Oh! de London Tuvaché

4.44 из 5
(9 отзывов)

Oh! de London Tuvaché

Rated 4.44 out of 5 based on 9 customer ratings
(9 customer reviews)

Oh! de London Tuvaché for women of Tuvaché

SKU:  7cd169d62cc1 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .
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Description

Oh! de London is a bright, sparkling and lively floriental, drying down to a mellow and creamy base with floralcy woven throughout. Originally introduced under the Yardley brand in 1962, the fragrance continues to offer wonderful, feminine scent character with a terrific signature, complex in accord, under the Tuvaché brand.

Oh! de London by Tuvaché is an Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Oh! de London was launched in 1962. Top notes are bergamot, sage and chamomile; middle notes are geranium, clove, rose petals, violet, lily-of-the-valley, ylang-ylang and heliotrope; base notes are sandalwood, cedar, vanilla, oakmoss and vetiver.

The fragrance is available as 100 ml Eau de Toilette.

9 reviews for Oh! de London Tuvaché

  1. :

    5 out of 5

    If you remember the vintage Woods of Windsor Forget Me Not, this is it. I have it. I’ve compared. This is that lovely, sharp, powdery floral.

  2. :

    5 out of 5

    Let Me Take You Back In Time Via My Memories
    1962
    London
    United Kingdom
    The Swinging Sixties with micro mini skirts and flower power theme, Twiggy & Mary Quant fashion is captured in the vertically striped cylindrical spray bottle of the eau de cologne. It was a YARDLEY fragrance, not a Tuvache which was released in 1965 and replaced the Yardley. This perfume has long suffered in obscurity and one can only talk about it from memory as I am doing in this review. This was a beautiful floral scent and one that held a lot of meaning for me. I was wearing this perfume when I first met opera singer Dame Joan Sutherland & I received some advice on operatic technique as a student. She complimented me on my fragrance but I didn’t reveal it’s identity. This was a drugstore fragrance as was the more well known Yardley fragrance LAVENDER and ENGLISH ROSE. One might call this the CHARLIE by Revlon of the UK in the 60’s. It was fresh, floral, spicy, aromatic & woodsy and very much a unisex scent. As it did not really market to women men & women both wore it. It was aimed at a younger demographic of hip London youth in colorful clothes. Think Austin Powers (ha) the Beatles & the British Invasion. Men in puffy pirate shirts and tight pants of various colors, women in floral print mini dresses & Go-Go boots.
    Between 1962 and 1965, I was studying how to be an opera singer & singing in chorus while at the same time performing in small recitals among my friends. This perfume always elevated my spirits & made me feel as beautiful as my idea of a diva. The aroma always left an impression. It is one of the greatest tragedies of the fragrance industry to have had it discontinued or reformulated. So I can only review the fragrance in it’s orignal form (not the Tuvache version which is a chemical nightmare of synthetic florals with less notes than the ones even listed on Fragrantica).
    The original Oh! de London opened with a fresh citrus. It was bergamot orange pure and simple, and a lemon. There was a definite green note & greenness to how it opens. Smells like an orange flavored rosebush. If you’ve ever spent time in a rose garden you’ll know what I mean. This is like putting your nose to citrusy leaves of both rose & orange blossom. Though orange blossom is not supposed to be one of the notes, it’s paired up with a green rose similar to the rose in Tea Rose by Perfumer’s Workshop. It’s possible the noses behind that scent were inspired by the opening to Oh! de London. That initial spritz was a realistic rose & rosebush scent. It’s followed by sage & chamomile which evoke a chamomile tea. It’s so on the nose how Brit this thing really is. It’s suggestive of Brit culture, English roses, gardens and tea time. The chamomile & sage are soothing and therapeutic like actual tea with leaves.
    There’s a medicinal quality to it as well. The tea note and the chamomile are unisex and it never did get too powdery or feminine. It stayed in the green zone. Other notes included earthy accords of clove, oak moss & vetiver. But it is floral with graphic greenhouse garden flowers of geranium, violet, lily, heliotrope & ylang. The heliotrope is quite strong and it has a vanilla flower smell. The violet was always a treat for me but the heliotrope blossoms & gives this scent a vanilla flavor which embraces the drier parts of the final performance. Finally the whole thing turns to cedar woods and a little musk, lots of sandalwood and moss. For me this was a chypre floral.
    This fragrance was rather innovative & unique at the time. Most floral fragrances were soapy but this never smelled like hand soap or bath soap. It was like they deliberately created a floral tea scent, or garden smell in a bottle. It’s utterly botanical. Women at the time enjoyed the flowers, and men were pleased with the musk & woods. It is not a very bright or sweet fragrance but it’s not too dark and neither is it animalic. That musk is faint & the woods & greens are the real stars. It has a clean but not too soapy no-nonsense straightforward air. It does really belong on Brits more than Americans. This is an absolutely beautiful & unforgettable scent but the tragedy is: who remembers this? I am writing a review on a page that is itemizing the new formula by Tuvache & other reviewers appear to be talking about a different fragrance entirely.
    I do remember my Yardley Oh! de London like it was yesterday and it is has not been honored with a convincing review of what it smells like. Reviewer Gigi the Fashionista who is a friend of mine in the United States (New York) has experienced this fragrance because she has smelled it on me and I have offered her one of the 5 bottles I have as a gift about a year ago for Christmas. Her description of the scent as a “floral chypre” is quite right but she also appears to wear the Yardley version which she likes but which I can never like. Even if it does try to smell like the orignal there are too many notes that take away from it’s green & herbal aroma namely more vanilla than there should be in it. The new one smells like vanilla scented tea & powdery florals, whereas the chypre aura of the old formula is vastly superior & based on hardcore old school floral fragrance formula.
    My advice is either look for the remnants of the original anywhere you can including rummage sales or ebay or wear the new one if only to get an impression of what it smells like and I use the word impression because it’s not the exact same scent. One last thing, this fragrance is best worn in the autumn as it is warm and aromatic not too fresh and sweet. It’s woodsy & autumnal and suggestive of the Fall season.
    Smells great.

