Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree Rochas

4.27 из 5
(30 отзывов)

Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree Rochas

Rated 4.27 out of 5 based on 30 customer ratings
(30 customer reviews)

Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree Rochas for men of Rochas

SKU:  a4ddfcba03b1 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree by Rochas is a Aromatic Fougere fragrance for men. Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree was launched in 1948. Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree was created by Edmond Roudnitska and Theresa Roudnitska. Top notes are lavender, basil, lemon verbena, petitgrain, bergamot and lemon; middle notes are honey, carnation, jasmine, rose and geranium; base notes are tonka bean, amber, musk, oakmoss, vanilla and cedar.

30 reviews for Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree Rochas

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    This is a very unique fragrance, different than anything else but it also seems somehow venerable and familiar. The opening is as others have noted strong and almost unpleasant. My experience though with such an opening (think Hugo Boss No. 1) is that this will open into something wonderful and Rochas Moustasche does just that. The animalic opening becomes a smooth, dirty/clean citrus , the lovely “dirtiness “ compliments of what I detect as a natural lavender that marries so nicely with the various citrus accords. There is some nice herbal aromas which must be the basil but smells somewhat like sage. The floral elements are balanced and led by a slightly spicy carnation. There is a powdery element also. The fragrance is very masculine and very sophisticated. This is a true gentleman’s fragrance. A gentleman who opens a door for a lady and will stand up for her honor. It’s old school for sure but really old school, not 80s, 70s or 60s old school but 1940s old school. If you love old film noir, Humphrey Bogart and the days when men were men and a dame was a dame, if you know how to wear a suit with a fedora, you will likely love this fragrance.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Soapy citrus. Opens up overwhelmingly masculine on me; my immediate response was “Oh no, I definitely cannot wear this!” but then it quickly tones down to a fizzy, soapy aromatic cologne. Not the most feminine thing I’ve smelled but not as butch as it initially seemed. An interesting blend of dry citrus and an almost animalic presence hiding in the base. A man who smells like this would be a very interesting fellow indeed; well groomed but with the tiniest hint of the beast peeking out. Dry but tart (not sure what the faint bitter sourness is from – the citrus?) and pretty retro in feel. Someone described this as “dirty freshness” and I have to agree. A really interesting fragrance, one I would highly recommend for anyone looking for something classy but unique.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    If your taste runs classic—solid and traditional but with your own personal flair, please read on. During the summer months, when citrus fragrances are ubiquitous, Rochas Moustache is the masculine citrus that sets you apart from the crowd. It’s citrus with sensuality—bergamot with balls. Equal parts “gentle” and “manly”. Nothing less than another Masterpiece from the brilliant Edmond Roudnitska.

  4. :

    5 out of 5

    This one smells real good. Certainly a twist from what vetiver lovers might like for example. I mean it definitely has a mature appeal. I get mostly herbs in this. rosemary, thyme, marjoram, whatever. a lot of sage. yeah maybe even basil. smells like kitchen herbs, a bunch of them, and also a touch of dried lemon, like lemon peel. It smells real great and I have not smellt something like this, and there is probably not anything smelling of herbs on the market these days and it could not be in the current fashion.
    I read someone say it has candlewax. I can see that, it has a scent in it kinda waxy, but like the smell after I put a candle out.
    I think this is very interesting and nice. I can only hope it is or becomes more available, and is not discontinued, since I might really like this. I just recently got it.
    I have the same bottle as pictured, but the box is obviously old – and the ingredients list is a sticker with about 5 ingredients. Not sure if this is discontinued or still being made. I think – though I really like the somewhat rugged but charming herbal kitchen herbs and candlewax smell – I think the perfume must have gone off. I know when they have, they may be weaker or have a sort of stale smell up top, which mine seems to b e. /but it is nice, and I guess they should just keep making it and hopefully it is not simply a relic at this point.

