Black Puredistance

4.12 из 5
(34 отзывов)

Black Puredistance

Black Puredistance

Rated 4.12 out of 5 based on 34 customer ratings
(34 customer reviews)

Black Puredistance for women and men of Puredistance

SKU:  04fe7187b3e4 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand:
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Description

Puredistance BLACK is created in Paris by the famous French Perfumer Antoine Lie. He created a perfume of the highest quality that is close to the wearer and releases sensual and elegant scent layers in a whispering and sophisticated way – without shouting.

A warm, mysterious and elegant fragrance, full of charm, that stays in the shadow, giving away – only every now and then – part of its nature. Puredistance BLACK plays hide-and-seek on the skin, appearing, morphing, and reappearing to delight the senses. Black was launched in 2013.

34 reviews for Black Puredistance

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    My favourite of the puredistance line.
    That said, it smells very familiar and nothing particularly soothing to my olfactiory system.
    7/10

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Black is my Al-time favorite fragrance. I could speak for hours about the details or sum it up personally as my inner spirit liquefied and bottled. Everything about it and its presentation are undeniably top shelf. The smoothest citrus laced incense, that radiates a mysterious yet comforting vibe, I have come across on my journey. Its an added bonus that every time I wear it, its almost a given it will garner compliments and attention from multiple people in my immediate vicinity. It wears close but at 25% perfume oil, Black will stay until you wash it off. Masterpiece fragrance!

  3. :

    4 out of 5

    The components are proprietary, but here are my best guesses: rich dark juicy berries (black currants, blackberry, possibly black cherry), a heady dark wood like ebony or mahogany, agarwood, a whiff of sweet tobacco from time to time, dark cacao, black truffle, black rose, soft dark musk, startling puffs of tellicherry black pepper, which are all in a continuous swirling ebb & flow, constantly morphing, disappearing and re-appearing, surging and retreating. “Black” also stirs some scent memories, which conjures Amouage Epic Woman standing beside Tom Ford Black Orchid, bound to each other with black sueded straps.
    And I think I must have it… mmmmmmmaybe after more testing.

  4. :

    3 out of 5

    So familiar yet definitely new. It has Amouage’s grandiose symphony-like structure, blend in with some Tom-Ford-esque sexy vibe.
    I’d say a medium-weight oud (or at least something resembles oud) is a major player, one can sense it from 5 miles away. Also on top is a rich spice scent, possibly cardamon, but it soon blends in with leather. A subdued smokey incense also appears at some point.
    The body notes are divine: a oud-y/patchouli-like accord with slight chocolate edge, perhaps softened by rose and benzoin. Solid, sweet and warm, at this stage there is something sensual reminiscent of Tom Ford’s offering.

  5. :

    3 out of 5

    While there is no mentioned notes, I suppose that I clearly can smell agarwood and leather as main notes and some smokiness, maybe incense or a little birch tar, and perhaps a little patchouli in the dry down… But anyway, this is a wonderful, dark, mysterious scent. So to knowing the exact notes really does not matter. Because, we can enjoy this authentic fragrance more then 8 hours. Because the longevity is great, the sillage is just how it should be, just like the other Puredistance perfumes.

  6. :

    4 out of 5

    Mysterious perfume. Every time I smell it, a new smell comes up. I can smell spices, leather, amber. I still find more every time I spray it.

  7. :

    5 out of 5

    Puredistance Black is the sexiest fragrance I own. It’s not my favorite but it’s the sexiest.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    Starts off scary but then you realize the notes are all familiar and comforting: rose, amber, oud, incense, caramel?, berries, leather, the list goes on. Black is definitely sexy and for evening wear. It’s slightly more masculine than unisex, but a confident woman could pull it off. One would place this among Tom Fords. This is some of the best sillage I’ve experienced in a while, and it sends out a beautiful cloud that gets better and better. It’s like meeting an intimidating but gorgeous stranger and finding out they were also nervous around you; once you get past the first impression you end up feeling more comfortable with each other than you ever thought possible.

