Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille Annick Goutal

4.19 из 5
(48 отзывов)

Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille Annick Goutal

Rated 4.19 out of 5 based on 48 customer ratings
(48 customer reviews)

Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille Annick Goutal for women of Annick Goutal

SKU:  9e4e320b73b1 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , .
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Description

Top notes of Mon Parfum Cheri, Par Camille await you with a clear chypre effect provided by Indonesian patchouli sweetened with plum. A heart intertwines iris, violet and heliotrope with clear and accentuated powdery notes leading to a base where patchouli rules. – says Diary. The fragrance is announced as a very feminine, elegant and hypnotizing fragrance inspired by glamorous actresses of Hollywood”.

Top notes: Indonesian patchouli, plum

Heart: iris, powder, violet and heliotrope

Base: patchouli

The collection of Annick Goutal Mon Parfum Cheri, Par Camille will be available in dark violet flacons with a gold stopper and an elegant dark ribbon, as 50 and 100ml EDT, as well as 100ml EDP.

The fragrance arrives on the wider market in September 2011. It will be first presented to the public on July 1st 2011 in Harrods, London.
Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille was created by Isabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal.

48 reviews for Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille Annick Goutal

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    I’m so sad and disappointed, MPC par Camille has been discontinued..I ‘m wearing it since 2012 and it was my signature. Why? It was unique , a real gem. Here in Italy I was always receiving compliments because of this uniqueness. Mon parfume is not a hippie patch, I don t even like patchouly..It was a real earthy and warm patch, warmed up by plum and heliotrope..I also detect some osmanthus beside the intence, blasting pening notes… But they vanish after five -ten minutes, letting the place to the persictent but refined and classy notes of a real strange and dusty patch /osmanthus /eliothrope combo (the heart notes..).I can’t even describe this gem . I know Mon parfume is a kind of exeption for Goutal Parfumes House itself : it’s persistent, has a very good sillage and it’s strange, odd, sensual, but in a very sophisticated way..Is it a good reason to discontinue a parfume? I don’t think so.
    I m very, very sorry becouse I ‘m sure I will not be able to find another perfume that makes me feel so unique and “really me”. Mon parfume, nothing compares to you..

  2. :

    4 out of 5

    I am a huge fan of some of the Goutal classics like “Heure Exquise” and they’ve been favourites in my collection for many years.
    Most of the rest of the Goutal scents I also like because the are quite unique and special.
    Having said that I have to say this one here is the odd one out. “Cheri par Camille” must be one of the most horrible scents I have tried in many years.
    For me it smells like wet, mouldy earth mixed with fermented, rotten plums and other overly sweet fruity notes. It smells like a rotting graveyard with a huge compost pile in a summer heatwave of 45C.
    As I was quite shocked to find a Goutal scent so bad I even made the effort to get a second sample from another source because I almost hoped the first one had gone off because it smelled so terrible. But unfortunately, also the second sample smelled exactly like this, mouldy, wet earth and rotten fruit.
    I will remain a huge fan of Annick Goutal scents, but this one was a complete fail.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    This fragrance immediately evokes some unspecific 80’s incense. A super generic incense, for that patchouli heavy genre, that must have been similar to something my Mother burned at the time. Weird memory, but it was around the time she collected Appalachian Mountain Trolls from a gift shop on Mt. Lemmon. That was as close to being a hippie as my Mother ever got.
    The start is bold, interesting, and oddly not-quite-headshop, then fades to powdery and plastic. Not a good baby doll head, but a dirty, forgotten baby doll head that remains artificially perfumed from within.
    It is incredible how a fragrance can be comprised of all your favorite notes, but it just does not mesh with your skin. It’s the equivalent of writing a love song on paper that sound ridiculous played out loud.
    If this doesn’t work for you either, I suggest giving Annick Goutal’s Tenue de Soirée a try.