  3. :

    5 out of 5

    OH! DE LONDON
    TUVACHE
    GROUP FLORAL
    NOTES BERGAMOT SAGE CHAMOMILE GERANIUM CLOVES ROSE VIOLET YLANG YLANG LILY OF THE VALLEY HELIOTROPE SANDALWOOD CEDAR WOOD VANILLA VETIVER OAK MOSS
    SILLAGE: MODERATE RADIATES WITHIN ARM’S LENGTH
    LONGEVITY MODERATE 3 TO 6 HOURS
    REMINDS ME OF: FOUGERE ROYALE QUELQUES FLEURS HOUBIGANT CLIMAT LANCOME
    Oh de London is a simple, quite easy to wear soapy floral fragrance. My sister wore it but she always scented her flower power floral print blouses and tops with it. It smelled like clean and sweet soap or laundry detergent. It’s been reformulated and I can attest that the scent is still the same. The scent starts off smelling like chamomile and bergamot tea. There is a green and orange color to it quite like those “groovy” oranges and avocado green colors that you remember seeing everywhere in the 60’s and 70’s.
    This smells like the cleanest most well-mannered hippie ever. I can smell this on one of the Beatles, Paul. It’s unisex despite all the flowers. Ylang, Lily of the valley, geranium, rose, violet and heliotrope. This is a floral fragrance but it is also as much about the cloves and the sandalwood and woodsy notes. There is also quite a bit of oak moss. It smells like being outdoors and you get that combination of smells: flowers woods and moss. It’s peaceful, comforting and lovely.
    This frag and Zen by Shiseido were my sister’s perfumes and I always remember her when I wear them and honor her. If you like florals, and if you like tea scents this is like a floral tea. The chamomile and vanillic heliotrope, the woods, the moss, it’s such a good assortment of scents. It’s a cheap cheap cheap perfume but not bad. It wears like one of the Danas – almost but not quite like Ambush. I would also include a note of lavender and a little bit of musk. It can pass for a fougere and in fact somewhat resembles Houbigant’s Royal Fougere. Unisex, pretty, clean, soapy, floral and relaxing. It’s something to wear after a shower and right before bed. It’s also something to wear to the office as it’s light and inoffensive. Sweet memories of a sweet perfume.
    Oh! I love Oh! de London!