  9. :

    5 out of 5

    This is very interesting and I’m not yet certain of it. On the opening, I get a real drippy, syrupy, sweetness. It makes me think of possibly benzoin, laced with a good amount of clove. Definitely spicy. I have an tug of war with benzoin so, I kind of felt a little put off by whatever the sweet was, but the spicy is very nice. Next, after a few seconds, I smell a very lovely, woodsy accord which reminds me of very fine sawdust. Sounds weird, I know, but like if you worked in woodworking and everyone is shaving or working on some piece, how that sawdusty smell lingers in the air. It isn’t bad at all. Not quite no. 2 pencil woody, nor cedar, but it is something… Lol someone mentioned the possibility of Oud, and that is definitely a maybe but doesn’t really show up right away. This is really growing on me… Ooh! 😉 there is something almost candied in this, perhaps even a little caramel. Not much, but in think of candy, like when it is being stirred over a stove. About 20 minutes in, I am getting this wonderful, pine/balsam kick. I love pine and this is like that lovely pine sap that sticks to your fingers after breaking off a few branches. The sweet is mellowing and I can smell leather and something boozy, dried fruit but like raisins or dates and it actually smells like … Rum Raisin, ice cream!!! Wow… This is definitely growing on me. The initial kind of put me off, it is rather strong but I’m loving this dry down! Nice! 😀 so fun to try these kind of fragrances. This is sexy.

  10. :

    3 out of 5

    It was at noon when he arrived back to his cabin. His dark hair looked a bit messy because the wind played with it a bit. He opened the heavy, wooden door and his eyes softly outlined with kohl pierced into the shadows who were filling the room.
    A few steps and he reached to his favorite place in the house – his ebony desk. Laying there, in complete silence was a leather bound diary, waiting. The man reached for the chair and sit there, reaching for his pen with trembling hands. Oh, yes. It was time to write about her.
    The ink began to tell a story, as it was greedily absorbed by the paper. It was about a woman with amber eyes and golden skin. Ahhh, her skin, always smelling like agarwood oil. Her presence was enough to make the air around boil. She was a woman of the desert and maybe that is why he feels so much warmth when he remembers her.
    The man felt the urge to open the window, and as he looked outside, he felt some very familiar smell. Incense maybe? Like a thread of fog, a silver shadow took shape outside. Was it only his imagination? The man could swear she was right there, with him, as her unforgettable perfume filled the room, but in the next minute it was gone only to come back more powerful and sweet, leaving him bewildered. He closed his eyes, took a deep breath and let the smell pierce his soul. They were now as one, perfectly blended, inseparable.
    This is Black, a longlost, bittersweet memory.

  11. :

    3 out of 5

    As mentioned in the fragrance intro, it actually does play hide and seek.. it comes and goes in various discreet forms..not as haunting as puredistance M but very special and addicting non the less..
    not worth the very high price tag..

  12. :

    5 out of 5

    I have smelled many of the most expensive and opulent fragrances in the world on my fragrance journey and only a handful of fragrances have connected with me the way that Puredistance Black. This is very opulent, unique and deep although quite linear. I get a dark leather/fruity/floral/oud. It is very potent and long lasting. I only go with one spray and i always get noticed. I think is perfect for a man or a woman.

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    I received a sample of this about a year ago, really enjoyed it, and thought “well, that was lovely, but can’t afford it”.
    Thankfully, I was in a place recently where I could trade another high-end fragrance for it, and as I type this, I am wearing this very beautiful, but hard-to-describe scent.
    My impression is of a darkened room, lined with old books, treasures, and other antiquities, and a worn velvet sofa where I sit curled reading a novel, while my beloved sips rum and smokes a pipe. There is a small incense burner, and the unknown substance is smoking gently, wafting seeking residence inside the pages of the old books and the leather that binds them. Roses placed in a tarnished silver vase sit in a corner on top of an old sandalwood box. I wear a touch of amber on my wrists and my husband is wearing a musky oud.
    This impression lasts and lasts…I cannot say what others might smell, or what is actually in this tall black bottle, but I really love what my nose and brain receive!

