Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920

3.80 из 5
(25 отзывов)

Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920

Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920

Rated 3.80 out of 5 based on 25 customer ratings
(25 customer reviews)

Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920 for women of Bois 1920

SKU:  6b98a4778ee1 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , .
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Description

Le Voluttuose (The Voluptuous) is a new collection by Italian luxury perfume house Bois 1920 launched in 2010. Three challenging perfumes Kimono Rose, Notturno Fiorentino and La Vaniglia are dedicated to female universe, representing an ode to Bois 1920 women: sophisticated, confident, elegant and mysterious.

The collection is based on rose, made intriguing with a twist of sweet fruits, flowers and oriental notes. It was created to awaken the senses and to leave a long impact, since the three perfumes are made of natural and raw materials.

La Vaniglia is a cozy scent of vanilla combined with fruits and warm notes. The opening is fresh and sparkling with bergamot, mint, tangerine and pepper. Incense, patchouli and ginger in the core are supported by the rich vanilla base.

The fragrances come in curvy bottles of soft pink color and gold lined cap, packed in two boxes – a pink and a gold one. Le Voluttuose collection includes three fragrances of 100 ml EDP concentration.

25 reviews for Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    Agree that this is a leathery ,Smokey,dirty vanilla. Too dirty for me I’m afraid. It has something of a Shalimar vanilla goin on..smoky halitosis on my skin.

  2. :

    4 out of 5

    I’m writing a new review because it has been a few years since I sampled, and now I have a full bottle. While I don’t find it repulsive like I used to, I still feel that it’s quite…ummm…artistic. Certainly not your run-of-the mill vanilla.
    My perception of it hasn’t really changed as far as what I actually smell. I still pretty much get the same sweet, soft and powdery top notes with some sort of plasticky strawberry (which I like). I love berry-fruitchoulis because they tend to create a plastic smell on me, so I think this is where I noticed patchouly, just in the top notes. I still don’t detect mint, anything herbal, no pepper, no ginger, and no incense. I also still get the rank animalic note, like an ass’s ass, frankly, but I have grown to really like animalics from ambergris to sweaty crotch, so rather than being perturbed by it, I think it adds an intriguing idiosyncrasy to an otherwise fluffy marshmallow vanilla gourmand. If the scent of this could be translated into a visual piece of art, it is the kind of thing I could imagine hanging on a wall at an art gallery with super artsy, cultured folks standing in front of it while swirling their glasses of wine and discussing its artistic merits as well as the subjective feelings it evokes in each person.
    It reminds me of Musc Ravageur’s concept of vanilla and intense animalic notes. While MR is Oriental and darker, La Vaniglia is its sweet, gourmand little cousin. Personally I think MR is the more successful fragrance at blending these two seemingly polarizing accords (vanilla +animalics), as La Vaniglia always just seems a little odd. It’s a keeper for it’s fascinating uniqueness, in any case. Someone complimented me on it when they smelled it, and they just smelled sweet vanilla, not a donkey’s derrière. So that’s good!

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    Very clear, sweet, rosey cool incense to open, then Le Voluttuose La Valignia warms up gently with a touch of vanilla. The incense here leans toward a musky cistus.
    The herb and spice notes aren’t detectable although they create a critical accord that diffuses the fragrance to keep the vanilla and incense from falling too heavy or flat, culminating into a botanically sweet, vaporous vanilla.
    Patchouli adds a cozy texture that makes the vanilla enveloping without being suffocating.
    This is a pleasant, easy-going vanilla with warm, natural sensuality.

  4. :

    3 out of 5

    Opens with… butter! Pungent, herby vanilla tobacco butter. Strangely seductive. Morphs into something that resembles a niche version of Kenzo Amour Le Parfum. Intriguing.

  5. :

    3 out of 5

    I’m not in love with this there’s something about it that’s not harmonious something isn’t mixing well. The comment below of old church smell is pretty accurate like old wood that’s always just a bit damp mixed with those wax candles they burn.
    I have 100+ niche samples for swap within Europe – updated spreadsheet of samples on my profile, get in touch!