  5. :

    4 out of 5

    Moustache 1948
    Eau de Cologne Splash
    Eau de Toilette Concentree
    Purchased on eBay
    Ok so this was my grandfather’s cologne.
    As such this is very special for me. He was Arnold Bozer a veteran of World War 2 and Korean War. Everything I know about him comes from what my father told me about him. He was a good man, a man of honor, integrity, compassion, intelligence and a love for our country. Grandpa passed away when I was still a small child at around age 7. The cologne was passed on from Grandpa to Dad and then to me. As soon as I left for college the cologne came along with me. It was a ‘coming of age’ gift. Eighteen, adulthood, manhood. I also see this as being an entry-into-manhood cologne from the time of it’s release (1948) which is why they called it ‘mustache’ when a male first grows facial hair and learns to shave or keeps a mustache. I did some research into the making of this cologne and the context of it’s time. The nose behind this scent Edmond Routnitska who formulated FEMME as the female equivalent to this scent a his and her fragrance in the 40s during which time World War I was raging through Europe. Paris was occupied by the Nazis and Edmond was busy in his lab making a cologne which he hoped to sell in the post war years. It was as successful as Chanel Pour Monsieur.
    I must emphasize that the vintage is the rare splash version. It might still be available through sellers one eBay. The item that sells the most is the Eau de Toilette spray in the bottle as seen in this page. By 2017 standards this is as outdated and perhaps to some unwearable. Even the Chanel Pour Monsieur that one buys today is wearable. This one has high powered notes of a potent fougere – lots of lavender, medicinal lemon lime citrus notes, verbena, green notes, basil, carnation, rose, geranium and honeyed floral heart, a base of amber moss vanilla and wood. The splash is powerful stuff. The initial notes I detect are lemon verbena and bergamot in a greenish mode with petit grain. Smells oily greenish and citrusy. As it settles on my skin it becomes less citrusy and more a scent of clean florals with carnation and geranium and a honey. The dry down is woodsy with cedar and herbal with moss. It seems to border on a chypre.
    The EDT concentree has the same notes but the citrus is less harsh and it smells of delicious lemon and orange, the florals are subdued with a clean and soft carnation, and a dry down with more pronounced vanilla and amber notes. The vanilla is amazing in the EDT and it has the feel of a somewhat more complex and engaging Coty Stetson. I don’t detect the musk but on both EDC and EDT the moss is there. This is something unique and hard to find nowadays. It has the appeal of the vintage cologne, with a gentlemanly and sophisticated, aristocratic air. It smells of an Englishman who holds a seat in Parliament who has his own chauffeur and butler service, who has a top hat and mustache. Reminds me don’t laugh but a cologne for Mr Peanut the mascot for Planters peanuts.
    A cologne of this caliber is meant to be worn with suit and ties, dress shirts, vests, and or tuxes. This is on the same level as Chanel Pour Monsieur and must be worn on special occasions and formal events. This is a wedding cologne, a graduation cologne, a formal dance cologne, a soiree, the theater, the symphony, opera, ballet, or an anniversary. It has superb longevity and sillage. I have so much respect and love for this cologne. I wear it to honor my grandfather and his legacy. If you like vintage classics this one is a must have!

  6. :

    3 out of 5

    I have the EDT concentree pictured here on top of the page. I really love this perfume, it is so unique and still original all these years later. Yet, there is a classical nature that never lets it get too wild. There is so much complexity here that it is difficult to describe. At first sniff though, it smells very classical and almost “basic cologne,” but then develops quickly into a strange complex and beautiful creation. In my opinion there is really no peer.

  7. :

    5 out of 5

    Moustache its a juice from a different time. Definitely strong opening, almost unpleasant. The drydown is where the true character of Moustache comes up.
    The beauty of it is that it conjures so many memories of times gone by. It smells very quaintly French. It smells very masculine. It smells the way gentleman used to smell before. Waaay before the fougeres, the aquatics, the gourmands and the current garbage out there. It does not have any current point of reference which makes it, in a very strange way, a modern fragrance. It nods to the past in a very big way, and you could almost say it was the French grandfather of Versace L’Homme (which I know is Italian), and the dad of YSL Pour Homme, which bears a strong resemblance to Moustache.
    Moustache needs to be experienced to be understood, in my opinion. If it were a movie, it probably would be “Purple Noon”. Maybe “Summertime”. I guess my point (?) is that if Moustache were a movie, it would be a great Technicolor film. Not in usage any longer, but still beautiful in its richness of color.
    Smell great my friends.

