come!

  41. :

    3 out of 5

    I have worn BALLODGIA off and on for years. I am definitely thankful that I have won it in some awesome bidding wars on ebay for REALLy good prices. Try 14.00 including shipping for a two once bottle. It was just a little used, so YAYA….. If you can find the fragrance you desire USED, you get awesome deals for sure!!!!
    After doing a review on the ‘old MAJA’, I went in on the site almost every day for awhile and NOW, I have five bottles OF THE ORIGINAL!!!!
    BALLODGIA on me, actually starts out with a very strong carnation, but then evens out to a mixture of the lily of the valley and jasmine rounding off what could be a screaming carnation.
    The bass notes , musk clove, and vanilla are not overpowering at all. I think the musk floats the clove and vanilla. The clove and vanilla seem to give a gentle undercurve to floral notes of very distinctive flowers of carnation and jasmine- both of which I love, but can’t take too much jasmine by itself.
    When it dries down on me, it is slightly sweet, I think because of the vanilla and clove. On me, I really don’t distinguish the vanilla and clove. The musk evens it all out. I don’t think that there is a STRONG musk, well at least not with my body chemistry. This is a beautiful perfume ( to me) I have several favorites in the CARON line.
    For me, I can wear this scent just about anywhere in any season… except summer. With the warmth, it definitely gets pretty heavy… In the summer, I think the musk and clove start to scream over all the other voices of the choir. Would I recommend that you all at least TRY IT? Absolutely.

  42. :

    3 out of 5

    I had just recieved my vintage Caron Bellodgia EDP I had won on ebay and bought in hopes to rekindle the rich warm scent of Blue Carnations I wore as a young adult.
    I have made myself a promise as I am entering senior citizenry to expand my horizons and senses something unfortunately I had put on hold because first raising a family, working in a non traditional male dominated field landscape design and maintenance…I always adored flowers and found it to be intoxicating sniffing those delicate delights and oh did I mention allergic to most hymenoptera especially bees so no scent and now raising grandchildren who are in their teens and late teens which is quite an intense task.
    So I said, “Now is the time to indulge my senses before too late”, a much deserved reward especially after all the years of hard work, sometimes impoverishment for I was a divorced single working mom for many of those years and there was little time or money to pamper myself.
    The first adult bottle of perfume I bought as a single working mom was purchased at a Gemco cosmetic counter and oh how it was a splurge for me something rarely done. It was a bottle of EDT spritzer ” Blue Carnations” by Rodger and Gallet. I savored every mist from that bottle and recieved so many compliments how it smelled like a fresh bouquet of carnations.
    As a young teenager I wore White Shoulders, My Sin and Tabu a scent that elicited the very excitment of the promise of it’s name. Does anyone remember those spritzer vending machines you found at bowling alleys and restaurants ladies lounges, well that was my first true experience of sampling the lofty fragrances that titillated the olfactory senses.
    Now back to my experience with Bellodgia, I was so giddy about my purchase my husband of 31 years had thought I had taken a leave of absence of my senses, in my minds eye I was embarking on a quest of my senses so I immediately applied a miniscule amount to my pulse points. On opening note it smelled like Lilly of the Valley and slightly musty. It then developed into a slight carnation smell and then toned down to a powdery scent not much sillage to this one on me. My bubble was bursted for I anticipated so much more, a sophisticated Blue Carnation.
    It was a real humid and hot day here in Northern Maine I do not know if that impacted how this scent developed on me so I tried once again this time no Lilly of the Valley just a soft bouquet of carnations not much development and no staying power, oh dear!
    As I said I am a novice here and my preference leans towards floral aldehydes I am open for suggestions please.

  43. :

    4 out of 5

    Fell in love with it at the first sniff.Gorgeous carnation, combined with cloves – a strange, but irresistible combination. Lily of the valley is included, I guess, to stop Bellodgia from smothering the owner in it`s spicy goodness. Just awesome.

  44. :

    3 out of 5

    Perfumes like this aren´t made any more. That is something I can´t really put my finger on when it comes to some of Caron vintage perfume. The way they wrap you up and in and at once gives me a feeling of being charismatic, elegant and oh so chic.
    Bellodgia is dark, mysterious and I feel like I´m swimming over deep waters, but still being safe. I´ve got a small vintage sample and really wish that the new Bellodgia available will have some of the old formulation soul left, anyone know anything about that?
    It´s really hard to think of this as a lilly of the valley or jasmine scent, in my opinion it´s much to golden, warm and sensual for that and I can´t hardly smell any of those flwoers except for being kind of a nice backdrop.
    Not as much carnation as in Tabac Blond though. I like Tabac Blond slightly better, but Bellodgia isn´t far behind. When I´m in the mood for this kind of vintage scent, both of them wopuld do just fine.
    Try it and get a nice surprise!

  45. :

    5 out of 5

    Have not smelled the new incarnation of this classic, because I still have two bottles of it from circa 1985. So my comments are based on the original version.
    For some reason, along with the other flowery notes, Bellodgia reminds me of coffee…that warm rich “brown”-ness. It is quite strong and lasting, which I appreciate because many perfumes quickly disappear on my skin. Men either love it or totally hate it; my best friend’s husband was so captivated by it that I think it contributed to his making a pass at me many years ago! Definitely unusual and daring.

  46. :

    3 out of 5

    Caron BELLODGIA is a carnation clove bomb! My goodness, I applied the edp as though it were an edt, and I was completely overwhelmed! I should have remembered that Caron fragrances are always much stronger than the typical, plus I have a sensitivity to clove. But I also think that the clove here would be heavy for anyone. And the carnation, too.
    I do believe that the quality of the essences is high, but there’s not a lot of development. I tried layering Victoria’s Secret VANILLA LACE, and that transformed BELLODGIA into a fragrance that I was able to wear and even enjoy. So let it not be said that the Secret Garden collection (all members of which I acquired at the astounding price of $4.36 each for a 1oz edt…) serve no viable perfume purpose! When in distress: Layer!!! And if that doesn’t work, head to the bath!

  47. :

    4 out of 5

    this scent reminds me of one of those wrist corsages.faint floral,little fruity that dries down to a soft vanilla.doesnt last long on me.body chemistry and all that but,i can imagine it being quiet nice on some.

  48. :

    4 out of 5

    I feel only carnation and maybe vanilla. Well, real carnations smell more sofisticated than Bellodgia. Usualy, perfumes are more complex than the simple essential oil, as they contain several different fragrant ingredients, but this time the rule is upset.I better wear a carnation behind my ear, like a Greek old man I saw once wearing.

  49. :

    3 out of 5

    I’ve never sniffed the old formula so can’t compare. The sample I just received starts as strong spicy carnation. I’m waiting for the drydown , but until then, this one proves less is more…
    Update: I never do get the heart notes, went straight from the carnation to a soft vanilla which is barely there.
    I’d say this one starts as a hurricane and ends like a whisper.
    It’s ok, but there are other Caron scents I much prefer to this one.

  50. :

    5 out of 5

    Bellodgia is a carnation solifloral on my

Bellodgia Caron

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