  14. :

    5 out of 5

    This is one of the many fragrances I’d get compliments whenever I wear this. darky woody and spicy…I rarely use this in the evening, as I wear this fragrance to my workplace, or just anywhere, fulltime.
    سمپل ارجینال جهت تست موجود است
    Scent: 9/10
    Longevity: 8/10
    Projection: 8/10

  15. :

    3 out of 5

    Scent – sweet spicy incense.
    Season/Time of Day – I prefer to use this one in the colder months, at night.
    Projection – I didn’t get noticed, I didn’t get a compliment.
    Longevity – I get 15hrs consistently.

  16. :

    4 out of 5

    This is a genuinely sexy and very sensual fragrance.
    The first thing that comes to mind is leather and a hint of incense and some smoked wood notes. After a few hours of wear it settles down quite nicely and on my skin it seems to take on a bit of a sweaty..almost musky quality but not in a dirty way, more in a sexual and carnal sort of manner. I adore this and I’m glad to have this in my collection, it’s definitely a head turner and conversation starter. The lasting power is excellent, i probably get around 12+ hours of it this and the projection is quite loud so spritz with caution.

  17. :

    3 out of 5

    Black on my skin smells like… Oud mixed with ink. Strange, I know.
    I definitely is not a love from the first sniff, but now I guess I’m starting “getting it”, starting to know what this perfume is about.
    It has so many facets, I can’t reveal it as a whole fragrance. IMO spices here play the main role. I can’t tell exactly which spices are here. It’s a mix. But blended perfectly. There are also quite detectable woods, especially vetiver and maybe some patchouli. And of course the oud. Oud is a kind of star, right next to spices. At the end of the fragrance Black is getting leather-ish.
    Longevity is over 12 hours, sillage is quite decent.
    For now, it’s not a must have like M but who knows… I don’t desire it. Not yet.

  18. :

    5 out of 5

    Although the notes aren’t to my taste; a quick sample just to see what another $500+ release from this Mad House was all about, I was quickly greeted with boring Pepper, lashings of aldegydes (?) and some odd floral.
    All flat, non-sweet and totally can be had in the sutiable product slot in any Niche line, costing around $100. Just pick a Niche house and click on the ‘Pepper’ note filer!
    Leather next, maybe the high class suede type but really, even the most mindblowing concoction shouldn’t push this beyond $300 tops for the Extrait.
    Then, an Ok/nice fruity vibe creeps in (currants?) but it’s swamped by spice (more pepper?) and the leathery brashness.
    It’s barely ever sweet, mainly warm and mixed with odd sour vibes too.
    I admired M, if even that ‘pinnacle’ of this line falling far below the ‘Overall package’ of powerhouses like Aventus (just over $200).
    If you want a top Quality leather, just go with a Mona or Cuir garmante by MDCI (both $300 tops).
    This is barely Ok, assuming a $150 price tag. So, you can understand my score looking at what PD actually are charging for High Quality Mediocity.
    My rating: 4/10

  19. :

    4 out of 5

    In my opinion It smells fantastic and last for an estimated 10 hours, It also depends on someone skin type , Wether it is dry or oily , My skin is oily and I have no complaints . It does fetches a high price tag , But its a niche perfume and what you pay for is what you usualy get . Some wear perfume to be recognize and expects compliments , Others like my self wear a fragrance because we like it , Try multiple times before buy , Overall rating 10/10.
    Thank,

  20. :

    5 out of 5

    Interesting fragrance. The whole sorta idea of just enjoy the fragrance dont worry about the notes and take it for what it is. Is well nice. Because often I think we can overcomplicated things in life and dont enjoy the moment for what it is. But… saying that… Using that gimmick.. Does that make this worth $600 dollars? lol Also looking at the reviews online in general it seems to me people get a lot of different things from this. So it almost makes me scared to think with out listing the notes does it allow the company to get away with like “batch varations” or qaulity control issues. That kinda thing?
    I just say that because I see some reviews say this is not a sweet or fruity pefume. And wow well I dunno but I can say my sample of it is has a very sweet, fruity vibe with dark undertones.
    Oh well im gonna stop my review basically there, im sure other people can explain the scent better than me.(or wait can they!? lol)For what its worth I actually like the smell a lot. I think it smelled good when ive tried it. But does it smell $600 dollars good? No lol I guess if your rich or have a more disposable income by all means though worth checking out for sure I think.

