Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae

4.09 из 5
(11 отзывов)

Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae

Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae

Rated 4.09 out of 5 based on 11 customer ratings
(11 customer reviews)

Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae for women of Parfums DelRae

SKU:  51b2a6b25a9e Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Coup de foudre is literally “bolt of lightning” and French use it to describe the “love at first sight” in English. It is inspired by rose and dedicated namely to Rose de Mai (Rosa centifolia) coming from one of the two remaining fields in Grasse made specifically for perfumes.” The processing of the rose was made with a new technique which is said to produce an “immediate vibrancy.”

The top notes are Baie Rose, Italian Lemon ‘sfumatrice’ and Pink Grapefruit. The middle notes are Rose de Mai France Orpur Absolute, Purple Peony, Egyptian Jasmine Absolute, and Magnolia Orpur, while at the base is interplay of Tonka Venezuela, Vetyver, White Moss and Velvet Musks Coup de Foudre was launched in 2010. The nose behind this fragrance is Yann Vasnier.

11 reviews for Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae

  1. :

    3 out of 5

    A nice, bright summery red garden rose. Agree that it smells of quality materials, but is fairly standard rose fare with a large price tag. In a side-by-side with my Pacifica Persian Rose, both are bright and citric and fairly linear. The Pacifica deepens a little as it wears while CdF flattens, and just fades out. I already have the Pacifica for staight up unadorned, realistic rose and it smells like pretty decent materials and is under $20(and only 8.99 for the solid).

  2. :

    5 out of 5

    Nice scent, but rather boring and therefore quite easy to forget. Good quality musk makes a smooth, slightly powdery base for very well-behaved, fresh rose with a hint of light citruses. I like peonies very much, so Coup de Foudre gave me a few short moments of joy, as it includes this intoxicating, honey-peppery note of these flowers. Nevertheless, the perfume as a whole left me totally unimpressed and indifferent.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    Very pretty and romantic fresh rose fragrance. Does not have this “old-lady” vibe that some rose fragrances have. Nothing very special about it for the high price it sells for. Don’t get me wrong, quality is there but feels quite generic.
    Sillage: Moderate
    Longevity: 4 to 5 hours

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    I catch lemon and rose jam in this beautiful concoction. At one point, it smells precisely like Serge Lutens La Fille de Berlin, but once the lemon kicks in, it softens and the jasmine comes forward to play with the rosie jamminess. Sillage is going to be minimal after the 1st hour, becomes a definite skin scent for a while and then wham, you get hit in the nose with a Jasmine Magnolia combo. Very nice, but I’m not sure it’s worth the price when it’s so similar to SL LFDB whose price is about half if you find a good bargain.

  5. :

    5 out of 5

    Overstated floral powder-bomb. One of the only perfumes where a passenger in my car has gasped and rolled down the window.

  6. :

    4 out of 5

    I’m adding my voice to those who say that this perfume is too fleeting. On me it is pleasant but very ethereal. The opening is lovely; I just wish it would last longer. (Citrus, of course, usually blows off after a short while.) Anyway, I have Parfum d”Empire’s Eau Suave in my collection and I find it serves a similar purpose as Coup de Foudre. A rose fragrance, Eau Suave spicier and fruitier than CdF so they are not the same, but both have an easy-going, summer garden feel. Eau Suave lasts much longer and the projection is stronger, so I will stick with it.

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    Parfums DelRae COUP DE FOUDRE opens with a scrumptious resinosity which is only barely citrus to my nose and not very sweet either, making this true rose lover’s perfume distinct from both the fruitier moderns (such as STELLA and YR ROSE ABSOLUE) and the rosebush varieties (TEA ROSE and countless others…).
    So I find that COUP DE FOUDRE is neither young lady nor old lady. Maybe respectably middle-aged–something like First Lady Michelle Obama? In any case, I like this composition, and it lasts a very long time on my skin, though I should add that it moves closer to a more dowagery rose by the drydown. What I really appreciate in this composition, though, is the opening, a stage which is sadly all too fleeting…

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    Initially this smelled like so many other rose perfumes but luckily it soon develops its own personality- fresh and very distinct. Doc Elly describes it well. However, it practically disappears on me as well! It needs better fixatives or something ( I have a preference for strong perfume though ).

  9. :

    4 out of 5

    This is a good fragrance, and I won’t be criticizing it, but I will be commenting on the price, sillage and overall note interplay.
    Price. First, let’s take a moment to remind the industry that perfumes are not automobiles. I.e, the pricier the car the lower the gas mileage. Perfumes don’t get to play that game; if you want to slap a big price tag on the bottle then you need to put forth the longevitiy.
    Sillage. If coup de food means ‘bolt of lighting’, the bolt didn’t hit a tree and ignite but a bad late night joke and sputter.
    Rose. this isn’t a bad rose, it just a rose that smells like bathroom soap. I know that is harsh, but I have Nahema and N’aimez que moi in my wardrobe, and I can’t do dull.
    This is a sweet, pleasant, safe fragrance. I would even say it competes with Idylle as a nice ‘opera or ballet’ choice. Certiainly will not offend anyone, should anyone even notice you are wearing perfume. EDIT: I just read 10,000 fragrance’s review of this scnet, and he too called out Idylle as a comparison 🙂 OK, I’m getting better at this…)
    This scent would be perfect if someone would ‘Walmart it up’; give us more for less and we’ll take it.

  10. :

    3 out of 5

    This is all about rose, starting with the first whiff out of the sample vial. It’s not a big, bold red Valentine rose, not an almondy candied Arabian rose, not a sexy, loose-petaled Rose de Mai, but a delicate and demure pink hybrid rose, something you would smell in a retro, rain-drenched English garden. There’s citrus with it in the beginning, a light twist of lemon peel, the kind you’d find in a cool drink, not a cleaning product, and a very light hint of musk as the scent dries down. The sillage is average, but the fragrance only lasts a couple of hours. Nice and polite, but not exactly a coup de foudre to my nose.

  11. :

    4 out of 5

    Splendid! This rose is fresh, with green notes that are oily-powdery somehow ;o)) This note gives the composition a vintage feeling. I can’t compare this rose fragrance to anyone, but I feel this rose familiar, maybe of that cozy feeling of the noble past

Coup de Foudre Parfums DelRae

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