  8. :

    5 out of 5

    I have a vintage bottle. Screw top splash, blue label. It’s lovely and has a talcy scent throughout and I can smell hyacinth or lupin or something. But is has zero sillage and I have to virtually inhale my arm to smell anything after half an hour. Unisex in my opinion. Just wish it was a bit more, you know?

  9. :

    5 out of 5

    It’s been about 20 years since I last wore this cologne, and I just got one bottle on clearance online, and after all those years I can say the core aroma remains the same or pretty close from what it was back in time. The lemon note is obviously outstanding, but it settles very nice with the rest of the notes after the opening which is sort of loud, but is nice for a brisk Spring morning.
    I’ve been a fan of the house of Rochas for about the same time 20 years, and this is one to keep.

  10. :

    5 out of 5

    It is known that Rocks Moustache is beyond a fragrance dated, or has itself one of the most beautiful stories than any other fragrance can be imbricated in their olfactory heart. Because composing a post-partisan historical period, it establishes as a rising benchmark of a people who joined forces for the physical and ideological reconstruction of their social collective masses, guerrilla post-confrontation. He protested as a reluctance to posterioriza the clash between Axis and Allies of the great world powers, at that time the last thing I would think, would be a colony to perfumarem.
    Despite the eminent virility that the fragrance sports, for being too loaded in notes refer to as perceived “macho” immediate, say that it was created from the common concession of a very loving couple, yes, he has a woman’s finger on means in the case, Edmond Roudnitska and Theresa Roudnitska, who met working in laboratories that create perfume in Paris, and from a gift that Theresa won Edmond, a fragrance (it’s you – Elizabeth Arden) that it exclusively created for Elizabeth Arden, it succumbed to its charms and sealed the fragrant romance with Yes !, the altar. From there many perfumísticas romantic and joint partnerships between the two came to Munda perfumery, one of them was the Fougere Moustache for Maison Rocks in 1948, after World War II.
    The very composition of the Moustache aromatic path to the House Rocks is recognized by Roudnitska couple particularly as a “Repertoire Roudnitska”, ie, a footprint that carries the identity of the likes of two for perfumery which strove to sign in time. Often consisted of a combination of fresh peaches, oak moss dewy, aldehydes C14 and C18 type and urinous aroma, which Edmond playfully termed the latter of “horse sweat”. [laughs]…
    Moustache opens with a combination of juice of herbs, being notorious there, Basil chord who disappoints his bitterness easily be recognized, together with a citrus, say a lemon juice unsweetened mixed to a lavender which refers to traditional barbershop where the paper smell, shaving cream, male perspiration, hair on the floor and water in the shower, make up the environment behind a rustic window. Soon he reaches his heart bringing up a dry Rose, a former Carnation, a very similar honey notes the Rumba Balenciaga and jasmine with its hyper feature Indole, giving it a noticeable dirt very characteristic of the decade perfume 40’s, containing / contains this note; It is a difficult phase of the fragrance, but if maneirar in sprayed, can you go through it quietly. Finally, its base brings key notes featuring a fragrance as the Family of Fougere: musk, amber, oak moss and cedar, with a resinous hint of Tonka, but nothing very noticeable, just to give a balanced legal to virility Moustache Rocks.
    It is a fragrance close the skin and which satisfies the wearer. The fact that 1948 and precede a post-war does not mean being a 8,000-megaton bomb, not the people were coming out of the war, remember that, they would be interested in that moment, for something to pass them security and self affirm as survivors of a newly experienced global ideological conflict. Boys extremely boys, forget Moustache Rocks, it definitely is NOT for you. I, despite the age I am, I regard it with affection because it always recognized to have been born in a different time which in fact was for me to have been born; things in my head it. Forward guys!