  21. :

    3 out of 5

    Wow, so not what I thought I’d get. I smell vetiver and yeah, maybe oud, but mostly standard men’s cologne with a boozy fruity note that reminds somehow of Idole by Lubin (probably the patchouli and saffron). Not going to be a favorite, but undeniably impressive.

  22. :

    5 out of 5

    The dry-down of this is strongly reminiscent of Cuir Garamante by MDCI. Ok, but hardly the seismic perfume event the hype would have you believe.

  23. :

    4 out of 5

    An elegant and distinctive house.
    Puredistance Black could not be otherwise, maintains the quality of M, with a single opening, magnificent and charming involved in an majestic aromatic woody wrapped of what appears to me a spicy accord, i think cloves which appears in drying a dna of Puredistance fragrances in general, for me more M.
    Later, it appears a kind of nuance metal kind of scent that isolates and merges with the previous chord, but didn´t take the quality in my opinion.
    Everything seems to be layered with a touch of oud or something geranium/ rose with some resins, perhaps this mix brings something like oud, and brings me a sense of something mysterious, deep and dark, which are perfect adjectives for this opulent and amazing fragrance.
    Rating: 9/10

  24. :

    3 out of 5

    Something of a masterpiece for me. It never fails to amaze me. Can be a little strong and shocking to those around you (and yourself) if over-sprayed, so use minimal amounts. Sometimes one spray is good enough. Either way, this scent is absolutely stunning and is drop dead *gorgeous* in cold, winter weather. It’s priced incredibly high – but for myself, the satisfaction is worth the sale. If you can, be sure to try this.

  25. :

    5 out of 5

    Released in 2013, this Pure Parfum Extrait, sold in 25% of Perfume Oil concentration, was created by Antoine Lie to suffer mutations on the skin, releasing layers of scent in a sensual form, without much fanfare. It was designed to be shared by both genders, but I believe that men can take better advantage. It symbolizes the unknown, which lurks in the shadows, the timeless concept of elegance and mystery. And for this reason, the company made a great effort by not providing its official composition. It means that each one can feel and interpret the fragrance in a unique way. Challenge accepted!
    To my nose, the fragrance presents itself as a hybrid of Puredistance M with hints of other feminine creations from the House, such as the vetiver of Puredistance I, the galbanum of Antonia or maybe the jasmine, from Opardu. But the biggest difference relies in 4 notes that presented themselves to me in latent form: frankincense, patchouli, oud and leather.
    I read numerous comparisons about it: since Epic Man (Amouage) to Tobacco Oud (Tom Ford), among numerous other creations and brands, what really matters is that Puredistance Black has concept, is linear and behaves as follows: it touches the skin incensed, with slightly bitter nuances. Then, a playful oud insists in a hide-and-seek all the time, while the leather keeps the concept together, just like in a bell jar. Time or another my nose implies the presence of the Bulgarian rose, but I think it’s another trick from its proposal.
    Exudes well, without being a bomb, and doesn’t disappoint in any way. With Puredistance Black, the mystery is everywhere.

  26. :

    5 out of 5

    Finally. in Alfarom (review below) we have somebody not afraid to speak the truth about PD Black. I had waited and waited to hear some modicum of objective evaluation when addressing this scent. Most all of the other bloggers seemed like under an obligation to pay curtsy to Antoine Lie and the PD company. One has the distinct feeling that if plain ole black tea was poured into the admittingly lovely bottle design, then we would be regaled with declarations of pure enigmatic oriental splendour and magestic imperial nectar etc. How much more of this lemming like hyperbole can we really handle before good sense and sensiblity prevails?.
    Indeed marketing trickery is very much evident in everything to do with PD Black: from the non disclosure of ingredients used in the making to the constant references of whispering not shouting , there but not there and so forth. I am reminded of one of those Victorian sideshows where the art of seduction is enough to lure unsuspecting punters into paying for what can never live up to expectations. Fact is Antoine , to have the courage nay temerity to not list the components of your perfume is putting it on a pedastal higher than most. We all know the rest.
    The creative direction at PD was admirable up until the release of Black. Let this fragrance be a reminder that we now have higher expectations from PD and need Antoine to up his game again. Nothing next time but trademark pure quality and save us all the gimmickry and smoke and mirrors effects of empty marketing. This perfumer has an innate ability to create a product that can stand on its own merits.
    Back to basics and what you are good at Mr. Lie.

