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manjynjanjoe7771 – :
Lately I’ve been exploring lots of samples from the PG house, which I find very interesting, and I was especially eager to try Cozé Verdé since I love fig (tree) scents. So my expectations were probably too high, and the fact that this has only gotten two reviews in the six years it’s been out might have tipped me off that this isn’t the most beloved from PG – all the ingredients for a slight disappointment. I do like it, but not as much as I thought I would: it’s far from the lush green fig tree I was hoping for.
The opening is pure woods on me, very natural but nutty rather than green or aromatic, pretty nice but a little masculine for my taste, and no fig tree to be discerned. In the heart I do get more notes from the pyramid: it warms up a little, and joining the general woody vibe are a vaguely figgy sweetness, licorice, a little patchouli. Still not bad, and it projects nicely at this stage, giving me enjoyable little whiffs of it from time to time for a while. But still not especially great either, or at least not really my thing, and it doesn’t last very long either.
I still think it’s weird this seems to have gotten so little attention, since it’s without a doubt a good fragrance from a reputable house, and it seems to be readily available. But on the other hand, it seems it won’t be getting much more attention from me either, so I guess that’s me joining the (absence of a) chorus.
Drinkens1 – :
Coze was one of those scents that everyone seemed to fawn over except for me. While certainly emblematic of the musky gourmand effect that became Guillaume’s calling card, I found it to smell like candied patchouli or, worse, flavored coffee. Coze Verde drops any evidence of the original down to a whisper and imports a milky fig that’s equal parts green and creamy. Although said fig hovers over what appears to be a something Coze-ish, not much of the original has survived that transition. Coze Verde is basically a lacteal fig which, over the course of an hour or so, morphs into a docile suede-and-patchouli number. It’s perfectly competent as a figgy scent, but the whole time I wore it I kept thinking about other scents I’d rather be wearing instead.
dmitriy5080 – :
I don’t remember very well how Coze is, since it has been more than one year than i wore a sample of it. But, from what i remember, it was a scent with a good emphasis on patchouli. Coze Verde, as the name promisses, is a greener interpretation of patchouli, with the green aroma represented here mainly by the fig accord. This fig aroma seems to me the same used in DjHenne, but with a more gourmand touch here. The patchouli is more subtle and smooth and maybe who likes Coze will not see the connection so clearly on this one.