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dddd – :
I am just testing this fragrance after buying the Au Pays de la Fleur d’Oranger discovery box…I find Liberté Bohème really pleasant for summer days. It brings me the same kind of pleasure as wearing other soft herbal, good-quality fragrances, such as Eau du Sud by Annick Goutal – it must be the common basil note, which I am very fond of. I would recommend LB to anyone who wants to smell clean, fresh and refined at the same time.
beshiktas355 – :
This fragrance is a nice green musk that won’t really astonish you, but it will make you feel happy and calm.
The herbs are clearly discernible, but never overwhelming or outstanding (I personally wouldn’t want to smell like tomato leaf or basil!)
Above all, Bohème is a lovely waterlily and (synthetic) musk fragrance for summer, maybe too pricey for what it delivers.
Longevity is sadly low, sillage is almost non existent.
hpa270Negeltzex – :
Liberté Bohème is a vibrant, green floral that is on the sweeter side. This perfume seriously makes me nostalgic for some of my oldest childhood memories. I grew up mostly in the city, but there was a brief couple of years when we lived in the suburbs. We had scorching hot summers but we had shaded green lawns, a deck in the back, a flowering magnolia tree in front, and lots of space to run around and play. I swear that Liberté Bohème is the exact scent of the front lawn while my dad mowed it. I can hear the sound of the lawn mower so clearly when I smell this, and I can see and smell the piles of freshly cut grass scattered all over for my dad to rake up. So it evokes childhood memories from a time when I would describe my life and my spirit as feeling totally free; unencumbered by life’s responsibilities; not yet jaded by perceived failures nor broken hearts.
I hate to compare Liberté Bohème to another perfume, but I want to give a reference point, as it is not the type of green that I encounter often. I feel that Hermes’ Un Jardin Sur le Toit (my favorite of the Jardin series) is the perfume that comes closest to Liberté Bohème. Both perfumes have sweet pink roses in common, my absolute favorite type of rose scent. Both perfumes are green, but Liberté Bohème seems strictly green, while Un Jardin Sur le Toit smells like a combination of fruit, roses, and tangy citrus along with the fresh green notes. As a matter of personal preference, I prefer Liberté Bohème.
Sillage is not huge, not cloying, so it’s really clean and fresh for warmer weather. I get about 5 hours of wear before I feel an urge to touch-up. I honestly don’t notice much musk nor woods. The perfume wears quite linear on me, but considering the fact that I really like the fragrance from the get-go, I am very glad it does not mutate into anything other than the scent of my carefree childhood.
As I mentioned, Liberté Bohème is truly green. Roses do not overpower nor dominate as I feared they would. There is no sharp hyacinth, narcissus nor lily-of-the-valley to give the perfume a false sense of greenness and tip the balance towards floral. It seems as though all of the “green” perfumes I encounter these days include one of those (potentially and frequently) sharp, screechy floral notes. It is not an evergreen fragrance, either. Liberté Bohème’s beauty lies within its ability to remain simply GREEN. I think it’s absolutely beautiful, quite possibly the perfect, simple, green perfume. Since it smells so natural, men and women can wear with confidence.
Wisp – :
Now this one is a clean floral roses with a slight rancidity from the jasmines. Slightly greeny from the tomato leaves, basil, and kind of dirty from the musc, but after all it’s sweet fresh clean floral roses.