  27. :

    5 out of 5

    I’m a big fan of both Antoine Lie and Puredistance but this time, I can’t say I’m impressed. Lie is responsible of some of my favorite *contemporary* fragrances. His work for brands such as Comme Des Garcons, Etat Libre D’Orange and, lately, Nu_Be is the most blatant example of his talent and his ability to create subtly twisted fragrances that are wearable and at the same time anything but dull. On the other hand, Puredistance is pretty popular for targeting the upscale audience with their luxurious / plush deliveries. The pairing of these two polar opposites, sounded extremely interesting on paper but, as a matter of fact, Black doesn’t convince me one bit.
    The fragrance opens with a citrusy-peppery-saffrony accord that is definitely well executed and promising. There’s a dusty, sort of sharpish vibe that brings to mind of modern masculine fragrances while speaking at the same time of quality and artistry. Unfortunately things fall apart right away with the composition taking a sweetish, red fruity, trajectory during the middle phase. This part is completely boring and, if you want, *cheap* smelling. Overly safe and somewhat generic, even a tad *sporty*. Things get a little better during the drydown when a sweetish oudy-incense base takes over but it’s still not enough to save the whole fragrance from precipice. The deja-vu vibe is so strong to drive me mad. It goes from Clive Christian V to something more generically Amouageish (thinking about Epic Man but also Interlude Man and more in general their latest masculines) via Monegal’s Agar Musk, Piguet’s Casbah and the plethora of other oudy-peppery fragrances released in the past 5 years or so.
    I think they tried to target the more mainstreamish upmarket crowd here but, as a matter of fact, while not being completely bad, Black is far from justifying the hefty price-tag. For those who care, the fragrance is pretty restrained but with an exceptional longevity.
    Rating: 5/10

  28. :

    3 out of 5

    I guess my first reaction is that it smells similar to a few Etat Libre d’Orange scents, but without the weird imitation raspberry thing you always get in ELdO.

  29. :

    3 out of 5

    Cutting to the chase…the rumors are true. This is a nice one. It’s like a purple leather jacket. Lilac? Oud? Definitely on the masculine side. Longevity is about 6 hours. Probably one of the best skin scents I have tried in the last 6 months…and I hate skin scents.
    Update: Read the negative reviews regarding “black”. I actually went back to my sample vial to see if you guys were crazy…..confirmed! You guys are Looney!

  30. :

    5 out of 5

    This is quite interesting. I will do two reviews…one from me and one from my beloved husband 🙂
    On me (female, dry skin, central heating environment) this opens with soft dry black pepper, ozone and cedar. After about 10 or 15 minutes I start smelling floral water, paper and maybe a hint of fresh leather, like a love note in a leather satchel. It’s blended very well, the scents that are more forward peep out rather than jump out. This also, however, makes this fragrance very soft. I’m sure it will stay quite a while given the concentration, it will just stay at a moderate whisper (skin scent). Overall, I like it. It makes me feel dreamy and nostalgic.
    On my husband (male, normal to oily skin, central heating environment) this opens with pepper, vinyl, old leather (think classic car), metallic and ozonic (lightening). After 30 minutes it becomes a little sweet with a bit of powder (softening). He says (emphatically) that he had found no sweetness in the beginning. This fragrance makes him think of working on a classic car in a garage with a storm gusting just outside. In short, he loves it.

  31. :

