Figment Woman Amouage

3.80 из 5
(15 отзывов)

Figment Woman Amouage

Figment Woman Amouage

Rated 3.80 out of 5 based on 15 customer ratings
(15 customer reviews)

Figment Woman Amouage for women of Amouage

SKU:  a8f7733fe95b Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Figment Woman by Amouage is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women. This is a new fragrance. Figment Woman was launched in 2017. Top notes are sichuan pepper, saffron and gardenia; middle notes are tuberose, jasmine, orange blossom, lily, ylang-ylang and cassia bourbon; base notes are orris, papyrus, incense and patchouli.

15 reviews for Figment Woman Amouage

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    Just wilted flowers.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Have had a much better second impression than my hilariously bad first impression in which this smelt, quite literally, I might add, of vomit. It was highly unpleasant – I actually rushed home to scrub it off. The second time, I at least enjoy it quite a bit. I don’t know WHAT happened the last time, but this is quite different. Having smelt both vintage and current Eden, I get the comparison but wouldn’t say the likeliness is high. The tuberose in this is rubbery and dare I say it: chewy. Its textured like nobody’s business. The gardenia and tuberose combination with pepper and other such spices make this a little soapy and somewhat unpleasant. This only occurs for the first few hours, though.
    I’m glad I gave this a second chance. Like many other Amouage fragrances, I dont think I’d ever purchase this (mainly due to the price point), but I can say the journey has been fun.

  3. :

    3 out of 5

    I feel I have to do another review on this one. My first encounter with Figment was more being puzzled, hard to say if I liked it so I put it in the very interesting but “not sure” catgeory. I liked the dry down but was disturbed (not necessarily in a bad way) by the opening and first hour. This also maybe because of this name and colour where for some unknown reasons I was expecting something at least a little bit about figs. Nothing of the sort though. Fast forward: I left the sample on my night table and from time to time I was smelling this very light somehow familiar smell I could not place. It was Figment. Then I had the chance to visit The Amouage shop in London. And although I concentrated on other fragrances and told the sales lady, “no, not that one” I keept smelling back the cap of Figment all the time. And having the occasion of properly and generously applying it, not just from a sample: I think what Lyric is to roses, Figment is the same to the tuberose genre. Dark, leaden, gothic type of tuberose if there can be such. Nothing to do with Fracas or Carnal Flower – yes there is tuberouse but those are blooming and sparkling this one is a tuberose in dim lights crushed under other opulent materials. It has the full opulence of of an oriental and lots of spices and aromatics around: anis, cardamom, some mint, saffron, some cloves or something around that and a good dose of green patchuli. Gothic. Unusual. Congrats to Amouage for continuing to come out with sheer opulence off the beaten tracks.

  4. :

    3 out of 5

    First I didnt like it, but when I applied it for the second time I just realized the whole day I was followed by a unique, interesting, natural and joyful scent.

  5. :

    4 out of 5

    You’ve just arrived in Chinatown for a secret wedding, and you’re helping the florist unload a truckload of lilies and gardenias. You carry them with her through a smoky Asian restaurant where they’re cooking peppery beef and sweet & sour chicken, and you go downstairs to the wedding hall. Figment Woman by Amouage.

  6. :

    5 out of 5

    Wow. I am not sure I would wear it, not even sure if in fact I like it, but what a surprise comes out of this sample! Not sure what to think of it except that it is so interesting but more in an abstract sort of way than in the way which makes you bathe in the fragrance. I am not sure it’s wearable. It’s more like an olfactory abstract painting than something you wear. It starts with a rain of colours but not like flowers, more like a pot pouri of disturbed flowers and fruits and spices thrown together in no particular order. And then things start to settle, in waves, one after another. It starts to decant and the colours start to make sense. When seeing the name I thought this is about figs. But it’s more about fig leaves macerated with anise, estragon, basil with some old pieces of leather and green patchouli coming out and drying down on a layer of rotten jasmine, tuberose and white daffodils, but with the anise or it may be the green patchuli dragging along all the way but softer. Of course when you read this description you may get ready to run away but it’s nothing of a kind. It’s a curious, interesting, fresh kind of idea that I would not wear but can definitely appreciate. The dry down is more conventional and wearable though, with the same notes present but more blended, soft and warm and after about an hour and more they turn golden, even warmer and very elegant.

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    White floral – spicy – earthy
    Color impression: butter yellow
    With Figment Woman we are getting away from the very meaning of fragrance: olfactory pleasure. This King Kong of white flowers bears an irksome earthiness that is really disturbing me. It’s like a mess on painting canvas that spontaneously gained an aesthetic value yet there is a lot of repulse with it.
    A deeply soapy camphorous green gardenia allies with intriguingly rancid ylang ylang patch and some other floral members that don’t evoke any raunchy sensation. Eventually peppery smoky nuances give a render to it but doesn’t get any better.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    Sales girl put a lot of this fragrance on me. its nothing offensive,but nothing special either. for the price tag,it didnt stay for a long time…

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    I went throu 2 original samples and I really can’t enjoy it. For me this is freshly picked moss from a damp forest and white florals on top with stems and all… It does become more enjoyable after an hour or so, but that’s it.
    Longevity is good considering the type of fragrance, but not the tipical Amouage durability I get with their other offerings. Silage gravitates toward the heavy side. My husband asked me with a worried expression: ‘You did not buy this, did you?’
    Honour is nice, but boring to me. This is just unpleasant.
    Amouage was one of my favorite brands, but they are taking a turn that I can not appreciate unfortunately.

