Nuit de Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

3.96 из 5
(48 отзывов)

Nuit de Tubereuse L'Artisan Parfumeur

Nuit de Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

Rated 3.96 out of 5 based on 48 customer ratings
(48 customer reviews)

Nuit de Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur for women and men of L’Artisan Parfumeur

SKU:  2774bcb3f366 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , .
Share:

Description

Nuit de Tubereuse by L Artisan Parfumeur is a fragrance for women. Nuit de Tubereuse is a new fragrance and it was introduced in 2010. The nose behind this fragrance is Bertrand Duchaufour. The fragrance features cardamom, clove, pink pepper, black pepper, citrus, green mango, angelica, tuberose, orange blossom, ylang-ylang, rose, broom, musks, vanilla, sandalwood, palisander, benzoin, styrax. It comes in 50ml and 100ml edp bottles.

48 reviews for Nuit de Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

  1. :

    5 out of 5

    L’artisan has been a good experience for me. I do love this house. I have had this on the want list for some time and I finally got it. As Babesabe1 below me mentioned, this is not a beach creamy summer type tuberose. This is one with a twist of spice. The opening is absolutely stunning. It goes on with the most amazing smooth tuberose. The dry down and final aroma is a lovely unisex skin scent with a hint of powder. While it dries down unisex it’s not overly masculine if that makes sense. This is very easily a unisex fragrance. Silage and lasting power are very nice. Great purchase!

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    Tubereuse is my favorite flower and I love most fragrances with the name Nuit. This fragrance is a soft spicy tuberose. Not the buttery type mixed with coconut and reminds us of an island, but a clean cool smell. I smell tuberose and cloves mostly. Great longevity and the sillage is moderate.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    Holy moly this is just my thing! I really love this offering from l’artisan. It was suggested to me by UneartlyApoth below… Thanks so much for suggesting it you were so right this is really gorgeous and comparing it to a white floral version of l’elephant I total get it! So good!!! If you like l’elephant I do think you would love this as well. It really helps that I do love Tuberose. L’artIsan did it well.

  4. :

    5 out of 5

    Love at first sniff! I was recommended this scent so many times that I leapt at the chance to blind swap for it. There is something a little bitter and herbal in the top notes but it fades off quickly to a warm clove spice /tuberose. This one is like a more wearable
    less cloying and BO sweat white floral version of Kenzo Jungle L’elephant. Very good throw for a l’artisian perfume. While I love this house and find so many of their scents beautiful, they suffer from poor silage and longevity. Keeping my fingers crossed for continued greatness throughout the day from this one!

  5. :

    3 out of 5

    We all have our favorite relative who dominates family gatherings. Tuberose is that Aunt Maude, whose shrill laughter and bawdy one-liners make the life of the party. The moment you see tuberose on top billing in title or pyramid, you can bank on it setting the tone.
    Artisan’s Nuit de Tubereuse is the exception to the rule. Benzoin-Styrax, which didn’t even *make* it onto the Fragrantica pyramid, set the base note, chorus, and harmony. There’s probably some tuberose here, along with fruity & spicy elements. Even Angelica, or some form of mildly bitter-green, balances this composition. But first and foremost, it begins and ends with benzoin. Which works for me, as an avid benzoin-styrax fan.
    But I alone, cannot correct the User Pyramid. Sample before you buy; or ask yourself the simple question: “Do I love benzoin?” Out of a dozen+ Tuberose test samples this month, Nuit de Tubereuse ranked within the Top 3 for me. Definitely worth the try!

  6. :

    3 out of 5

    I think that when I purchased a travel size of this from a friend, I expected something … kinder. Not to say that it’s a bad fragrance but in my subjective opinion, this is a harsh and unforgiving mistress if your skin doesn’t mingle with it.
    Oh yeah, there’s tuberose. Believe you me, it’s there. But a creamy … dare I say it: bile like tuberose. The spices, the angelica… should all be so wonderful? Alas, it goes the same way Figment Woman went on me… sour ‘morning after drinks with the girls, head in the toilet’ sick.
    Truly sorry. I think this has been the only perfume that has made me actually nauseated. I’d LOVE to smell it on someone else.

  7. :

    3 out of 5

    On me it starts out very similar to 4711, a fresh petitgrain note…. But then the tuberose opens up and wow, it is so beautiful! One of the easier-to-love Artisan perfumes. And still interesting!