    4 out of 5

    This is an unusual one—one that I wanted to spend some time with before formulating some concrete thoughts that I could stand behind. In brief, PD Black is far from a bad scent; the components work well to produce something that’s intricately textured and granular. But while I genuinely appreciate the use of restraint, I don’t find it to be nearly as accomplished as Lie’s other deliveries, and it feels a bit out of place in the Puredistance range in relation to both aesthetics and pricing.
    With that said, this is a slippery composition whose complexity makes it difficult to nail down, and I also find that it transitions into its main and most continuous phase at an alarming speed. The main players that I’ve been somewhat able to identify are tobacco, castoreum, suede, resins, tuberose, and some fruit notes that are somewhat plummy verging on tropical. On top of this are some spices that are nicely restrained—one of which I think is cinnamon—and there seems to be a notable juniper and incense combo at work here also. The fruity notes are really only perceptible at the beginning, falling into the blend almost immediately. In fact, it appears that perceptible notes in general aren’t the goal here in lieu of a swirl built around the most recognizable note—tobacco. Oddly, I don’t much vetiver at all given that others have emphasized it.
    There’s nothing striking going on, nor is there anything that immediately grabs your attention, but I don’t think it can be quite so easily dismissed as mundane in that the composition is warmly nuanced and speaks in spacious whispers. When you first put it on, there’s a lot to take in with the fruity chord being the most obvious, appearing as a plummy wine that has a slight tropical edge to it. But I’d say that within ten minutes, the scent has largely unpacked itself, and what you smell here is pretty much what you get for the whole ride. It doesn’t develop or change at all, but it doesn’t really need to either as there are a number of interlocking layers at work that necessitate individual focus. In addition, this scent’s playing subtle sillage tricks that I suspect are the result of a sea of chemical fixatives undergirding the whole thing.
    Before I tried this, I’d envisioned it as “purple” smelling—rich, deep, wine-like fruits—probably because I couldn’t really imagine what “black” would smell like without any color tinting to it. This was somewhat validated by the opening, but if I were to describe the total composition in terms of color, it’d be grey. In fact, what this makes me think of is charcoal—as though someone took a canvas and rapidly filled in the whole surface, caring not for accuracy of coverage or consistency of tone. This scent feels monochromatic, textured, and ashy.
    The key player to my nose is the tobacco note, which is suspiciously similar to the tobacco note used in Tom Ford’s recent Tobacco Oud (stripped away from the Sahara Noir accord that TO pilfers from). It’s not particularly smoky, nor is it distinctly “tobacco” in the way many other scents are—it’s just a mere strum of a chord, but it’s the one that the whole composition is structured upon. When sniffed up close, the tobacco reveals a coniferous tint, but one that’s barely perceptible as more than a touch. There’s also a slight juniper in this chord, too, but not so much as to be totally recognizable as juniper is generally a deal breaker for me. Without the use of resins to smooth these components out, I think there might have been some infighting between them, but it works well here to produce a unique but not overly adventurous harmony. Other contemporary associations that I make from it are L’Occitane’s Cade (the dry, slightly scratchy effect) and Andrea Maack’s Coal (more for the papyrus than the charcoal association I’ve already outlined).
    This central chord is played up against what appears to be a refined suede note that, alongside some of the balmy resins, produces, yes, a watery effect that’s somewhere between bilge, bleach, and fatty, but in no way is it gross or off-putting—it’s intriguing. It lends the composition a slight powdery effect without any sweetness or coloration, maintaining the charcoal gray wash that the scent seems to be aiming for.
    However, what troubles me about the scent is that it reminds me of a number of different things, but I’m finding it hard to pinpoint exactly what they are. The tobacco note is very much the same as the Tom Ford (it must be a new chemical or something as I don’t think it’s tabanol), but the overall composition is reminding me of a slew of products that are scented, but aren’t designed as perfume per se (shower gels, deodorants etc.) I don’t see this as a major problem, but it just feels awkward—as though what we expect as perfume has been nudged into a different category. In this sense, PD Black *is* new, although its subdued nature and somewhat opaque notes make it hard to recognize and appreciate it as such.
    If I were to boil this down into a terse description, I’d say that it’s a clean tobacco scent with some creamy, slightly spicy resins that produce an ashy and watery effect. It’s not bad at all, but I’d never pay what they ask for something so subdued and restrained—even if I genuinely appreciate the direction they were heading with it.