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    My mother wore this in the 60’s and the 80’s. This was a realistic green floral garden scent. I have the one selling for a cheap 20 something bucks on Fragrance X which my mom says is a reformulation but “it’s still good”. This is a chamomile scent most of all. If you’re familiar with chamomile you’ll find it relaxing soothing and strong. It has rose, heliotrope and lily of the valley, flowers I really love. The scent is very flowery so you have to enjoy flowers. But there is something about it that is like a spicy green tea. There’s also oak moss and woods. The woods gave it a masculine edge and it sorta reminds me of British actors like Laurence Olivier and Roger Moore. I bet they wore this fragrance. It’s floral, a green garden and very dreamy, old fashioned and divine.

  5. :

    4 out of 5

    When I was 10 years old mother went to Richmond one early December and bought back all sorts of wonderful presents for me and my brother and sister. I received my first bottle of fragrance- Yardley’s Oh de London in a gorgeous gift set box. I was enraptured. My mother was a perfume snob. She wouldn’t let buy or wear “cheap” perfume from the Dime store. I adored my beautiful mother and I believe her when she said that Oh de London was something good. I loved that perfume and I kept a tiny bit in the bottle to smell when it was almost gone. The powder lasted much longer still. When I got my bottle by Tuvache the memories came flooding back. I think it is a very faithful reformulation.
    For comparison I bought a vintage bottle of Sea Jade and a small vintage Oh de London and I must say I don’t think the Sea Jade is the same scent at all. I respect people who say it is the same, but they smell so very different to me especially in the top notes. I even bought the new Yardley Jade. It is not the same as my vintage Sea Jade but it is similar and still not Oh de London. I can see that all the perfumes are similar types but the Sea Jade just isn’t the same fragrance to my nose. I am not a sophisticated perfumista (not a complete novice either) but I know my Oh de London like the back of my hand.
    I also bought new bottle of Guy Larouche Jai Ose perfume and a vintage sample EDP because I read it was the same fragrance as Oh de London. Both vintage and original Jai Ose smell the same to me and nothing remotely like Oh de London or Sea Jade. I would say they aren’t even the same type of perfume. The Jai Ose is very rich and deep whereas the Oh de London is light and fresh. I am wearing the new Jai Ose perfume on my right wrist and the vintage sample of the EDP on my left. The EDP faded quickly and the new perfume is coming through stronger and richer. I even bought the Jai Ose Baby perfume in the tiny baby bottle flacon. Personally I liked that version the most but still it didn’t remind me of Oh de London in the least.
    This whole odyssey cost me a lot of money, but I don’t have any regrets. I really wanted Jai Ose to be the same scent especially because I could buy it in perfume form and I love perfume. I wanted the Sea Jade to be the same too, especially with the launch of Yardley’s Jade. I would love to get my fix directly from the matrix- Yardley. I wanted more ways to find that scent from my youth. In the end only the vintage bottle and the remake was my Oh de London. I wish the bottle from Tuvache wasn’t so plain. Eventually I want to buy a large empty bottle of Oh de London and decant my remake into it.

  6. :