  8. :

    4 out of 5

    Here we are again…this guy is a genius! Nuit de Tubereuse opens with spices, changes its notes in every 20 minutes and settle down to a beautiness, Im wordless! Full bottle worthy!I never loved spicy fragrances, but this is a masterpiece!

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    The opening notes smell precisely of crushed wild ginger (Asarum caudatum) in a redwood forest.
    I love this smell, and have never smelled it in a perfume before.
    I will update this review later.
    Update: the sandalwood drydown is creamy and gorgeous. I’ve used at least 20mls of my 100ml purchase from October 2017-June 2018.

  10. :

    4 out of 5

    This was one of the stops for me and my travels trampling through the “white floral” field in perfumery which I thought was something that would never happen, but I fell in love with Fracas so hard I went a bit tuberose crazy. Literally, anything that had the word “tuberose” on I bought, much to the dismay of my bank manager…
    I got the older type bottle from a reputable place. the clear-ish topaz-ish bottle with the floral engraving. and I gotta say, where are the flowers?
    I sprayed it on me, sniffed, thought, this is strange!!! but then I thought maybe it’s me or my moisturiser or body temperature or the perfume I was wearing already or something so I sprayed it all around the room, and what I picked up was…. Chai?
    as in Chai tea.
    This is not a bad thing, not a bad thing at all, I like Chai, but it was nothing like I expected which was a…tuberose, a queen-of-the-night type of smell.
    I will wear this when I want to smell Chai, but will look elsewhere for a tuberose scent.

  11. :

    5 out of 5

    Unfortunately, it’s the only fragrance I actively don’t like from this gorgeous brand. I always enjoyed subtle tuberous in fragrances but tis one was a nauseous, very sticky smell which lasts forever . I wish it was for example, Cote D’amour has have of its silage.
    Beautiful brand and the nose, but in this case, not my cup of tea.

  12. :

    3 out of 5

    It’s a lovely tuberose, simple and warm. I didn’t like it at first, but I decided to give it another try and it worked. Unfortunately it reminds me of a moment of my life that it’s gone, so I have a full 100 ml bottle (only used twice, in the original card box) available to swap.

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    Found my new fragrance, I just love it. It is funny how people condemn this fragrance for the name. It is a beautiful tuberouse gem. Useless the comparison with fracas and carnal flower lol get it out of your mind, this is a soft tuberouse perl and obviously the more haters the more perfume left for me yay!

  14. :

    3 out of 5

    All I can smell is a bucket full of Iso E Super and some other fake woody notes. Scrubber for me!
    Edited to add update:
    Okay, I promised Marissaluvsscents I would give this a second chance. She told me to apply it heavily and then take a shower. She promised a lovely scent left behind. I followed her directions and I’ll admit it’s sort of pretty this way. What’s left behind is a pretty soft tuberose mixed with a scent I can only describe as an almond powdered cookie mix. The smell of a store bought cookie mix, powdery and almond. It’s good. I’ll use up my mini after all, but applying and then showering is the only way, lol!

  15. :

    5 out of 5

    In the opening, I smell the sweet soapy tuberose, accompanied by a spicy gin. Gin is a note not listed, but I clearly smell gin here… and: Yes, I never thought I would say the word “soapy” and mean it in a positive way, but here I am, in Miami, in the middle of summer and right now, soapy is good.
    The fragrance begins to dry down and the soapy powdery quality prevails. At this stage, it becomes very powdery and rough. It actually makes me cough sometimes. It also becomes sweeter and a bit of a bitter note emerges.
    I know mango very well, and somehow I can’t smell it here. To my nose, the sweetness of the tuberose and ylang ylang is what dominates as this fragrance dries down.
    The woods, and resins appear at the dry-down, and while the boozy note dissipates, what lingers is a narcotically sweet, soapy, flowery, musk scent.
    This is not the fragrance I see most Millennials gravitating toward, as it is not at all a fruity gourmand, let alone a sugar bomb. However, it is clean, not overpowering and has a lovely sweet summer scent.
    This to me, is a fragrance listed as a “LOVE”. If you like white florals for the spring/summer, you should check it out, since this fragrance represents the very welcome and uncommon perspective of a sheer / transparent tuberose. It’s as if B. Duchafour’s perspective were represented by the spicy/voluptuous tuberose and J.C. Ellena had come in to offer his transparent light perspective. Only, that this is: the sole product of Duchafour’s genious all by himself!
    However: as it is the usual problem of L’Artisan Parfumeur, the longevity leaves much to be desired:
    It has moderate sillage (arm’s length). This sillage, retreats into a skin scent within 2.5 to 3 hours, and the skin scent is gone in one hour. Making the total duration: 3.5 to 4 hours (in the heat and humidity of Miami).
    Still, I have decided that it is such an interestingly beautiful fragrance, it is worth the annoyance of reapplication every four hours, and I’m finding I get better longevity when I apply it on my scalp instead of my neck.

