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fayst71 – :
I am fairly certain this one is called Extraordinary Tulip and NOT Black Tulip. The notes on the Atelier Bloom website are identical to the ones mentioned here but the name of the fragrance being sold on the website is Extraordinary Tulip. I have a sample of this one and the name on the spray vial is Extraordinary Tulip. Smells like a florist shop but the dry down is very sweet on my skin. Must be the amber.
senen – :
A visit to the flowershop in the spring, morphing to a lovely vetiver.
zema978 – :
It smells like my idea of a tulip. You have to strain to smell a real tulip, but it does get it right. It’s a little clinical for my taste, like a pure scientific re-creation of a tulip. I suppose it’s a difficult flower to present. I can’t entirely fault Atelier Bloem for this, as tulip is not a warm and friendly flower. Definite daytime scent, although a little formal for casual or office wear. Only place I can imagine wearing it is church or a weekend brunch.
I noticed that it is so light and minimal that you can layer it with other scents. I layered it with some amber oil to give it a spicy bottom.
Guassispuse – :
The fragrance of tulips is elusive in perfumery.
Atelier Bloem nails it with this fragrance; the tulip is slightly citric and tart while being lightly floral and waxy. There’s also a nice crisp violet, more green than powdery. The bottom has wood, but it’s all light, refreshing woods (think more of fig branches rather than oud bombs). The vetiver is more grassy than musty.
This is a lovely morning walk on a spring day. It’s light, almost dainty, floral and bit airy.
ZarD – :
a tart, peppery vetiver. i’m not wild about the first hour on my skin, it’s a lot like cranberry juice. With time it turns into a very okay generic men’s cologne, vague floral freshness foregrounded by woody vetiver