  4. :

    5 out of 5

    This is my Signature Perfume , because it is really unique , luxurious as if I am in Versailles Palace or one of a royal family

  5. :

    4 out of 5

    A hippie fragrance, to my nose, in best possible sense evoking raw materials from the earth. Spicy, deep and quite strong. Imagine sweet, ripe, juicy plums soaked in patchouly, lightly powdered with iris and given some more depth and ‘headiness’ with heliotrope. The color of the scent would be wine red, the mood is dusky and autumnal. Simple, uncomplicated, yet unique and very beautiful indeed. The bottle is pretty but I can imagine this kind of liquid being sold by LUSH in a far less classically styled bottle and with a cheekier name.

  6. :

    5 out of 5

    A dark and sophisticated fragrance for an older, worldy-wise woman. Not remotely girlish. Could be worn by a man quite easily. I get patchouli, plum and iris. It a little gothic and unhappy – not a grey sadness but a bitter, world-weary, hard-faced unhappiness. Great for grey autumnal days. In my mind’s eye, I see this being worn by a well-groomed, tight-lipped concierge with a secret lover and a waspish tongue.

  7. :

    5 out of 5

    I am about to say something I often hear: classy lipstick smell! :)Which is a narrowing category for it to render justice to this beauty, but it has that luxurious vibe of wearing high quality makeup. I imagine someone wearing this scent will trigger feelings of classiness, elegance, authority and command others..love it. It truly has its own character, something the sweet fruity-patchouli crowds of today are so afraid of…

  8. :

    3 out of 5

    This is a very unique fragrance, it is like nothing else around. Strong patchouli, strong heliotrope, then iris, violet and plum, as I can make it out. The overall experience is like smelling some old wooden drawers that kept make up, and I mean it in a good sense. Wood and traces of buttery retro lipstick note from heliotrope. It’s very well composed, good quality. It is a signature worthy for someone who can pull it off. Someone with great timeless style. A lot of character.
    I am trying it on from a splash tester. Sillage is soft from dabs, longevity is several hours.

  9. :

    5 out of 5

    I purchased a sample after seeing comparisons of this fragrance to vintage Rochas Femme, my favorite. Smelling the it uncapped, I could see how they appear similar.However, I tried it on and was disappointed. It was interesting to smell but not pleasant. Something was heavy and nauseating in the same manner I feel with the taste and smell of too much cilantro, if that makes any sense. Perhaps it is my body chemistry.
    Mon Parfum Cheri is, to me, sad. I agree it is vintage-esque, but in a Ms. Havisham sort of way. Those who have described it as bitter, dark, gloomy, and goth have said it best.
    I can appreciate its uniqueness and complexity. This is an unusual fragrance.

  10. :

    5 out of 5

    A very good perfume. It has character, and depth, and it is not for a young sweet girl. The cheri in the name has more to do with cherished (I believe the perfume was created by Camille in remembrance of her mother Annick) than with sweet-natured.
    There is more going on here than you would think when you hear the “floral woody musk”. There is a beautiful darkness in here.

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    I used to have a decant of this but I swapped it because I couldn’t stand it. It was way too dry and patchouli is always challenging for me. I did apreciate it because it was definitely one of a kind.
    Then recently I started thinking about this fragrance and actually started to crave this perfume. It’s very dry, in an ancient kind of way and te plum and iris work very well together. The patchouli is nicely blended with the other notes. I don’t really think this is a dark fragrance, but it has a melancholic and gothic (as in the era, not the subculture) feel. Needless to say, I have a bottle now…..

  12. :

    5 out of 5

    Gorgeous bottle, and the list of ingredients are all ones which i love. However, this scent did not agree with me at all. It gave me a full blown migraine and sickness, and even after scrubbing it off I could still smell it. If it agrees with you, this is a good thing as it is potent and lasts a long time.