  6. :

    3 out of 5

    Love the opening! Spicy vanilla.
    Too bad it doesn’t last that long.
    In the end you only smell some vanilla

  7. :

    4 out of 5

    I would call it an ancient vanilla. It smells like vanilla ice cream at an exposition of mediaeval history artifacts.
    It opens with a blast of pepper and a minty accord, gradually morphs into smoky vanilla and gets softer and sweeter with time (not overly sweet though). I would say it’s easily unisex due to the serious smokiness. I would personally love it on a man, but on a woman also, it’s warm and attractive with a twist.
    It’s strong and enveloping. Great sillage and longevity. Not a typical vanilla at all. Very unusual stuff.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    I bought this perfume blind on sale. I have enjoyed Bois perfumes before, particularly Sushi and Oro, and so had high hopes. What I got was a mess: Vanilla and sweetness so absurdly strong that it made most of my friends recoil in disgust. The consensus among them was that it smells like a popular orthodox church, frequented by older women with older tastes and an affection for overly-sweet vanilla scents.
    I’m tempted to say that I have no clue what Bois was thinking, producing this, but I think I do: the current Bois operation is a newer Italian perfumery with excellent masculine and unisex perfumes. The odds ones out, from my experience, are their scents for women: they’re far too strong, girly in a puerile way, and not what most adult North American women would want to smell like. I suspect that La Vaniglia is the product of an Italian man’s imagination — what he thinks women ought to want, without ever asking them. Stay away from this one unless you’re planning on touring Russian cathedrals in summertime.

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    I have fallen madly in love with this scent. Rich vanilla incense on the resinous side dries down to a distinctly dirty note on me that manages to be sexy instead of gross. My sister doesn’t get the dirty note, but we both get lovely, boozy incense vanilla. Will be saving up for this one.

  10. :

    5 out of 5

    This is very chemistry dependent. The opening notes sit on top of my skin in a cloying fecal vanilla cloud. It never fully opens up on my skin, ending two hours later on a pretty vanilla with bourbon and spices under the notes that never fully developed. On another person I had try it the opening lands light and citrusy, settling into an animalic deep bourbon vanilla that is extremely sexy. This is a great fragrance on the right person, subtle, sophisticated, fascinating and complex. My skin doesn’t work with orange blossom and some ambers (ambre precieux MPG) and it makes some roses too sweet and synthetic (fill de berlin). If these two perfumes work for you then this might as well. It’s worth it if it works. If not please run as fast as you can.

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    I’d call this an interesting rubbery vanilla. I sampled it a few times, but it doesn’t scream “buy me”. In fact, it taught me that what I sometimes think of as vanilla is more likely benzoin and tonka bean. These other two notes have more natural sweetness and warmth. This fragrance isn’t boring (big plus!), but I don’t feel like smelling of it.
    BTW: totally different “rubber” fragrance than Bvlgari Black.

  12. :

    5 out of 5

    Where Dolcelisir is laden with cinnamon, La Vaniglia is liberally peppered especially in the opening where the smell of freshly grated ginger and pepper is almost overwhelming and there’s no sign of vanilla at this time. The initial spiciness dissipates over time but spice remains a prominent note even to the drydown and this dry spiciness gives a feeling of antiquity to La Vaniglia. Under the spice, living beneath a thick fog of darkest patchouli and smoky incense that is so intense it is as if someone sucked up the incense of several cathedrals and stuck it in this creation, there is a creamy vanilla but La Vaniglia is not just vanilla as she claims to be nor is she the innocent cotton candy pink of the bottle. She is very much a sophisticated, audacious take on vanilla that is both wildly weird and wonderful. Potent and promiscuous this is definitely not for little girls. Amazing longevity and good projection.

  13. :

    3 out of 5

    All smoke, barely sweet. This is spicy smoke with a whisper of vanilla. Seems linear. Smoke smoke pepper smoke smoke pepper sweet.