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    One of the greats from the old school. Moustache is a great dry, bitter, herbal citrus scent in the style of YSL Pour Homme. Imagine YSL Pour Homme with a lot more citrus, and you’ll have a good idea of what this smells like.
    The citrus is strong and bitter, like you poured a glass of grapefruit and lime juice on your head. The citrus notes smell juicy, making me almost want to drink a glass of Moustache.
    The bitterness is what separates Moustache from any other citrus scent we usually think of these days. Whereas most sporty or citrus-based scents today have wood and synthetic notes in the base, Moustache relies on dry herbs to give it body and staying power.
    Like a lot of French perfumes from the 50s and 60s, Moustache has a definite “skank” note; the combination of the bitter citrus and herbs gives it a sort of subtle urine smell (if you wear Yatagan, you’ll know what I mean). Some people will think Moustache smells dated, or an “old man” scent. I think it smells mature, sophisticated and debonaire. Love this fragrance.
    My rating: 10/10

  12. :

    3 out of 5

    A legitimate fougere green classic.
    As chypre citrus, as early as its opening is very green, looks like a mixture of lime, lemon verbena.
    Shortly thereafter appear pine nuances, fortifying even more green hue and at the same time, fougere by the presence of lavender, that appear to enhance the flavor, feel some slight sweet touch.
    Traditional base, moss with woody nuances making it a classic indispensable for anyone who loves this segment.
    Rating: 9/10

  13. :

    4 out of 5

    Old school scent. I like it.
    It reminds me of Cigalia by Roger & Gallet.

  14. :

    3 out of 5

    I have vintage edt.It reminds me of the later creation eau de rochas( female ) which I also wear.
    Lovely for a summer cooler day, classy and not too citrus even though citrus is present.
    I would describe it as a delicate Gentlemen’s fragrance without any harshness.
    Completely non offensive and not “in your face” but you still feel you are wearing a fragrance that is natural and will not offend anyone.
    Lasting power just a couple of hours but not sure whether this is due to the age of my bottle which is a proper atomized spray which translates to the fact that the spray is constant until you remove the pressure of your finger from the top of the sprayer.
    I also detect a fleeting scent of aldehydes present in vintage perfumes, please correct me if I am wrong.
    The high combination of quality ingredients shows in Moustache and I would like to try the concentree version although I am happy with my current bottle.

  15. :

    4 out of 5

    It is known that Rocks Moustache is beyond a fragrance dated, or has in himself one of the most beautiful stories than any other fragrance may have nested in your olfactory heart. Because composing a post-partisan historical period, it establishes as a rising benchmark of a people who unite forces for the physical and ideological reconstruction of their social collective masses, guerrilla post-confrontation. He protested as a reluctance that posterioriza the clash between Axis and Allies of the great world powers, at that time the last thing I would think, would be a colony to perfumarem.
    Despite the eminent virility that the fragrance sports, for being too loaded in notes that refer to perception as “male” immediate, say that it was created from the common concession of a very loving couple, that’s right, has a woman’s finger on means in the case, Edmond Roudnitska and Theresa Roudnitska, who met working in laboratories that create perfume in Paris, and from a gift that Theresa won Edmond, a fragrance (It’s You – Elizabeth Arden) that it exclusively created for Elizabeth Arden, this succumbed to their charms and sealed the fragrant romance with Yes !, the altar. From there many perfumísticas romantic and joint partnerships between both came to the Munda perfume, one of them was the Fougere Moustache for Maison Rocks in 1948, after World War II.
    The very composition of the Moustache aromatic path to the House Rocks is recognized by Roudnitska couple particularly as a “Directory Roudnitska”, ie, a footprint that carries the identity of the two tastes for perfumes which strove to sign in time. Often consisted of a combination of fresh peaches, oak moss dewy, aldehydes C14 and C18 type and urinous aroma, which Edmond playfully termed the latter of “horse sweat”. [Laughs] …
    Moustache opens with a combination of juice herbs, being notorious there, Basil chords those who disappoint her bitterness easily be recognized, together with a citrus, would say a Lemon juice unsweetened mixed to Lavender which refers to traditional barbershop where the newspaper smell, shaving cream, male perspiration, hair on the floor and water in the shower, make up the environment behind a rustic window. Soon he reaches his heart bringing up a dry Rose, a former Carnation, a very similar notes of honey from the Rumba Balenciaga and jasmine with its hyper feature Indol, giving it a noticeable dirt very characteristic of the decade perfume 40’s, containing / contains this note; is a difficult phase of the fragrance, but if maneirar in sprayed, can you get through it quietly. Finally, its base brings the main notes featuring a fragrance as the Family of Fougere: musk, amber, oak moss and cedar, with a resinous pinch Tonka, but nothing very noticeable, just to give a balanced legal to manhood Moustache Rocks.
    It’s a close fragrance skin and that satisfies the caster. The fact that 1948 and precedes a post-war does not mean being a 8000 megaton bomb, not the people were coming out of the war, remember this, they would be interested in that moment, for something to pass them security and self affirm as survivors of a newly experienced global ideological conflict. Boys extremely boys, forget Moustache Rocks, he is definitely NOT for you. I, despite the age I am, I regard it with affection because I have always recognized to have been born in a different time which in fact I was supposed to have been born; things in my head it. Forward guys!