  16. :

    5 out of 5

    Bertrand Duchaufour does mango, spice and woods again. Other incarnations have been seen in this house again in Timbuktu, Neela Vermeire Bombay Bling!, and the latest, Phuong Dang The Calling.
    Here, the spices are fiery to open and more pronounced than his 2004 iteration in Timbuktu. But in Nuit de Tubereuse, the white florals are more prominent. Still, not featured enough for something with the flower’s namesake.
    This culminates into a woody spiced soap with floral undertones. Quite pleasant yet wild, tuberose dances in and out of the spiced flames here, untamed. Too hot and dry to be designated as a floral perfume. It reads as a torrid, more natural sketch of Kenzo’s Jungle L’Elephant.

  17. :

    3 out of 5

    At first spray its like you just shoved your head into the spice cabinet
    But let it settle and you will be pleasantly surprised.
    A mixture of green herb, pepper, mandarin and soapy florals.
    And the more it warms on the skin the more anamalic it becomes. And as the musky softer side appears, the spices quiet down.
    This smells very “organic” to me but so expensive and unique at the same time.
    For a woman who is very sure of herself, knows exactly what she’s doing in life and doesn’t care much for pleasing everyone.

  18. :

    4 out of 5

    I do like this, but in a memory of another time kind of way.
    At first I get a soft tuberose that had me thinking, it’s nice but I have other tuberose fragrances that are stronger than this.
    Then come the spices and the woods.
    I tested this while I was in the Blue Mountains today, and there was this familiarity – not just a general familiarity, but one specifically linked to the mountains.
    Last time I was there, I’d bought a perfume called Sepal. A softer Sepal? I wondered.
    Then it dawned on me. I used to hang out with a guy in the mountains who was building a house and used to mill his own timber. In winter, he’d have a pot of milky chai tea simmering on the stove, in his handmade kitchen (made from the milled wood).
    That’s what this smells like to me – the woods and spices dominate. Towards the end there is also a very slight hint of soap.
    I’m in two minds about buying this.

  19. :

    5 out of 5

    Охх,влюбена съм в този аромат! Браво,че туберозта не е толкова нахална и брутална,както в някои други парфюми(примерно Michael Kors-отврат),толкова добре балансиран и изящен.Пасна ми прекрасно!!!

  20. :

    4 out of 5

    Not your typical floral, and most definitely not your typical tuberose. If you are blindly going in and expecting Fracas, you will take a step back, look around and be like: “Hold on a second, this isn’t where I parked my car!”
    Or you are opening a pink and gold ornate door, expecting to find Marie Antoinette’s powder room behind it, but instead you are entering a pantry filled with spices and fruit on untreated wooden shelves.
    Opening is very much like putting pink pepper, mango, cloves and floral stems in a mortar and pestle. There is something distinctly bitter and green behind all the warmth of the spices, that must be the angelica.
    All of this is very nice, if slightly odd. I seem to like everything Duchaufour creates, and this is no exception.
    But where is the tuberose you may wonder?
    Well, I guess it’s Tuberose’s night out, and maybe she won’t show up until the wee hours of morning.

  21. :

    3 out of 5

    Tuberose?Really? ok,let’s say not an ordinary velvety sensual tuberose! Basically all I get from the first blast is spicy notes; something like cardamon or pepper mixed with earthy notes in a weird way! It has definitely got lots of warm spicy notes which almost reminds me of culinary in an oriental kitchen. Musk is bold too and gives it animal cruelty.
    I think it’s got something strong, bold and even aggressive that says a lot about the ones who dare to wear it. Nonetheless I never call it a unisex perfumes. It has some characteristics which make it suitable only for a strong woman. I like the name and I think it makes sense. Plus if it wasn’t for the sake of name, I might not recognize tuberose at least as the main note!