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    this starts off with a dusty patchouli and quite a bit of plum and powdery iris as well. it calls to mind an old parlor with dusty velvet curtains and polished wood. i don’t sense much violet or heliotrope in this, and i must say i kind of wish they were more prominent, as i get mostly plum/patchouli. these are notes i like and i find this scent very interesting, i just don’t think it’s for me.

  14. :

    4 out of 5

    This was my third purchase from Annick Goutal. I was quite mesmerised by the aura of this fragrance and it made me feel I was in a different era entirely. Still I somehow craved it’s supposed voluptuousness that the notes seem to suggest and for it to envelope me in the patchouli-plum-iris-violet bliss entirely but I was left wanting more. It has all of my favourite notes, the things that make me melt.
    Whenever I see this bottle and it’s name, it brings feeling of deepest regret that I was quick to let go of it because I thought it were feminine at the time but having tried several other Iris based fragrances, I now know that I should have waited… Oh well, people learn from their mistakes…
    The quality is impeccable although it suffers in the longevity department. I just wish it was strong enough to make me forget my notions of it being feminine although if I find a bottle again, I would repurchase it and spray heavily because this did leave an impression.

  15. :

    5 out of 5

    Fragrance Review For Mon Parfum Cheri Par Camille Annick Goutal
    Notes: Heliotrope Iris Violet Plum Patchouli
    This is a beautiful fragrance reminiscent of Cacharel Loulou. I don’t mean to say it’s an exact duplicate. But there is something about it that wears quite like Loulou. Both fragrances have the heliotrope note and the violet, purple floral thing going on but with smoke and incense in the case of Mon Parfum Cheri it is patchouli. This is an Oriental fragrance. It doesn’t follow the traditional top base note structure. Many of the Annick Goutal perfumes don’t have that structure but it is still very well made. The flowers are well paired. I love each of these flowers and grow them in my greenhouse. This is a powdery iris with a sweet vanillic heliotrope. The violet is also really jumping out on me. This is purple flower heaven. Plum fruit are also purple so that’s clever how they have a synthetic plum scent in here. Plums have no real smell, just a taste and yet this is what this scent smells like, a juicy dark plum. The patchouli is at the dry down very smoky and aromatic. This is a gorgeous evening perfume. I recommend it for summer months and for evening/formal wear. Beautiful heliotrope. Smells divine.

  16. :

    4 out of 5

    EDIT: i realise after some time, that the EDT is very different to the EDP.
    my review is for the EDT version.
    bitter plum skins, lots of iris/orris, dry dusty patch, no floral or spice or sweetness in this one. the EDT is distant and formal and is all about the iris. and I understand that it was made in honour of Camille Goutal, hence using the name Cheri.
    For some reason, I am unwilling to part with her and am now keen to try the EDP version.
    ORIGINAL REVIEW:
    “the dry ashes of a Goth, scattered in some mouldy patchouli. laid to rest beside their beloved cloak, dry sour sweat in its dusty plum velvet creases. R.I.P. Dear One. mon cheri”
    i have tested it a few times and i cannot get to grips with it.
    all i can imagine is that my bottle has been dug up from said woodland burial site and is not in fact, the plummy patchouli vintage it intended to be.
    so sorry mon cheri.
    a week of trying to pinpoint the familiar scent memory those top/middle notes so perfectly emanate = when you open a lunch box in the bottom of your school bag, one that you forgot about.

  17. :

    4 out of 5

    My everlasting search for a good patchouli scent made me try this one. Surprisingly, I hardly smell patchouli but mostly a boozy plum and slightly powdery iris. Very goth and very dry, this is a non-sweet, dusty, heavy perfume. Its aura (dried flowers, fruit and a woody base) reminds me of old builings and even more of antique libraries.
    There is absolutely nothing “chérie” about this fragrance. Pardon my lack of respect but “mon parfum pourri” would have hit it more adequately. Maybe I would have named this “Strangelove” …
    Certainly not a to-go scent for every day but an edgy beauty I definitely like very much.
    P.S. Another weird surprise, the drydown reminds me of vintage YSL’s Yvresse (Champagne)

