Chevalier d’Orsay D’Orsay

3.67 из 5
(3 отзывов)

Chevalier d'Orsay D'Orsay

Chevalier d’Orsay D’Orsay

Rated 3.67 out of 5 based on 3 customer ratings
(3 customer reviews)

Chevalier d’Orsay D’Orsay for men of D’Orsay

SKU:  17f39037dc04 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Like his friends Berlioz, Alfred de Vigny and Lamartine, the Chevalier d’Orsay left a breath of romanticism in his wake. Painter, sculptor and alchemist of luxury, elegance and love, he became a gifted creator of perfumes. Perfume was created in 1911.

Top notes: Fresh lemon, basil, orange, lavender.

Middle notes: Nutmeg, mint, black pepper, cinnamon.

Base notes: Moss, patchouli, vanilla, musk.

3 reviews for Chevalier d’Orsay D’Orsay

  1. :

    3 out of 5

    I’ll start by professing my ignorance-I’m a complete novice. I got this as a sample as a blind tester (it was one of those ‘people who bought the fragrances in your shopping cart also bought these……). I didn’t even realise it was for men until I read up on it, but what the heck, I gave it a go.
    It is glorious! Absolutely gorgeous and I am totally in love. It starts out as a slightly bitter herbal citrus-its fresh orange zest rather than orange juice. The basil in this just works perfectly-I’ve tried Jo Malone Lime Basil and Mandarin and that was rank on me, but this citrus basil combination is wonderful. The middle spicy notes are smooth and warm-I’ve tried Fracas which has similar cinnamon spice notes and that was awful on me, but Chevalier D’Orsay seems to be a perfect combination of gentle warm spice without bitterness, a hint of sweetness with the vanilla and the rounded musk underlying it all. This isn’t an over the top macho man scent, this is pure class, and could be unisex (unless you’re the type who like sweet candy or bright florals). For a woman, I’d say this was a winter evening scent.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Mixed feelings. I doused my shirt and two folded tissues with the whole mL+…the juice was in a non-resealable plastic blister-type sample (what a remarkably stupid way to package it!). Because of this, I’m writing a very stream-of-consciousness review because this is the only shot I get, and I suspect that I got fatigued to the scent in the process.
    It’s a light greenish citrus, with some subtle florals mixed in…they appear where it got on skin but not until later on fabric. It has that bright shiny golden feel contributed by certain sharp herbs, as in AdP Intensa, Burberry original, Dolce and Gabbana, or Platinum Egoiste. For a while, it seems to be getting sharper in its herbiness, approaching Villoresi Uomo, and the lemon peel really starts to stand out. It would almost be a perfectly natural lemon peel, but the herbs give it a disappointingly wilted mustiness that approaches Joy, or a similar lemon dishsoap. Soon, on cloth but not on the tissues, the mustiness of the lemon peel starts to clear up, leaving only the good parts. Eventually, it’s down to a vague but classy floral lemon residue on cloth (even though I used 3-4 times my usual SOTD amount), and it reeks horrendously of fetid dishsoap on the tissues (too much lavender!).
    As a frequent tissue-tester, I can safely say that this scent varies more between cloth and tissue than anything else I’ve ever tried, and I really don’t appreciate that. (I know, I know, “it will only smell proper on skin, etc, etc…”, spare me the dogma!) Still, what’s intriguing is that, like AdP Intensa, it leaves on cloth a transparent but very persistent aura of refinement, which I can never assign to a particluar plant note, but simply smells expensive. A gentle cloud of golden fleece, perhaps?

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    I, by all rights, am a fragrance novice. I know I appreciate what smells good and avoide what doesn’t suit my taste. My uncle was unloading some colognes and I found myself in posession of two vintage frags, Givenchy Xeryus (blue art deco bottle) and what has to be a late 70’s to mid 80’s FULL bottle & box of Chevalier d’Orsay. I did the research, and came up surprisingly emptyhanded. All I can understand is that it’s a quite rare bottle.
    Anyway, this quickly surpassed Pure Malt and Aventus as my ‘dress-to-impress’ scent. Seriously, I typically hit manly, fresh, or darker fragrances. This is delightfully out of my comfort zone. The opening is a smokey/sweet that I can’t explain with due dignity to the cologne. I’m in my third hour as we speak and it is still firing a liquid cinnamon/honey/hot toddy that I’m just enfatuated with. And it projects. Seriously, it gives no f’s. Rightfully so. The end is, and I only describe as such because I don’t have the olfactory perception to pontificate on each note, what I believe a truly comfortable man should smell like. Confident, sweet, spiced, and assuredly dignified. With more complexity and depth than I knew possible by frags.
    This will never see the office. I’ll employ some more acceptable dailys for that. One, it is far too rare. Two, I don’t need the headache of explaining what I have on and why the newly hired girls suddenly ‘need my advice’. Just try to find it, please. This is one that you’ll coddle one dap at a time.

Chevalier d'Orsay D'Orsay

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