  10. :

    4 out of 5

    For the life of me I can’t figure out how…they share hardly any notes in common…but this smells exactly like Cacharel Eden to me. Not quite as intense but equally disturbing.

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    Mediocre. And uninspired, since it reminds me of Honour, but less elegant and classy. Really, Amouage: I can’t stand a new product every six months, if this is the way you mean to make it.

  12. :

    5 out of 5

    So imagine a keyboard, and several notes are played in unison, making a chord, but each key played is a white key, there are no black keys, no flats or sharps, and each white key is a white floral note, and this white floral chord of overlapping notes is held and sustained, and it is a great beautiful sound lasting and lasting, eventually fading to a whisper…
    That is my first impression of Amouage Figment Woman. Everything has been blended into one seamless floral tapestry, such that I cannot make out the individual edges of each note. Very pretty, very smooth, very lush … But with no hard or sharp edges or surprises. Consequently, a bit flat, linear and one-dimensional, especially in comparison to her quirky, more difficult brother, Figment Man.
    I’m picturing a bohemian midsummer-night garden party; night flowers are blooming in a disorderly overgrown garden, under the light of a Full Moon… she is in a velvet dress, chaotic and beautiful. Her perfume is as intoxicating as the heady indolent blooms surrounding her, and as constant as the steady beams of moonlight, lighting up her voluptuous velvet-wrapped form…. yes….

  13. :

    3 out of 5

    I was so excited for this bec it’s another white floral offering from Amouage and I love their white floral offering Honour and I was impressed by Ubar even tho I won’t wear it for myself. I’m a lil disappointed that the bottle is not opaque like in the ads.. The price is much expensive than the other Amouage too but thankfully not as expensive as the secret garden collection. As for the scent, the good news is it’s not the usual generic white floral; the bad news is there is a repulsive note that I can only describe as celery (could be the medicinal smell the reviewer before me described). I also agree with the first reviewer that the tuberose is undetectable. It does get better in drydown. It reminded me of jubilation for women but idk what note is that. I think it’s myrrh but it’s not in the notes listed and I could be wrong so please don’t take my word for it. It’s long lasting, the projection is moderate to killer depending on how much you spray and sillage can fill a room.

  14. :

    4 out of 5

    What I smell is very nice in the opening, all the white flowers are present there; I get more Lily, Tuberose, very little Jasmine if any and some Ylang Ylang. I am afraid I am not getting anything else, no orange blossom involved here either.
    This is very much like Ophelia by Heeley but that lasts a bit and is a bit sheer in it’s texture. I do get a slight Reflection Man aka Le Male vibe but Figment has a certain medicinal cold creaminess to it. Smells nothing like Carnal Flower, Boadicea Mystical is the closest to CF.
    I will be fair by saying it’s lasting power is a couple of hours, giving the statement the benefit of doubt that ‘Skin chemistry varies from person to person’, half an hour just sounds rather bad. But I am quite uncertain because tuberose usually melds into my skin and after some time I can’t really tell if I am wearing anything so it is a very-close-to-the-skin tuberose for me which seems more prominent than the other flowers after the initial 15 minutes.
    I would say it completely veers towards the feminine spectrum but can be worn by guys who are comfortable with wearing medical grade white gardenia. Think: you’ve put Savlon on your skin and washed it without soap. And I do like the smell of Savlon!!
    I have recently been interested in the female offerings from this house because they can be very unisex (Myths is a new favourite from the women’s range) but I am not sad as such about Figment Woman as I am for it’s male counterpart because these bottles indeed looked very exciting. What is inside is not entirely bad, just not something I look for or want.

  15. :

    3 out of 5

    Well, for me everything is pretty about Figment, the blue-turquoise bottle, the artistic box, beautiful display in the Amouage London store but the scent itself… fails to make a good first, second and dry down impression. It opens up on a peppery, spicy and persistent note that lasts a good few hours and overpowers everything else. It’s like pepper on some abstract flower. When it finally subsides the abstract flower emerges but it’s very subtle, quiet and somehow watery. Like an aftersmell of a flower, not a flower itself. I didn’t detect any of my favourite notes: tuberose, incense, orris. It’s nice but it’s not mind-blowing. It’s very abstract and conceptual to a point when it somehow loses ‘substance’. I would much more prefer something more defined and, in a way, in my face. After all, it’s Amouage. Also, it reminds me of something but my memory doesn’t recall the name. I shall update the review when the name comes to my mind. I’d give it 6 out of 10.

Figment Woman Amouage

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