  18. :

    3 out of 5

    A perfume from a long-gone era, though very new…
    It smells like perfumes of the 40s and 50s. Perhaps ones that were used, and what was left on the bottom has this oily, off feel.
    Heavy, warm, filled with patchouli and plum, and overripe violet and iris. There’s also a leathery note lingering somewhere. I truly get the lipstick vibe that some mentioned, it’s actually the smell of a lipstick that’s been in your etui for more than 20 years, and it’s the first time i experience it in perfume.
    My mum said it reminds her of Vivre by Molyneux.
    I say it takes a lot of skill to create something new that smells like something that travelled through time.
    I enjoyed wearing it today, but am not sure if others around me didn’t wonder whether i should keep my old treasures in the closet…

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    What an incredibly beautiful perfume! First spray I got violets and a musty sort of velvety curtain smell from many moons ago.Then the sweet plum kicked in and balanced the patchouli/ violet/ iris combo.It eventually settled to the most intoxicating powdery patch/iris/violet/plum scent which just transports you to some vintage, posh house full of mystery.I have the EDT and the longevity is very good the sillage too is great.This is so far away from a lot of the mainstream offerings at the moment, you feel like it was made just for you, a true masterpiece.

  20. :

    5 out of 5

    It smells similar to Histoires de Parfums 1889 Moulin Rouge because they share the prominent notes of iris and plum, but the heavy dose of patchouli added to Mon Parfum Cheri differentiates the two. Not as powdery in comparison to Moulin Rouge and the iris is not as waxy, so it doesn’t smell like straight-up old-school makeup like MR does. A decent alternative, but MR is better. Still, it is an elegant and powdery fragrance with an edge.

  21. :

    3 out of 5

    Firstly a tang, which becomes a delicious marriage of plum and patchouli, totally sepia in tone; it has a nostalgic atmosphere, like looking through old photos. I’m not a big fan of patchouli scents, but this is so unusual – so individual – not a blind buy, but a must-try. The seamless blend of plum and patch dries soft, powdery and cozy. It’s saved from being too sweet by the iris and violet – very skilful and unique. Also long-lasting, without ever being hard on the nose or headachey. Very accomplished 🙂

  22. :

    3 out of 5

    Mon Parfum Cheri,par Camille makes my boyfriend physically ill because he cannot stomach its non-sweet richness. This is only for serious iris lovers. I loved it. I tested the original edt iris-heavy formulation. Many have mentioned that this perfume reminds them of old fashioned glamour. I don’t get that from it at all.
    This perfume is so creamy and sour/bitter at the same time it is truly unique. It also contains a large amount of deep dry earthiness, like parched black mud in powdered form combined with candle wax, and dark purple plum skins. The tang of plum balances the fatty orris and the dusty patchouli so expertly, I’m spellbound.
    The acid and alkaline components do not blend here. Instead, they remain separate and juxtaposed in an equilibrium that commands respect. I can’t believe someone actually composed it! It’s an olfactory assemblage. Truly perfume as art. Waxy, bitter, powdery, and addictive.
    This is not a welcoming smell. It comes off as something you know you shouldn’t be smelling for your own health/safety, but you succumb to it anyway. Like drugs or fumes or magic. Seriously engaging.

  23. :

    4 out of 5

    Mon Parfum Cheri, par Camille Annick Goutal was sort of Black Horse fragrance to me, as it seemed weird and controversial…weird enough – to want to try it badly! I love weird people and weird fragrances.
    Opens similar as John Galliano – by dusty violets, almost like theatrical, heavy, velvety curtains before performance in provincial theatre. Those curtains move slowly, revealing, as other reviewer have mentioned ,– old woody floor, squeaky and which knew better times – iris is coming to perform. Its like this wonderful diva from the middle of the nowhere, make-up from 20-30s, with some classic forgotten play, which guests from capital are watching with eyes wide open
    Intriguing perfume with strangely vintage feel and lots of philosophy, you tired of drama, yet can’t take your eyes off, when you just start rolling your eyes : “Ooooh , those damn violets!” – the patch with plum gives you such a drydown, that you are forgetting your own name, its daring, powerful, juicy-bitter-sweet, Gothic and melancholic at once.
    As a matter of fact – a masterpiece.

