Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains

4.07 из 5
(14 отзывов)

Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains

Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains

Rated 4.07 out of 5 based on 14 customer ratings
(14 customer reviews)

Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains for women and men of Jardins d’Ecrivains

SKU:  23f0ffa57682 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Junky by Jardins d’Ecrivains is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Junky was launched in 2014. The nose behind this fragrance is Anais Biguine. Top notes are cannabis, palisander rosewood and galbanum; middle notes are violet, iris and gardenia; base notes are cashmeran, cedar, vetiver, incense, juniper, moss and myrtle.

14 reviews for Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains

  1. :

    3 out of 5

    Deeply strange and a bit of an enigma. Amused to read the notes here because smelling this blind I thought “narcotic floral with very heavy orris root”. Didn’t detect a specifically cannabis note in it at all (though I can in Florabotanica), but turns out that was the narcotic in question, ha ha.
    For me it’s the smell of a rich, not destitute, hippie in 1969 San Francisco – there’s something almost fusty, almost musky, about the bottom end, at the top the flowers are soon covered with dust and ash, the bohemian affectation hangs almost too heavily in the air, it’s almost too much … but not quite … and it’s definitely intriguing and multi-faceted. The violet’s a bit cloying and threatens to turn the effect all air-freshener-y. I liked it more as it dried down and the orris/iris surged a bit more to the fore. But yeah there’s an edge-of-old-potpourri tinge to it which turns me off slightly. It’s got a definite powdery/fuzzy texture which is almost comforting though, and at the end there’s a turn into powdery wood which I really like. While the projection dies back pretty quickly, longevity’s surprisingly tenacious – I was getting flowery wafts a good 7-8 hours in.
    So: this is a bizarre character trailing wisps of some sort of drug which does unpredictable random things and is fascinating though a little bit creepy…. a junky indeed! I’m sure it is someone’s dream so do try it if you are intrigued.

  2. :

    5 out of 5

    not a bad woody smell , better than she wood which is cheap and synthethic , but not on my to buy list . really overpriced for quality

  3. :

    4 out of 5

    Junky! Yes, the name is totally appropriate. I can’t stand the smell of cannabis, therefore I can’t stand this fragrance at all. It turns my stomach upside down. What a mistake I put it on today:-( What a bizarre.

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    I never think I would like this perfume because of the hemp. I always hate that smell but I was so intrigue to smell Junky. First I am a fan of Burroughs’s work and second I am an olfactive addict. I was really surprise to like it. Yes the hemp note is noticable but it’s really subbtle. It’s mostly a perfume about the violet. At the begining of the 20th century, women were so crazy about violet perfume. Smelling it gave them a little buzz like a drug.

  5. :

    3 out of 5

    last day by Gus Van Sant

  6. :

    5 out of 5

    sometimes i have the discipline to write a review withOUT checking out the individual notes…
    …tonight, alas, i didn’t…
    man…this is quite an intriguing scent! i could definitely detect some white floral, and to be honest, i thought the rest was some sorta mishmash of aromoachemicals. but i was wrong! the cannabis is totally there, but it’s striking an accord with another component, probs a white floral, to create an amazing note. i really like it. i’m only 15 minutes into the ride and i’m quite into it…
    there’s a bit of ‘air freshener’ about this scent, unforch, but it’s quite a pleasant number otherwise. definitely worth a try and i’ll be trying this one out again methinks…

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    I’m mystified by the high number people detecting the cannibis note; I don’t sense even the faintest trail of it in this fragrance, which is 100% soapy iris/violet with an underlying gardenia. Nice enough, but I don’t really want to smell like the guest soaps in my mom’s extra bathroom.

  8. :

    3 out of 5

    This smells waxy and plasticy. I guess I don’t dislike it since I keep smelling it, but it’s not something I would like to wear on myself.

  9. :

    5 out of 5

    The opening is smokey and woody, unlike anything I’ve smelled. Thumbs up for uniqueness. Then this scent goes on a journey of changes. At drydown the iris peeks out and makes the fragrance very powdery in a lipstick way.

  10. :

    4 out of 5

    chaos at max!! it is truly a Junky with no offense! i thought it was going to be daring rather than disturbing! it’s soapy with artificial Iris and violets. the gardenia is acting weird in here and giving that soapy essence and i guess it’s because the quality is quite bad! that just too much!! it reminds me of cheap hand wash soap, some nylon, and sometimes it’s like a pillar of iron has been washed by that cheap hand wash soap and a tiny rubber band was there wrapped all the time. nope.

  11. :

    4 out of 5

    Those who expected a parfum of transgression, will be disappointed. And also I was expecting a more daring scent scent, more complex and more structured. Considering the ingredients used, it was necessary to stand out more and some less than others: for example, the gardenia, I can not feel it and even the violet. In addition, the longevity and sillage are insufficient, but this is perhaps the minority problem.