  14. :

    4 out of 5

    Yuck–this is not any kind of vanilla I would want to wear. I expected incense, smoky, sultry, spicy, with a touch of mint. I got a fluffy marshmallow vanilla upon opening (yes–the sweet kind that you would expect from the girly pink bottle), which was quickly overtaken by the plastic note mentioned by another reviewer. This plastic note only gets worse as it smells more and more animalic (read: poop) as time goes on. I’m being reminded of Tom Ford Urban Musk–it’s the same manure scent that turns so many people off and probably the reason it was discontinued. Big surprise–nobody wants to smell like donkey manure. I’m shocked that hardly anyone has mentioned how truly dirty this smells. On other review sites, people talk about this fecal scent, but for some reason nobody seems to talk about it here.
    I got no trace of mint either. I sampled twice and endured it’s sillage all day long before coming to the conclusion that it just stinks and is no vanilla I’d recommend unless a member here is looking for this sort of thing. I know some people are into fecal scents, but not me. Different strokes for different folks….

  15. :

    3 out of 5

    I was hoping that this would be my new signature, sophisticated vanilla fragrance. After reading the reviews, I thought that this “dirty, mysterious vanilla” would be perfect for me. I was expecting sexy and unique but what I got was ancient and unwearable. It smells like vanilla incense burning in an old library full of antique furniture. Don’t get me wrong, La Vaniglia is beautiful to experience, but I just don’t want to smell like it.

  16. :

    3 out of 5

    From the bottle itself, before placing it on my skin, its like a brown sugar vanilla. then unfortunately once placed on my skin, the brown sugar vanilla disappears and becomes somewhat like a newly opened plasticky doll, after 5-10seconds it settles down and it becomes smokey, incense vanilla, not too sharp incense, mixed with a hint of leather. This is what I wish shalimar would smell like on me i also get a sweetness from the mint and orange, not really a citrus scent from bergamot but something (can’t really explain) that keeps the leather and smoke from being overpowering. I will savor this tiny sample, thank you to my fragrantica fairy.

  17. :

    3 out of 5

    A salacious slip through the backdoor in a bottle. perfect!

  18. :

    5 out of 5

    To me the drydown smelled very similar to Shalimar vanilla hyped up flankers (Ode vanille & Vanille Madagascar, probably the edp too). I have to highlight this similarity isn’t in the opening phase when one can smell the distinct leathery Shalimarness. Only a bit later.

  19. :

    3 out of 5

    Talk about a wolf in sheep’s clothing!!! The bubble gum pink bottle could not be further from the truth. This is a blast of citrus and a hint of mint for about 30 seconds before the shy girl begins to fade and her dark mysterious side decides to show her face. This is incense and spice with just a dash of patch and bone dry vanilla. If you want cream and sugar you’d best look someplace else. If you are interested in a vanilla that misbehaves, well then this may be your bottle!!!

  20. :

    3 out of 5

    Lots of reviewers have noted the “dirty” facet of Bois 1920 Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia, but they seem to have different ideas about its provenance. Several people have characterized this perfume as “sexy”, which suggests that the dirtiness in question is some sort of animalic angle. I concur and do not believe that the dirtiness here derives only from patchouli, which, in my experience, has a kind of clean dirtiness–as oxymoronic as that may be. In fact, La Vaniglia does not seem that heavy on the patchouli at all–at least not compared to many recent perfumes. To my nose, there is something else going on.
    Labdanum amber is clearly a mainstay at this house, appearing prominently in the base of several of the perfumes which I’ve tested, but here there seems also to be some ambergris or perhaps even civet. I’m not sure which, but I’m betting the latter, because in wafts this particular creation goes beyond the socially acceptable, making it a not-so-public-friendly perfume and extending a nanometer or so beyond my wearing comfort zone.
    This take on vanilla is definitely not the typical sugar cookie or other gourmand dessert scent–as the cotton candy pink bottle might seem to portend. In truth, this composition is not even that sweet, and it’s far more dirty than woody. Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia is also more naughty than voluptuous, and not really so focused on vanilla, it seems to me. If I were marketing this creation, I’d put it in a dark scarlet red bottle.