  22. :

    5 out of 5

    What a fantastic scent! If not for the notes, I would never guess that it was supposed to be a floral.
    It’s a gorgeous woody aromatic, I can smell very realistic, almost wet, vibrant pine (or fir? I’m not exactly sure) on a woody base. Propably palisander. It’s very dense and thick. Cumin is there in the background too, but not as much as in Rochas Femme, just enough to make it interesting, but not too dirty. It makes it salty in the drydown.
    It’s great for a sweater weather and perfectly unisex, leaning more on a masculine side.
    Very ‘artistic’.
    *Tiny bit similar to Burberry Brit for men, or maybe even Light My Fire by Kilian.

  23. :

    3 out of 5

    I am so surprised it doesn’t contain coriander seeds! When I first smelled it on my wrist, my first thought was: this is the perfume dedicated to coriander!
    After 2 hours I still mostly smell coriander and then cumin, peppers, little bit white flowers and something green underneath (maybe cilantro?).
    If I look at the perfume pyramid here then yes, I can find the musk, precious woods and definitely a bit rose lingering somewhere on the back. But I absolutely can’t feel any mango, cloves or mandarin orange!

  24. :

    3 out of 5

    It’s strong cardamom, but might be the only cardamom I’ve ever smelled that I didn’t love. Maybe it’s the combination of notes.
    I get tuberose, a little, if I really try, and if it’s really hot outside. I have to try that ‘hot air’ trick ~ breathe out hot air onto my wrist and then inhale right away ~ but it’s there, a little. But it’s hardly there, and the flower that *is* there isn’t creamy or buttery. It’s hardly even floral.
    I don’t know if it’s the styrax and broom or what, but this perfume actually BURNS MY NOSE, mostly in the drydown.
    Longevity is amazing. Sillage was huge for a bit, but then I went to bed (after I tried scrubbing this off, to no avail!)…
    VERDICT: Unsettling chemical mess of a scent that wants to be sheer but burns, wants to be warm but reads metallic.

  25. :

    5 out of 5

    I can’t smell tuberose, and hardly any of the other notes. I do smell something really odd. It’s like a fake fruits over a strong powdery-musky base. Like someone spilled a tropical flavoured soft drink over grandma’s retro face powders.

  26. :

    3 out of 5

    Ok, so this has to one of the most beautiful tuberose fragrance I have come across. The diva tuberose tamed by wood notes, musk, fruit and clove. Im not sure what happened to the pepper on me but its barely detectable. This tuberose has almost transformed herself into the oriental lily.
    A special tuberose fragrance who is delectable and approachable but she is still a creature of the night. Softened and sweetened into an addictive beauty. BD has shown true genius in his choice of notes and materials. I would say moderate sillage and longevity.

  27. :

    3 out of 5

    I like to imagine what famous historical characters would wear in the XXIth century! And Nuit de Tuberouse makes me think of Marie Antoinette. Perhaps the Marie Antoinette portrayed by Kirsten Dunst?! The queen adored this flower.
    This is not a Tuberose cliché… This is tart, then peppery and of course flowery.
    The tuberose note is so real that once my hairdresser said to me: last week I had flowers in my counter that smelled like you! When I asked how the flowers looked, she described the beautiful lushness of tuberoses…
    Silage and longevity are great!
    The SA of L’artisan also told me Catherine Denueve wears this fragrance… This bitty information could be inspiring for some.
    (I own the pink labeled bottle)

  28. :

    5 out of 5

    en femini doft, def inget för en man. Pudrig/träig tydliga inslag av mysk och mandain, vita och gula torra el. torkade blommor. Diskret, söt, oskyldig.

  29. :

    5 out of 5

    I read the other reviews and saw all the negative comments and was surprised. I wonder if they are reviewing a product made under license? The product I am reviewing was made and bought and first worn in France.
    It is delightful – a charming balance of flowers and spices which manages to be both warm and sparkling, very like sitting in a town garden, on a balmy night, amongst fairy lights, drinking wine with friends.
    I say town garden not country garden because the flowers seem ‘florist’ rather than ‘native’. Not sure if these ‘shop-bought flowers’ are ‘tuberose’. I just get a vaguely flowery bouquet (summer blooms like roses, orange blossom, freesias).
    The ‘spices’ combine fuzzy cinnamon and cumin notes with spiky pepper and bitter licorice. To be honest, I enjoy the spices more than the flowers but the flowers are helpful because they bring out the complexities in the spices.