  16. :

    3 out of 5

    An opening like YSL Homme Haute Concentrate. A heart like Ferre Man. A dry down like Lauder for Men, only smoother at first, then gets sharper and more aromatic.Though Moustache smells citrus, aldehyde, mossy green wonderful masculine classic that obviously is transforming, I still prefer the playful journey of the classic 3 perfumes stated.
    I never regret not owning a full bottle. My decant is good enough.
    Projection and longevity, above average.

  17. :

    5 out of 5

    Vintage EDT:
    Moustache, a creation of Edmond Roudnitska, one of my favorite perfumers, seems to have developed something of a following in the fragrance community, especially among folks interested in vintage fragrances.
    My excitement when I finally got to try it was appeased with a lovely lime/pine chypre – doesn’t smell too old or stuffy, just incredibly smooth and enjoyable, like most masculine chypres always are…
    …and it was a great time, for the 90 minutes that it lasted on my skin.

  18. :

    3 out of 5

    Opens with a ton of citrus and a little while later im getting a bitter green vegetal note in there. Its like someone ground up all the greenery on the forest floor and took that juice and threw it in here. Dries down slightly animalic. Not for me.

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    On my skin, this is a potent citrus aromatic that is initially uber-present but super-restrained overall.
    A sweet lemon blast off the top reminds me of chilled lemon pie. Very realistic.
    A light talc citrus sustains the animalic undertones very well from the heart into the base.
    It’s a skin scent on my skin, but others may have better end results.

  20. :

    5 out of 5

    Wowee – what an opening! Great stuff… but I need to wear it on my skin to really formulate my opinion. But I was impressed with it on a paper strip.
    “This could be the inspiration for Salvador Dali Pour Homme” – YES. I do smell that very odd scent there as well!
    ——-
    Second wearing, on skin. I love that powerful citrus opening… it is as intense a citrus as anything I’ve ever smelled. But then, after about a half hour, uh oh… on me it turns skanky. And not a good skank, either. Unwashed old man skank. A pity.

  21. :