    5 out of 5

    FLOWER POWER FROM LONDON IN THE SIXTIES
    Thank you my perfumista friend Lucia in London. This was my favorite Christmas gift. Released in 1962 (same year as Bal a Versailles by Jean Desprez) Oh! de London by Tuvache is a floral fragrance for hippies, for peace lovers, bohemians, anti capitalists and Communists. Of course I was expecting something edgier and more avant- garde because that’s what the 60’s was all about. It was a time of great experimentation in ideas, fashion, psychology, art, politics, feminism, philosophy, radical thinking, sexual liberation, equality and total upheaval. This doesn’t wear like a fragrance revolution like Yves Saint Laurent’s Opium. This fragrance is, in the simplest of terms, a floral chypre. It’s flowers and woods. Good thing for me I love floral fragrances and chypres. Oh de London opens with a lot of greenery: fresh citric bergamot, sage and chamomile. The chamomile is a lovely British touch and combined with the bergamot it feels like you’ve just made some tea. I thought ok, it’s London and feels like I’m having tea. What happens next? Apparently you’re taking four o clock afternoon tea in a flower garden. The heart of the fragrance is floral: rose, geranium, violet, lily of the valley, ylang-ylang and heliotrope. I love these flowers and I could smell mostly the violet, lily of the valley and heliotrope. The rose and geranium combo is rosy and sweet but not very heady nor overpowering. The rest of the fragrance is woodsy with sandalwood, cedar and oak moss. There is also some sweet vanilla. But they’re not very strong base notes and it still feels like a garden. In this way it wears more like a dainty feminine fragrance with a lot of flowers. Even Houbigant’s Quelques Fleurs is stronger and has more going on. This is a classy, sweet, feminine old fashioned very lady like fragrance that wears like one would imagine of Deborah Kerr or Julie Andrews perfumes. I liked it but I suppose if you’re looking for a stronger and edgier 60’s fragrance, even the vintage original Bal a Versailles with that animalic musk beast in it is what you’d want to experience. I loved this because I’m super into floral fragrances and vintages. The one selling today is a reformulation which has the additional vanilla note that the vintage ’62 did not have. Both are essentially the same except the reformulation selling right now is powdery, very light, inoffensive, and stays on the skin closely whereas the old formula was definitely a stronger floral chypre. I thought this was beautiful but coming from the 60’s I had hoped this would have rivaled Yves Saint Laurent’s Opium. I will wear this for spring and summer or any time I’m in London with my friend Lucia – during Fashion Week!

  7. :

    5 out of 5

    Thanks for that wonderful review, Greenelf!
    (I was mad for everything Yardley in the late 60’s-early 70’s. I still have a half inch of Yardley Spring Flowers, and I would LOVE to get my hands on Eau de Love or Love’s Lemon. Do you realize, there is no perfume now with a real lemon scent to it?)
    I of course wore this back in Tha Day. I have a teeny bottle of the remake by Tuvache and I have found it quite lovely to sniff. Is it the same as yesteryears? I don’t know. I thought the remake was really nice. (I read the original could never be reproduced now, because there is a shortage of sandalwood and the price would be sky-high. That’s the trouble with reproductions of perfumes, they’re never the same as the original because of a lack of original ingredients, or ingredients are now found toxic and harmful.)
    I still love it, reformulated or not.

  8. :

    4 out of 5

    I find this fascinating–I wore the original OH De London as a college student in 1972 or so, back when Yardley made it and I loved it. A friend found this reformulation for me a while ago and I liked it, but wasn’t sure if it was exactly the scent I remembered. Then, this week, I made an amazing buy in a local thrift shop–a splash bottle of the Yardley cologne, almost full-IN THE ORIGINAL PACKAGING FROM 1969 no less! I picked it up for $3! Of course, I had to run home and try both on! They are quite similar, but the Tuvache EDT is stronger of course, than the Yardley cologne–and the Yardley original is more of a green floral–the top note is very jasmine-y and the mid note is very fresh green and sweet–just like clover. The drydown is definitely more of a green floral scent, whereas the Tuvache is much more oriental and powdery. The blurb on the back of the Yardley box describes the scent as: “The wildflower scent of jasmine, rosebuds and young clover.” The re-formulation is more lasting–but the original is much more innocent and girlish, much more ingenue, than the EDT re-make. Now–if someone would just bring back “Eau De Love” from 1969, I would be thrilled!!

  9. :

    3 out of 5

    …the dry down is milky and mellow This scent is very natural,smells like a newborn baby ,chamomile tea with milk The most innocent and neutral scent I came across ever…Staying power is amazing on fabrics

Oh! de London Tuvaché

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