  30. :

    5 out of 5

    Initially I hated it!! It smelt too much like incense at Buddhist temples, which I hate….
    On top of that, it was making me nauseous. Out of two tries on my wrist, I actually puked one time.
    So, I said… ‘that’s it. will put on a flea market for sale’ and put it back in the box after taking pictures, etc.
    Oddly, last night, i suddenly smelt this perfume in my room, which was not at all unpleasant.
    Very bizarre since the perfume has been in the box for the past week or so.
    I don’t know what drew me to taking the perfume out of the box and spray over my bed (definitely not on my skin!).
    Boy!!!!!! A breeze of fresh, refreshing, woody scent with a hint of orange? rose? just swept across my senses.
    Wow!?!?! What happened? What happened to the incense?
    My guess is that the trick was “resting” the perfume after the delivery. I bought it online and it was an overseas purchase. I guess the flight and the pressure changes, box being tossed around during the delivery got this little fella rather ugly.
    Now, calmed down peacefully for a week, Nuit de Tubereuse gives wonderful, very pleasant woody aroma and surprisingly refreshing tone.
    4 hours down, I can still detect it since I sprayed on my clothes instead of my skin. Amber and cedar scents are strongly present.
    Very unusual and surprising scent.

  31. :

    3 out of 5

    I bought this fragrance today in a beautiful gift set, which included the body lotion. I hadn’t intended to do this. I was walking past a niche perfume counter in a city department store. One that I, unfortunately, walk past quite a bit. I said ‘hello’ to the young male sales assistant, who’s always pleased to chat about fragrances and give me sprays. While this counter doesn’t have a lot of L’AP fragrances, it had this one in a lovely gift pack (perfume and body lotion). Fate was obviously setting a trap for me. I like L’AP fragrances but they never last very long on me. Some smell terrible on me (Dzongkha especially). The first spray of this was totally unexpected because it didn’t smell of tuberose. Not the tuberose I’m used to in Fracas and Petite Fracas anyway. It smelt really lightly spicy and incense-like, mysterious and evocative. The way Dzongkha smells on friends of mine but not on me.
    I really liked it but went away to see how long it would last on me. While having a coffee and waiting to see the longevity of this fragrance, I checked Fragrantica to see the notes and who the perfumer was. Bertrand Duchaufour! Well, ultimately, I couldn’t resist buying it. It does last longer than most L’AP fragrances on me and I’m intrigued by its fragrance. So, my contribution to these comments is, if Dzongkha smells awful on you (like dill pickle juice) but somehow, and very unfairly, smells fantastic on other people and you’d like to smell the same, try this one. No idea why this should be so because they don’t have many notes in common.

  32. :

    3 out of 5

    Strong creamy, waxy ylang and tuberose, totally a warm weather scent, sunny and peppery. It isn’t subtle, it shouts “white floral” but thanks to the good quality of the ingredients, there are no headaches. Also none of those crystalline aldehydes which seem to be in nearly everything. This lasts medium-well and is very feminine. I do like it – it’s cheerful and dries down beautifully into a light musk with that ylang still wafting occasionally. It’s not a cheap scent, but it’s definitely reminiscent of tropical climates and flowers worn behind the ear, pretty sarongs, will go wonderfully with your sunscreen. Somehow my nose registered a coconut note in this, but it might be the power of suggestion – this is the most “tropical island” tuberose I’ve tried 🙂

  33. :

    3 out of 5

    I am sad to say this, I really tried to like it, after all the name is so promising Nuit de Tubereuse.
    On me it smells more like I have just paintet the house and afterwards drenched my self with turpentine. So for me, amore fitting name would be Nuit de Turpentine
    A note that will not go away ruins this scent completly, cold chemical and sharp, reminds me of gasoline or paint remover. Now and then, I get a whiff of something nice, only to be be ruined by the chemical, it does not dissapear in the drydown like I hoped.
    Good bye, I have had enough of you, one of few tuberose scent that will not join my collection.

  34. :

    5 out of 5

    The opening was way too green for me. I almost scrubbed it off in a panic. But I’m glad I hung in there because a clean tuberose awaited me, followed by a strong clove note with a hint of sweetness in the background. The combination feels unique.
    I like this much better than the version of tuberose in La Chasse aux Papillons.
    The drydown is sweet, but I don’t get the bubblegum/candy vibe that others mention. Maybe after a few more tries.