    5 out of 5

    This fragrance takes me back to the days when I had a moustache, wore short sleeve patterned cotton outdoor shirts and corduroy pants – it’s borderline retro but still so hip it’s feels more cutting edge than most contemporary fragrances.
    It has that clean everyman feeling. Masculine and fresh yet a little dirty – like when you first start sweating while still fresh froma shower – and quite natural.
    It has one of the best ‘warm’ lemon openings of any fragrance I have tried. It also has that typical Roudnitska powderiness to add a bit of dry freshness. The best way I can describe it is if you smell a cut lemon that was freshly cut that has been sitting in the sun for a few hours. It is still incredibly fresh but has just started to go dry.
    When I smell it directly on my skin I get that prominent citrus/warm lemon and a black tea note saturated with forest edge buckwheat honey, something very comfortable and nicely stale from an oakmoss, basil, rose and jasmine accord …
    BUT, it has a clean, fresh honey, lime, basil and rose scent when I sniff the fragrance through the fabric of my shirt. I sprayed both arms and am sniffing one directly on my skin and the other arm through the fabric of my shirt and they are two similar yet different scents. I’m not sure how the fabric might filter certain molecules, but the scent through the fabric has noticeably fresher, more photo-realistic citrus and cleaner floral and honey tones.
    It smells familiar to the point of seeming natural. Like a scent I wouldn’t be surprised to find outdoors but distinctly human as well. For those of you familiar with the scent of bee hives and natural bees wax, this fragrance has a little of that beautifully pungent quality that I have not experienced in any other fragrance to date.
    I own the current formulation of this fragrance and have been enjoying it immensely this past week. I’m looking forward to how this wears in warmer temps.
    Quite possibly the best invigoratingly manly cologne ever created … EVER!
    It is a fragrance that paints a picture of of a warm sun filled day outdoors in the drying grass with moist soil underfoot. It is fresh and vibrant and alive.
    EDIT : (6-24-13) This wears beautifully in warm and even hot dry temps – that said, I think it is perfect for brightening up gray autumn days outdoors as well.
    EDIT II : (11-27-13) I really admire how unique this fragrance is. Cold weather – no problem – it takes on another character and remains fresh and sharp. Hands down one of my all time citrus heavy favorites and I just like it more and more as the years go by. Smells so natural.
    EDIT III : (02-08-14) Wow, what a great opening ‘warm’ lemon powderiness. Nothing like it. Beautiful.

  22. :

    5 out of 5

    I bought this last year, after many great reviews.
    Honestly, I do believe that this really is one of the best fragrances ever made, but I just couldn’t bear the uber-strong, musky-citrusy honeyed scent. ¯_◉‿◉_/¯
    I get compliments from my colleagues saying that I smell good and ‘different’. Yes, they like it, and probably because they have never smelled something that is ‘old school’ or ‘vintage’. ¯_(⌣̯̀⌣́)_/¯
    The scent gets stronger and stronger with a great silage after many hours, it gets more intense throughout the day, as if the fragrance is going to stay forever! ¯_(・ε・)_/¯
    Well, no doubt this is a really good classic fragrance, but it’s not for me, yet it will stay with my other fragrance collection and make me proud for having to own one! ¯_(ツ)_/¯

  23. :

    4 out of 5

    I have the bottle that is pictured. If there are a lot of aldehydes here that would explain the odd fruit mixed with candle wax accord (as they don’t remind me of Chanel No. 5 aldehydes at all, which are steely). That is strong at first but after several minutes things begin to balance out. I don’t find this too animalic, so those who fear “Kouros Junior” may be able to tolerate this one. The citrus persists a long time, coming across to me as lemony, but weakens gradually. If lavender is present, it”s mild and there is no strong fougere accord. The chypre base is obvious but mild. A kind of hair spray element, which may be the aldehydes combined with florals, seems to take over for the odd fruitiness in the top notes. Over time, it sweetens just a bit and gets a little powdery. These days, this is clearly an aficionado scent, for those seeking a chypre with a bit of a “twist.” I am basing this on a recent cloth sampling as well as a newbie wearing a long time ago.
    UPDATE: Several hours later and the powderiness stayed about the same but it got sweeter, though certainly not cloyingly so.

  24. :

    5 out of 5

    (vintage version, not the little-known re-release): Masquerading as a citrus chypre, Moustache is actually a woody fougere, historically sandwiched between Dunhill 1934 and Arden’s Sandalwood. But make no mistake, this fragrance smells intensely of natural citrus oils, chiefly bergamot and lime, with a beautiful lemon verbena and petit grain. Lavender asserts itself early on, but is smoothly integrated into the citrus, with its herbal/aromatic facets played up beautifully. As it dries down, Moustache exhibits a quiet herbal tendency, with basil and geranium appearing after thirty minutes, and just a hint of jasmine peeking through the greens. The base is primarily oakmoss, treemoss, with green resins lurking in the shade.
    Edmond Roudnitska’s fragrance philosophy of keeping things “clear, simple, and restrained” is self evident here, but what’s interesting is that Theresa Roudnitska co-created Moustache, and this fragrance bears some of her elusive genius. There are some aldehydes at work (C14, C18?) and hints of acidic non-citrus fruits in Moustache’s early stage, possibly due to the aldehydes, but I’m not sure. What I do know is that Moustache exhibits the finest lime note in the history of 20th century masculine perfumery, and capitalizes on lime’s fresh-clean/woody dissonance, bringing out its semi-sweet dryness in a way I have never before encountered. An iconic perfume, still available in vintage form, and arguably better than Eau Sauvage, in any of its incarnations. If you love citrus, you’ll adore this.