  12. :

    5 out of 5

    I’ll admit from the outset, Junky does not smell how I had imagined it would smell.
    The pre conceived idea I had in mind was likely influenced by other scents I have tried with a cannabis note – black afgano, hungry hungry hippies, mountain high, coze – all of which have, on me, a very dense, rich, heady aromatic type feel. So with the name Junky (which in my part of the world is most commonly spelled ‘junkie’ and is a derogatory term for a user of illegal morphine, and occasionally used for a thrill seeker of some kind, such as one who enjoys extreme supports and is an ‘adrenalin junky’), combined with previous experience with this note, I was expecting something dark, maybe resinous, edgy. Therefore Junky was a [pleasant] surprise.
    When smelled in the bottle this made me think of the colour green – a rich, vivid green with shades of darker green. However it was much brighter than I anticipated, more aromatic, clean, fresh and green.
    Sprayed onto my skin this was immediately interesting. In the top notes there is a real smoky quality to it, almost as though I had applied my perfume in a room where someone was smoking fragrant tobacco or burning incense sticks. It wasn’t a dirty smoke yet it didn’t immediately remind me of incense itself. It is hard to explain. This smoky feel didn’t last long at all but was an interesting opening that got my attention.
    Within a few short minutes this began to settle into my skin and became a wonderful clean, happy, green scent with violet leaf and violet flowers, green stems and leaves, and a clear herbal armoatic edge from the cannabis. Although the cannabis note is definitely here it isn’t over the top, you wouldn’t worry if you wore this to work that people would think you were carrying drugs! Rather the thick sweetness of the note adds a lovely rounded depth to the other green notes.
    The inclusion of notes such as galbanum, juniper, oakmoss, vetiver and cedar prevents this from becoming overly feminine and retains a unisex character although I felt it lent more towards the female side of unisex.
    After about an hour the floral notes really come to the fore – violet is prominent, with gardenia and iris supporting, and a surprisingly strong and persistent yet soft myrtle note comes fore. The combination of flowers, violet, iris, gardenia and myrtle makes for a lovely fuzzy soft and almost powdery feel, but this is more a fuzzy yellow mimosa style powder than an overpowering or baby powder smell. I was actually surprised to see mimosa wasn’t in the notes as I thought this was what I had identified!
    This retained its green and floral heart for several hours before the drydown of mosses and woods came through, though it retained an armoatic, green and gentle floral quality, with the fuzzy powder on top.
    I found this to be a very enjoyable scent to wear and was surprised how much I liked it. There is a slight synthetic feel towards the end of the heart and start of the drydown which lasted maybe 30-60 minutes, this was the part I was least fond of, but the rest I did enjoy. This gave wafts of scent that felt rather elegant and feminine and I would be interested to smell it on make skin. There were some similarities for me to Velvet Forest Wood – at the time of writing it appears one other person found this as it is listed in the reminds me of section.
    Longevity was pretty decent at around 6 hours with moderate sillage before it moved closer to the skin. It remained close to my skin for another 2-3 hours before fading away.
    This was a pleasing scent that I would like to explore further. Tested from a sample spray, in cool autumnal weather.

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    Inspired by one of the most controversial characters in modern literature, Junky takes its name from William Burroughs’ first novel and, just like its inspirator, you either love it or hate it.
    It opens with a hyper-green and resinous blast of galbanum joined by a violet/iris combo. The cannabis accord is more like a suggestion than an actual presence but, as a matter of fact, I can’t help it from noticing it. The fragrance introduces then a sweeter floral accord that, together with woods and incense, gives birth to a weird drydown. There’s something about the soapy greenness of Papyrus De Ciane here but, for the most part, Junky smells strangely familiar and unique at the same time. Now, this is one of those fragrances which I can’t decide if I thoroughly loathe or completely love. There’s something so disturbing (almost nauseating) about it and fascinating at the same time. Somehow out of balance and wrong but still conceptually interesting. In this context, I think they completely nailed the inspiration and, just for that, Junky deserves a positive rating.
    Weird.
    Rating: 7/10

  14. :

    4 out of 5

    A megastar note of Cannabis escorted by a quirky bottle name? Where do I sign up?!! This opens with a conservative ingredient of Cannabis or should I say CannaBUST. If you’re looking forward to getting high on your own supply, you may be disappointed. The weed aroma is quickly usurped by florals which balances the greenery in a way that both genders can enjoy. Given the “Junky” name and “Cannabis” note, I expected the Incense to play a prominent smoky role. That too was a little lackluster. There’s other things going on here that will contribute to the Junky you will become such as soft woods and baby-faced flowers. Not quite the Fish Net Tank Top wearing Dreadlock Rastafarian perfume i was expecting but this is without doubt a very safe blueprint on how to make a gender-neutral fragrance with Sativa. This is Reggae Sunsplash in a bottle.

Junky Jardins d’Ecrivains

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