  35. :

    4 out of 5

    Reminds me a bubble gum… pink candy….the good thing about this perfume is the smells is staying looooong time….I really like..it…I imagine myself wearing light pink dress and sitting in balcony of European palace…eating pink cake and looking at my gardens….I feel only one note…but it blended really tastefull very sweet and reminds me of my childhood fav fruit gum…
    it feels a very femine and sexy as well..very well balanced perfume

  36. :

    4 out of 5

    i have tested this several times and every time my mind is saying…”this reminds me of something from primary school”. i just couldn’t put my finger on it…what is that smell?
    a lovely scent, fruity, a touch of pepper/cloves/spice….and the tuberose is blended with the narcissus, musk, woods and resins, with a touch of the lovely carnation that the result is a very beautiful perfume that has tuberose in it. i think i would wear it in cooler weather….the summer heat made it rather heavy on me.
    this projects well for at least 4-5 hours and lasts for about 7+ hours on me.
    then i read all the reviews (like you do)…and there it was!
    someone mentioned that this reminds them of “Juicy Fruit” chewing gum.
    it does! that was it! Juicy Fruit.
    it isn’t a tuberose soliflore imo, but this is a beautiful perfume and for an Artisan, it lasts like a normal EDP.
    review for the pink stripe bottle.

  37. :

    3 out of 5

    I have two bottles of Nuit de Tubereuse, first I bought the seethrough bottle with ornaments, and this one smells very peppery, spicy and a little watery. A week ago I decided to repurchase it, but I received a different bottle – simpler, similar to other Artisan bottles, with a deep pink stripe in the middle. It’s a different fragrance! Much softer, cashmere-like and flowery, I smell half of the pepper I got in the first version! I sprayed both versions on my wrists, and it confrimed there is a difference. Personally, I prefer the second bottle, it’s warmer, deeper and you really feel the tuberose, but anyways you should keep in mind which one you purchase!

  38. :

    5 out of 5

    I bought this semi-blind, after reviews/comments from members I trust. I couldn’t be more delighted, what a seductive, soft spicy Tuberose! The pepper wasn’t intrusive to me,the Vanilla & Sandalwood well blended.On the whole a very sophisticated, elegant offering.

  39. :

    5 out of 5

    If you love pepper, this is the fragrance for you. I don’t and I found no tuberose, ylang, delicate blossom or citrus here. For me NDT is a horrid, screechy fingernails on a blackboard experience where the most I can detect is strong black and pink pepper on a wood base. Even the clove is crushed under the weight of the pepper and cardamom. I guess I am very sensitive to pepper; I rarely find any fragrance where I feel pepper supports or enhances the fragrance.
    I do love tuberose and envy those who found it expressed well in this fragrance. For me Nuit de Tubereuse remained obnoxiously peppery for hours, and I couldn’t leave it on my skin long enough to see if the pepper released its death grip on the other notes.
    Beware if you are sensitive to pepper, test this first before buying.

  40. :

    5 out of 5

    Nuit de Tubereuse has nothing similar to any other tuberose perfume on the market. It’s very unique and original . In two words , it’s a spicy tuberose. On first spray I get a blast of pepper, carnation and cloves. In the beginning I thought that the name was misleading , the first half and hour it’s all about carnation! It has many facets and that’s makes it unique and so beautiful . The dry down is definitely carnation mixed with tuberose and an animalic, musky note which adds a refined dirtiness, daring and very sophisticated .

  41. :

    3 out of 5

    L’artisant parfumeur presents us a very interesting composition! Tuberose is a tropical flower it possesses coconut sweetness illusion. It’s a heady strong fragrance in the opening with appearing cloves and Asian vibe coming I think from yang yang yellow flower. I imagine myself in an Asian massage saloon being surrounded by an ambiance scent facilitating relaxation and welfare.
    Yang yang mingles with powdery and spicy tuberose wich opens up with a faint green note before warming into sweet jasmine-like scent underscored by a rubbery accord. Tuberose vacillates between coconut sweetness and warm skin impression, as it dries down.
    Tuberose is a capricious flower behaving sometimes strangely on a skin. So it seems that it’s all about the skin chemistry so either love or hate scent.
    It resembles to nothing else in my collection and hopefully for me it’s a “love” grown up intoxicating scent.
    A definitive keeper.

  42. :

    4 out of 5

    on my skin more like a herbal scent…and a lot of manderine.