  24. :

    3 out of 5

    One of my favorite things to photograph the most is this old abandoned school building. It was built in 1902- It is a barbarous style one room building with arches resembling the gothic arches one sees on the cathedrals in Paris. The doors and windows are missing, the floorboards are damp and rotten infested with woodworm. The floors are weak and could easy give away under your feet. The once reddish bricks are now aged, they are deeper, blacker in color. Dust are caked-on the desks, chairs and the black board. The smell of the air is sickeningly damp. Unearthy moss and shrubs are growing on the building. I like to imagine a ghost of earth bound beauty living there waiting for her lover to return to her.
    Mon Parfum Chéri par Camille is an elegant but grim and gloomy fragrance. The composition while sparse in the number of notes is truly unique. The first scent is the beautiful powdery iris, along with the plum- the plum is sharp here. The misty heliotrope has a hint of vanilla to it and supported by the rich antique patchouli, in the end the drydown is powdery. The patchouli to me is like the lichen that grows on trees, very dry, earthy and bitter.
    I simply adore Mon Parfum Chéri it has an old-worldly quality to it.

  25. :

    4 out of 5

    The problem lies in giving time to this perfume. If you wait about 20 – 30 minutes, you will get the most fantastic patch scent available. I hadn´t been into Annick Goutal scents till I found this “my precious”. Give it a chance.

  26. :

    5 out of 5

    When this was released, I read about it and saw that it had violet, iris, plum and patchouli. “Sold!” I thought. Unless they snuck in something really awful I would be guaranteed to wear this. But I restrained myself and got a sample first, which I used up immediately.
    It does start out with a weird, musty closet note. I think it could be an aspect of violet, because I perceive this in TF Violet Blonde, as well. But in that perfume it offends me, whereas in this one, it drew me in. As I predicted, I couldn’t go wrong with violet, iris, patchouli and plum. I could develop a dangerous blind buying habit this way. I have the EDT and the longevity is great.
    I still don’t think patchouli is the new chypre, because I grew up in the 70’s when real chypres were popular. But it is glamorous nonetheless.

  27. :

    4 out of 5

    A witch in her cave, burning herbs and incense and earth and musk, and damp flowers… very mysterious and I was tempted to keep it after I found a bargain in TK Maxx, but it never “grabbed” me and I sold it on Ebay.

  28. :

    4 out of 5

    The nicest patchouli perfume that I have smelled. The plum and iris make it warm and elegant. I love many Goutal perfumes, but this is the only one that can really speak loud I think…it’s a real shame that it has been discontinued, why?

  29. :

    3 out of 5

    Tell me a story of long ago. It is written on sheet music, or in prose, or in the notes of a perfume. Sometimes it is possible to combine them and this is what Camille Goutal has accomplished with Mon Parfum Cheri. It was inspired by a gift of solid perfume from Collette to Annick Goutal, who was eight when the French author Collette died; one wonders what circumstances led to a gift being made to a child,but they were both pianists who left their original discipline for another field, sensual prose for Collette and perfume training for Annick. This perfume, crafted by Camille Goutal as a tribute to her Mother pays homage to the rustle of silk, silver candelabra, Austrian crystal and fine Damask napkins.The table is set. The ladies are resplendent, in dress and perfume. Even the table napkins are scented, it’s patchouli.
    Indonesian patchouli is employed without apology in the opening of MPC. It’s frightful… one recoils, then I consider how it was first used as an insect repellent in bolts of silk and other imports. I allow it to dissipate as I recall the sensuality of the book. ‘Silk’. And then, by association, I think of FILTH, a book with an acronym in its title (Failed in London, Try Hong Kong)
    There is plum, Satsuma of course, and I am reminded of Femme, the great Roudnitska’s lovechild. Iris, the goddess of the rainbow, mixes and mingles as an excellent hostess should at a soiree. The adventure isn’t over, the similarity to Cuir Amethyste hits me like a brick and I tumble down a rabbit hole where Daim Blonde is trying to wake the Dormouse. A jester sings to the KIng and Queen in a coat he borrowed from James Dean and moss grows on a rolling stone, but that’s not how it used to be, back in the day, before the music died, before perfumery became praline, before we all began to smell of egg custard pies. Who started throwing those things anyway?
    Mon Parfum Cheri par Camille is about how it used to be, an open declaration, a petition if you like, for a return to great French Perfumery. Where do I sign?