  25. :

    4 out of 5

    Very old fashion and maybe too risky to wear. It has nothing from Eau Sauvage and some of my friends said that smells like church.
    I was expecting some clear lemon with the old fashion vibe but i got something that reminds herbs and old men. Not suggested for anyone i suppose below 80s. 🙂
    UPDATE
    The perfume needs to calm down to show. The Roudniska signature is there and slightly gives something from eau sauvage.
    Is a very strange perfume which its top notes are a bit dangerous. In the middle when the honey with the floral notes start to emerge, the whole thing gets better and has something very masculine.
    Definitely for guys 40 and up and deadly if used for teens. The lemon note is still noticeable. A classic perfume that reminds old times…..David Niven comes to my mind as soon as I smell this cologne, which his pencil moustache 😉

  26. :

    5 out of 5

    Ancient, acrid lemon verbena/lavender opens this fragrance with a very strong elderly gentleman vibe. An herbal(“dirty” lavender) piss-leather warmly greets you as the top notes wear off. As the fragrance warms, the urinous honey adds an animalic touch that would be considered quite risque to todays youth. As the base emerges, you are treated to that familiar Roudnitska chypre warmth. By familiar, I mean absolutely excellent with the distinct Roudnitska genius.
    This could be the inspiration for Salvador Dali Pour Homme, and indeed would function well as a “light” version. It’s still scary, though. Strongly recommended.

  27. :

    5 out of 5

    Well, brazilian citizens on fragrantica: if you *love* After Shave Mentolado Bozzano you will die for it, if not, there’s a chance to you break the glass and make a campfire with this. Worst blind buy ever…

  28. :

    4 out of 5

    Moustache is nominally a masculine citrus, floral chypre. It falls into the same category as Chanel Pour Monsieur, Monsieur de Givenchy and even its own sibling Eau Sauvage. But something about the twists of its construction leaves a crisp dryness akin to Guerlain’s Vetiver. Moustache’s lime and peppery carnation give an astringency similar in tone to Vetiver’s licoricy-vetiver dryness.
    All of Moustache’s elements play off its central strong chypre base. The dryness has a scrubbed and starched quality that stands out brilliantly against growling animalic undertones. It’s as if Moustache’s affable eau de cologne-like gentleman’s chypre hides a bit of a snarl. Like an ongoing dare. What’s marvelous is that this tension lasts through the entirely of the scent’s evolution.
    There are through-lines to many of Edmond Roudnitska’s pieces (Eau d’Hermes, Eau Sauvage, Diorella) but I find that Moustache, an early work by Roudnistka and his wife Therese, shares a particular quality with one of his last pieces, Mario Valentino’s Ocean Rain. They both have and underpinning of that beautifully flat scent of a new rain hitting dry earth.

  29. :

    3 out of 5

    Eau Sauvage, Chanel Pour Monsieur, YSL Pour Homme, Rochas Moustache. A “this is how we do it” version of the classic chypre enriched with a pine note, animalic hints (civet) on a slightly sweet base. Great.
    Rating: 8/10

  30. :

    4 out of 5

    I have a vintage bottle of this(one with the blue sticker). When I first read about this, I read about it having an old powdery lemony scent to it and it pretty much hasn’t let me down in that regard. You can definately tell it was made by the same nose that made Dior Eau Savauge(Edmond Roudnitska) but is more of an ambery baby powder smell then a nice light citrus cologne like Savauge. Even if I’m only in my early 20’s, I can appreciate a classic cologne like Moustache. Though not something I’d wear often, I appreciate where it came from and can see an older ma wear this.

Moustache Eau de Toilette Concentree Rochas

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