  32. :

    5 out of 5

    Firstly, the concept is spot on in its application, first time I wore this was 2 mins after it arrived in the morning post, I did one spray on my hand, and for the whole day wafts of scent came and went. 12 hours later, it was still going strong, never invasive but always reminding me of its presence.
    Scentwise Black to me is more of a dusky lilac in colour, something I wasn’t really expecting. Personally I find it shares a few subtle facets with Oud for Love (doesn’t smell exactly like it, but more of a reminder, and they diverge farther past the early heart), with oud and sweet spices (predominantly cinnamon) and resins playing a major role, but Black is more transparent, weightless and also has a slightly sharp shimmering freshness running through it enhancing its radiance and dynamism. There’s a suedelike slightly plasticy side softening and adding a little transient creamy density and also uplifting lush white florals to brighten. White musks appear during drydown softening things, but they aren’t applied with a heavy hand. The drydown also shares a sketchy lower density connection to Enigma pH Parfum, with its dusty amber sandalwood and creamy resin finish.
    As others have mentioned the overall effect is approachable and may not be ground breaking at first glance, but in parallel it’s smooth, elegant, wonderfully executed and an utter pleasure to wear, certainly befitting of the Puredistance name.
    Saying all that, it hasn’t won me over for a full bottle yet, something about it doesn’t quite satisfy (an unfulfilled romantic tryst if you like), and there plenty others I’d rather buy sooner, even so with each wear it’s romancing me a little more as it unfolds its mysteries. Great work in any case.

  33. :

    4 out of 5

    I tend to like my perfume to speak for me — as volubly as possible, with sillage visible on regional Doppler. This subdued, “whispering” mystery scent represents a significant departure from that ideal.
    On application, the aptly-named Black is cool, dark, equally piquant and sweet. There’s a pinch of oud (to which I’m very sensitive), a curl of incense, a brush of something green and earthy which others have called vetiver but feels to me like an abstract and clean patchouli, a slice of ripe plum, and a sprinkle of cardamom and saffron. All these are miraculously contained by a cordon of 15-denier amber, each note clearly perceptible, none shouldering forward. Its timbre calls to mind Black Afgano, but at late-night-TV volume, down the hall and on the other side of a door.
    Around the one-hour mark, a sueded leathery vanillic cloud (tolu balsam?) condenses and hovers. At home, I’d grab my MAC MV3 for comparison. The aura clings close, woods and smoke and amber — and the plum, now dry and lightly spiced — still in attendance, albeit semi-transparent, mutable. Fashionably late to the party are a boozy bourbon note and a trace of benzoin, further warming and softening the lengthy drydown. My fragrance-devouring skin took the better part of a day to consume Black entirely.
    True to the marketing, this is a majestic yet intimate scent, with qualities like velvet: rich and subtly lustrous, susceptible to the angle of the light, drawing in rather than projecting. It doesn’t come to you; you have to seek it out… let your attention shift, then inhale deeply and realise it’s as present as ever.
    TL;DR: ultra-smooth wood/incense oriental

  34. :

    5 out of 5

    Initially I was disappointed. I’ve smelled this before! Wasn’t that the Amouage Epic Man Oud I smelled? And this other note, I know that vetiver from someplace… After an hour, my opinion changed, and disappointment was replaced by admiration.
    Dark, earthy, sweet, clean, and with a sharp note in there that I can’t place. This is very masculine according to my girlfriend. Others have described this scent as fitting of it’s monicker “black”, I’m not sure about that. But it is dark, with vetiver and oud mixing perfectly. Yet to describe this as an oud or vetiver does a disservice to what PD has created. There’s so much more going on. Having worn this scent on and off for about a week now, I’m not picking up the oud as much as I did when I first wore it, instead it’s that earlier mentioned sweetness with a touch of sour. Seems like a very complex and rich perfume, and immensely enjoyable. When I don’t wear it, I want to. When I do wear it, I look forward to the continuous wafts of… whatever note I don’t know what it is hitting my nose. Black has gotten into my head, and I’m glad it’s there.
    After the first hour of moderate projection it becomes a skin scent, and from there it lasts all day and all night, with the scent still lingering on my arm after a good nights rest. So far all that I’ve asked have been very impressed with it’s smell, from family and friends, to the SA at Neiman’s, everyone likes it. And I do love it. This scent is appropriate for every occasion since I’m the only one likely to enjoy it, along with anyone who happens to hug me. So far no one has noticed the fragrance without me getting in close and pointing it out. I’m a fan of M. If M is the James Bond of perfume, announcing it’s presence strongly, then what would Black be? Perhaps Tom Cruise at the masquerade ball in Eyes Wide Shut…
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