  30. :

    5 out of 5

    I love it! It’s very complex and deep. It starts earthy with the patchouly and plum fighting to emerge, than it completely change to a powdery old school perfume. It smells like boudoir and makeup but in a classy way. It surely is a masterpiece. Sillage and longevity is good. Sometimes I put it on before going to bed and in the morning I can easily smell it on my wrist.

  31. :

    5 out of 5

    Sour plum juicy not very truly fragrance.
    Nearly in the same style with Very Irresistible Givenchy L’Intense by Givenchy, only the last one is more pleasant, but this one smells more natural.
    I love plums in perfumes. But this fragrance seems to me not interesting enough and not charming.

  32. :

    5 out of 5

    I agree with Irisjetaime: cacophonie, c’est le mot juste.
    First comes a blast of patchouli of the worst kind, more like camphor, and then something vaguely fruity–plum they say.
    I had a bloody nose and my cat had a fit of his asthma. The smell is very strong and lasts, alas, for hours.

  33. :

    4 out of 5

    Oooh !! Quel dommage ! Je me faisais une joie de tester ce parfum sur ma peau. Et puis… La déception !
    Sur ma peau cette fragrance donne une odeur grasse, brûlée de terre. Puis viennent les épices sans cohérence avec les baumes. Une cacophonie totale.
    Attention : ceci c’est sur ma peau. La peau a sa propre façon de réagir selon la personne qui porte un parfum.
    Le parfum étant subjectif par nature, si vous me lisez votre peau est susceptible de réagir d’une toute autre façon.
    On dirait que “Mon Parfum Chéri” se cherche entre un parfum oriental, un tabac ou un chypre fruité avec la présence de la prune et même un cuir par les épices et les baumes et par la façon dont ils sont structurés. Etrange pour ne pas dire bizarre.
    Pas poudreux du tout ! Et justement moi ce que j’aime ce sont les parfums poudrés. (C’est ballot hein ? ;O)
    La durée de vie n’est que de quelques heures pour un parfum sensé avoir été créé par une marque élitiste…Oops !!! Non ! Ca va pas l’faire….

  34. :

    4 out of 5

    Most of the Annick Goutals I’ve tried are very weak on me, but not this one. Lasts forever, great sillage (I am kind of shocked that is an edt) and it has plum and patchouli, which are two of my favorite notes. what more could I ask for?

  35. :

    5 out of 5

    At first spray, this composition seemed disjointed- I could smell quite separately plum and the upper, medicinal notes of patchouli oil, but after 20 minutes, everything came together beautifully. Violet and heliotrope moved forward to fill in the gap, forming a purpled bridge between the plum-tweaked cassis and deep earth of patchouli; there are resinous woods (cedar), and a pale powdering of iris adds a star-like shimmer. The effect calls to mind candied violets atop a dark-chocolate cake- the color of the bottle’s glass is quite fitting! Supremely elegant, yet at the same mystical, solemn, and dry, this is a unique fragrance that an obtuse personality would dismiss as lacking in jubilance, but an introspective one would find it a worthy tool to emanate a reserved- but passionate- heart.