  43. :

    4 out of 5

    This is intensely beautiful from first spray to dry down. It has a definite tuberose scent. Gorgeous and seductive. For the dramatic. Ok, it’s definitely feminine and I’m a man who likes masculine and unisex fragrances for my own skin. But, I keep this around for those moments when I crave the enchantment of a flower. Often I just take a whiff of the inside of the cap and I am transported to a joyful place. I like to see the bottle there on the shelf tempting me. I might try layering it with something more masculine.

  44. :

    5 out of 5

    I didn’t know what tuberose smelled like. This perfume smells definitely like a gardenia slightly smoked with tobacco. It’s interesting, fresh yet warm, like a warm white floral I’d say. The more time it sits on my skin the more “warm” and sweet it becomes. It just does remind me of some pretty old-fashioned gardenia-like fragrances, so I definitely get an “old lady” vibe at the beginning. That being said, it mixes beautifully with my skin, which normally hates white florals, and the more time that passes, the more intimate and sexy it becomes. Soft to moderate sillage, not headache inducing at all. A very interesting scent indeed! I’m going to go with “love” on this one.

  45. :

    5 out of 5

    Nuit de Tubereuse is so beautifully feminine. I first wore this perfume on a cool day in autumn and the intoxicating tuberose scent was most enjoyable outside as it wafted about on the breeze. The fragrance would also be lovely for a spring or summer’s evening.
    On my skin, the opening is a luscious tuberose that’s a little bit green and tinged with the soft sweetness of the mango, which is quite refreshing. The scent then develops into a more fuller-bodied floral as the spices kick in, and the dry-down is soft, creamy and lightly powdered. And although there are some unusual notes in this tuberose fragrance, they really work harmoniously together.
    Unfortunately, I am learning that tuberose has a tendency to give me a little bit of a headache. However, it is a flower that projects beautifully and really leaps off my skin. I might start experimenting with softer tuberose scents or smaller dosages and see how I go, because I would be devastated to have to kiss them goodbye. Very pretty sillage, soft to moderate in strength; longevity is for about 5-6 hours.

  46. :

    3 out of 5

    I like this much better than La Chasse aux Papillons which, to my nose might as well be a tuberose soliflore. The mango and mandarin really pop out for me (and I’m crazy about mango scents as well as mandarin) and even though mango and tuberose is a weird combo, I’d expect no less from L’Artisan! The cloves and ylang-ylang are pretty noticable too but the notes do a good job of blending together and creating an image of a wild, eclectic night in my imagination. A night of partying and hedonistic fun, yellow taxi cabs, city lights, mango infused drinks, cute boys who don’t speak English. An unexpected scent for an unexpected adventure.
    It’s unlike any other floral I’ve smelled and it’s definitely not for the girl who wants to just blend in with the crowd but it’s not for the attention-whore either. It’s for the girl who’s wearing perfume only to please herself.
    Try before you buy though, definitely not for everyone. To me the ‘indolicness’ is pretty mild for a tuberose but I know some people can be super-sensitive to that.

  47. :

    3 out of 5

    This actually smells quite masculine. The opening is dominated by a brusque clove and pepper, followed by a vague hint of dry, sweet florals.
    As it wears down, it gets more woody and dusty, without ever revealing the creamy, waxy nuances expected of tuberose. It sort of reminds me of men’s cologne.
    Sillage and longevity are not great either.

  48. :

    3 out of 5

    As a tuberose lover, I am slowly making my way through every tuberose perfume I can lay my hands on. Nuit de Tubereuse is intriguing. It opens with a peppery blast–quite typical of scents introduced in 2010. The spicy start is soon joined by the green, slightly sour Angelica , another note I love. Mango and finally a peep of tuberose is next overlaid with a veil of musk. Interesting that sweet orange blossom and ylang ylang arrive a little late to the party, yet they are there, sweet, but not cloying, and tempered by lingering spices.
    The overall impression is not of a tuberose perfume at all, because of all of the other facets. On me it is quite lovely and even feminine, and At no point do I feel overwhelmed by its complexity. I find it spicy to start, green and then floral in the middle, and woodsy and warm in the end. I can see myself reaching for this sweet little scent time and again–a sweet little floriental.
    I especially love reading others’ impressions of scent. Last night I wore My Sin (vintage) for the first time and it was so soapy

Nuit de Tubereuse L'Artisan Parfumeur

Add a review

About L'Artisan Parfumeur