  21. :

    3 out of 5

    This one is excitingly unique. The initial blast on my skin was this pretty, creamy, sugary scent which only lasted for a few seconds then quickly evolved into a vamp type of warm, smoky vanilla drizzled with exotic spice.
    The transformation was so swift that it might leave the wearer wondering how this fragrance has morphed into a complex and deeply seductive yet slightly muddled scent from the pink melting marshmallowy fluff that it started from. The innocent sweetness was trampled by the provocative warmth this vanilla exudes.
    Rich, savory, smoky and spicy … not your usual vanilla. Beware of the potent, audacious and grown up Vaniglia that lasts forever on the skin (or at least a good 8 hours) — unless you dare tempt the temptress.

  22. :

    4 out of 5

    Oh, naughty, naughty vanilla. She likes to pretend she’s so innocent, smiling that sweet smile of hers, pleasing everybody, drinking Earl Grey tea with a squeeze of tangerine. But when no one is looking, she sneaks off with the likes of patchouli, pepper and incense to give her a little grit and life experience. Throw ginger into the mix for some sparkle and heat, and what you have is something to talk about at dinner under your breath. La Vaniglia is very intoxicating with all its hidden smoky darkness. You will fall hard for this one. And love it.

  23. :

    5 out of 5

    Incredibly beautiful, the most original vanilla I’ve ever tried. Addictive and bizarre, it starts with a boozy alcoholic minty opening, strong and very unusual; ( mint and vanilla? sounds like Listerine, but it has that old rum Cuban flavor, haa – El Ron del Cuba- if you can believe it plus a milky undertone!). This phase doens’t last longer than a few minutes.
    Soon after vanilla comes mixed with a nice dose of patchouli and incense. Ahh, that divine incense seems to come straight from my Orthodox church. Literarily speaking. It’s heavenly and it almost appears profane to be put in the composition of a perfume intended, most likely, to seduce and give pleasure…
    The drydown is pure soft smokey incense and dry vanilla. The citrus never shows up on my skin. As complex as the opening , the base is simple but inchanting.
    I don’t think I could love it more than I do!
    Lasting power of this olphactory wonder is not as good should it, neither is the projection. A true delight to my nose, I cannot stop smelling myself!!!By the way, I had samples from Tobacco Vanille and La Vaniglia, as I was looking for a dark vanilla. While I loved both equally, this one won my heart in the end, because of those stunning opening notes…Divine and sexy!

  24. :

    3 out of 5

    I have tried many vanilla-based perfumes, so I thought nothing can ever surprise me now. Especially, when I approached this Barbie-pink coloured bottle with “La Vaniglia” written on it.
    Boy, I couldn’t have been more wrong about that. This is definitely a vanilla perfume, but it’s nothing like I have imagined. La Vaniglia opens with strong patchouli and smokey incense; very woody and almost dirty (yes, patchouli, it’s all your fault!). The fruits here are not very noticeable, but without them, the fragrance would have been completely dirty and pungent, so they added some balance, I guess.
    I was already prepared to dislike it, until it strikes me that I am actually enjoying it. Incense and patchouli did not go away, but became slightly more well-behaved. Finally, I expected this to turn into plain sweet confectionery, but La Vaniglia kept reminding me that it’s got “dirty mind”.
    I honestly have no idea, on what kind of occasion you could wear this, but I am sure I will find excuses to put this on, as I can’t stop sniffing my wrist – it’s both very delightful and weird.

  25. :

    4 out of 5

    To me, this is a very leathery, dirty vanilla. The “fresh and sparkling” top notes are there for only a split second before the scent descends into a strong, non-churchy incense and vanilla. It reminds me of a vanilla-flavoured cigar, smoked in a room with leather armchairs. Very pungent and deep. Probably reserved for wearing in the cleavage of a low black velvet dress on a promiscuous hot summer night.

Le Voluttuose La Vaniglia Bois 1920

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