  36. :

    3 out of 5

    Another olfactory masterpiece has been created by Annick Goutal
    This is my fourth AG acquisition and its the most beautiful and unusual IMO.
    This fragrance is a dark, earthy and dirty patchouli which smells like the taste of snails.
    The composition contains a sour and fermented plum, some iris, violet and heliotrope, which blends into a very grown up, very fresh and very beautiful scent.
    This is like nothing that I have ever smelled before. It has been described as ‘hypnotising’ and actually, I cannot think of a better word to use to describe this gorgeous perfume.
    The initial blast is boozy, dirty, earthy, sour and fermented, but this quickly morphs into an addictive fresh and beautiful orchestra of notes which keep wafting up my nose and causes me to inhale deeply and savour its olfactory beauty.
    I am in love!! This is just heavenly in every way possible.
    To me, AG frags are eccentric and quirky in a genius way! Only AG can put together these ingredients and get such art out of them
    The silage for the EDT is amazing and longevity is fantastic especially considering the fact that I only sprayed a small amount of this on my arm a few hours ago but can smell its fabulous aroma constantly.
    This is a perfume wardrobe must have for die hard patchouli lovers, wonderful!! Just wonderful!

  37. :

    4 out of 5

    This fragrance isn’t awfule per se but the patchouli came off as smelling more like fresh beets; at least on my skin.

  38. :

    5 out of 5

    A new love !!! When I will finish ? Never, of course never: I am always find perfumes that I fall in love and this is not the exception. This one is extraordinary, extreme, very, very delicious !!! I love it !

  39. :

    4 out of 5

    I am as easily sucked in by the term “chypre-effect” as the next perfume fanatic. I’ll admit, I blind bought. Not only were the reviews good, but the  dark plum-iris-patchouli targets me perfectly. Factor in my recent fascination with Annick Goutal fragrances and I become a big, round bull’s-eye.
    As it turns out, I’m in love with this perfume. It is encompassing. Blanketing really, but perfectly calibrated. It’s a dusky, dusty, musty pairing of patchouli and coumarin.  The plummy richness and the odd pairing of iris and dark vanillic heliotropin, serve more as modifiers than main course.
    In tone, this could be Aromatics Elixir’s younger sister, a bit less stern but equally towering.  Self-assured. 
     It’s not a chypre, though. It’s not even like a chypre, despite the common thread of pachouli. It’s a dank, powdery wood, with a remote sweetness.  It’s neither old-fashioned nor retro.  But it does feels like it refers to the past.  In the way that certain perfumes seem to have a language, MPC speaks the language of the more assured mid-late 20th century feminine perfumes.  It is a like mind to Diorella, Sherrer by Sherrer, Azuree, Chanel 19.
    Contemporary perfumery would lure you into a Bravo world where high heels define femininity.  MPC reveals backbone.  It’s not perched, it’s grounded. It is 180° from another patchouli heavy feminine, Angel.  Angel is an exciting, monstrous femme that knocks you over.  But where Angel is an irresistible force, MPC is the immovable object.  It has gravity.  MPC demonstrates that stillness is not stasis, but poise. It doesn’t try to appear contemporary, as in the ridiculous expression ‘fashion forward’. It simply IS contemporary.  J’y suis, j’y reste.
    Screw bubbly and whimsical. They are irrelevant.  MPC is serious. The seriousness speaks of intent and assuredness. This is how perfume is sexy.
    P. S.  I’ve always disliked the AG ‘gender’ bottles. The blocky masculine bottle is tolerable, but the feminine bottle is ugly in its plain-Jane frilliness. Is gender really so simple as these two bottles? Putting the self-possessed MPC in this dowdy feminine bottle, though, reveals a line of thinking that shows that the easier it is to spot the simple gender binary at a glance, the easier it is to move past it.
    from scenthurdle

  40. :

    4 out of 5

    This scent is a wonderful memory reviver for me, with quite some patchouli in it. So. What’s the memory about: we went to the country, he and I. The road was blocked thanks to lots and lots of snow. And it kept snowing and snowing, and snowing, and… It was chilling outside. We spilt some spices on the kitchen floor and were picking them off the boards, trying to keep our jeans as spice-free as possible. The stove, so hot, so close… Hands. Boards, cloves, cinnamon… Every single knee spiced, but we managed to pick some spices off the floor, too. The wind quietened outside. The snow and the chill stayed. And we were so comfortable, so happy and so warm by the almost red-hot stove.

  41. :

    3 out of 5

    Very slow to open up, with lacquered nail polish coming out of the gate first. Then it turns into something for Big Girls. What you’d wear if Clark Gable was coming over for a nightcap.

  42. :

    5 out of 5

    I’m with Blue Lady_Jan. On me, this fragrance was awful on first encounter, and even worse several hours later. I ended up throwing the bottle out I was so unimpressed.

  43. :

    4 out of 5

    Hearing the words ‘dark’, ‘unique’ & ‘mysterious’ had me extremely curious… All these descriptions apply but in a very negative way for me.
    I have never had a perfume make me feel actually ill and this managed it. Awful, heavy, (plasticine as one person said) and incredibly depressing. Just imagining this mud of rotten, thick, acrid syrup that hits the back of your throat and won’t move.

  44. :

    5 out of 5

    This one its too dark for me 🙂

  45. :

    3 out of 5

    Mon Parfum Cheri really does have an old fashioned, glamourous feel to it. They got that right. It feels deeply feminine, wise, graceful. It feels a little dark and risque but not earthy or even that woody. This on me has hardly any sillage, but over the course of the day, I appreciated it. I got wafts of it off and on all day long, but it wears quietly enough that it never got annoying. This perfume is liquidy smooth–I was expecting a powdery musk based on the reviews, but on my skin it never goes there. It’s mostly plummy patchouli, with a hint of sweet flowers all the way, all day.

  46. :

    3 out of 5

    I have to confess that upon applying Annick Goutal MON PARFUM CHERI, my initial reaction was: “Meh. Goutal gets into the fruitchouli game.” However, I had to eat my words shortly thereafter, because as the perfume developed and settled, it became more and more compelling to my nose. There is a lot more complexity here than I’ve sniffed in other fruitchoulis of late, and the high quality, natural-smelling ingredients which I’ve come to expect chez Annick Goutal are in full evidence as well.
    The overall result is quite appealing: chewy, plummy, woody with some sweet florals along for the ride. I like this composition very much, I really do. Another big surprise is the heft, projection, and potency. I was sure that this must be an eau de parfum because of the sheer strength of this elixir. In fact, on the vial of my manufacturer’s carded sample are clearly printed the words “eau de toilette”. Nice to know that not all houses have succumbed to the temptation to dilute their wares to stretch them as thinly as possible…
    Good work, Goutal! One must like plum and patchouli in order to enjoy wearing this perfume, but if you do, then this one’s for you, as it’s the best of the recent bunch of launches in this general mold.

  47. :

    4 out of 5

    Imagine a dark boudoir, a woman in a burgundy gown reclining on a plush leather chaise lounge. The room is filled with the incense-like scent of patchouli and iris hovering in the air, gently wafting through the windows into the incrutable night sky outside. The regal fragrance of Mon Parfum Cheri puts you in the mood of someone noble, strong, mysterious, and very very classy.
    I have never been a patchouli fan, but this fragrance changes that. From the first sniff I am hooked! I placed a card into my handbag and the scent stayed there for 3 days. Finally after more than 2 months and endless thinking about it, I purchased my first bottle.
    Intoxicating and mysterious. And only for the classy and old-school!

  48. :

    3 out of 5

    This fragrance’s opening is bewitching (if you love patchouli). I don’t know why but it brings me into the fantasy world of the

Mon Parfum Cheri

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