Poivre Caron

3.89 из 5
(19 отзывов)

Poivre Caron

Poivre Caron

Rated 3.89 out of 5 based on 19 customer ratings
(19 customer reviews)

Poivre Caron for women of Caron

SKU:  b6f7b2c3c899 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .
Share:

Description

It took rare audacity this hot spicy pepper top note, backed up by a typically Caron rich floral heart, and woody base notes. As the most powerful scent, pepper appeals to both men and women. Poivre was launched in 1954. The nose behind this fragrance is Michel Morsetti.

19 reviews for Poivre Caron

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    I have a bottle up for sale, just as the one shown, without tassle and box, but in perfect condition. PM me for details.

  2. :

    3 out of 5

    I believe I have a huge bottle of this perfume. If you have a vintage Poirve please send me your contact info so that I might send you a sample to see if indeed this is what this mystery perfume is. I have been mind boggled for 15 years with a 1910 dorflinger vintage perfume bottle full of this mystery juice that my grandmother had left me. She was very wealthy and I know this is not a cheap perfume.
    Thank you in advance for your help in this mystery.
    Fill free to also email me at terriep1118&gmail.com
    Terrie

  3. :

    3 out of 5

    Stunning, dry, spicy (mostly cloves and ylang on my skin), peppery perfume. Smells like Christmas, all warm and inviting. This does not have the strong, sweet Caron-ade in the background. Lush’s Yog Nog, is Poivre with added sweetness and creaminess. Two extremely wonderful orientals for the winter season and Christmas. I am so glad I made the trip to the Harrods Salon de Parfums to smell this beautiful classic and see the Caron fountains all lined up in Roja’s boutique.

  4. :

    3 out of 5

    I keep trying it again and again and l love it,but it just doesn’t last that long. Perhaps base notes are so soft one can’t feel them after that lovely pepperiness…

  5. :

    3 out of 5

    Poivre was launched in 1954 during the time when most perfumes and fashion aesthetics were well-mannered. I assume it was quite ground breaking to use pepper in women’s perfume back then. Its advertising was “Parfum de la femme moderne”. It is still very relevant today and definitely unisex.
    Its dry hot pepper and clove opening is explosive and sexy while the prominent carnation note lifts up the spiciness of the perfume. Later the slightly sweet opoponax softens it a little. There is some similarity to Bellodgia which is gentler and spring like.
    I always think it is a cold weather perfume. Have tried it this summer and is totally wearable. Great alternative when I don’t want citrus or white floral. The vintage parfum lasts 6 hours on my perfume eating skin.

  6. :

    3 out of 5

    I don’t normally like to make blind buys, mistakes can be so expensive! But I will go headfirst into the House of Caron.
    I’ve only been disappointed once: the dreadful Fluer(no “S”) de Rocaille. I can’t imagine “Poivre”(“pepper”) would disappoint anyone. A blast of pepper, cloves, and Caron’s iconic carnations from start to finish. A common complaint about Carons is that they have a smell-alike quality and this magnificent creation doesn’t quite make a getaway. A bit of Carons characteristic soapiness comes in at the drydown. But it is faint and lends a bit of softness, it does not overwhelm. The warmth and spiciness of “Poivre” would make it a great Christmas go to. By all means add this to your perfume wardrobe.

  7. :

    4 out of 5

    Peppery — oh yes it is! But it is much more than this. Warm, like hot milk with honey, though not sweet, spicy, and flowerish at the same time. It is extremly comforting scent for the cold weather. I don’t know why, but it has an extremely positive effect on men — at least my husband and two colleagues, including my boss. Regardless of this, I would be buying it again and again. On my list of best ever greated fragrances, together with l’heure blue, sous le vent, jicky and cuir de russie.

  8. :

    4 out of 5

    I love this one! Very Caron-ish highest quality smell – par excellence! Peppery, spicy, but also rounded by warm carnation, rose and jasmin. After around 20 minutes new notes – some of them are Sandalwood and Tuberose appears. It keeps gently changing and never stop surprising me. I have EXTRAIT – I LOVE this parfume! Simply gorgeous and not like others!

  9. :

    4 out of 5

    Tried it and loved it! Firstly the peppery side comes along with another spices and a soft sweetened in the background. After a while, carnation make it more present. It reminds me a lot of Myrugia’s Maderas de Oriente!

  10. :

    5 out of 5

    This fragrance isn’t worthy of the Caron name. The first note was sharp pungent black pepper followed instantly by the medicinal scent of oil of cloves, the toothache medicine we used as kids and now contained in the OTC preparation Ora-Gel. Reminding me of toothache didn’t do much to impress me. The initial scent is very harsh, even although the pepper moves to the background quickly and the clove takes over. After it dried down a bit, I could smell a touch of sandalwood in the background, but no real carnation at all, and I love the spicy scent of carnation. There may be a tiny bit of floral there, but it is overpowered by the sharp and unpleasant clove scent. After about forty five minutes, I smelled a touch of baby powder and vanilla, but the vanilla is what makes most fragrances cloying and I don’t like it. Poivre kept the vanilla down to the minimum I can tolerate in a fragrance, so that was a plus. Spicy scents are my absolute favourite – Opium is one I have used for decades, and the only one so far that doesn’t turn sickly sweet and cloying on my skin after a half hour or so. But Caron’s Poivre smells heavily like oil of cloves and a concoction I made containing it when first experimenting with essential oils years ago, consisting of clove, pepper, sandalwood, jasmine and a drop of ylang ylang. Poivre also didn’t last long on my skin, but the scent was much better after about thirty minutes. But still, the clove overpowered. I’m glad I just bought a few samples. It would do better marketed to men.

  11. :

    4 out of 5

    I tried a sample today of the modern version and kept asking myself what it reminded me of. Then it came to me: Royall’s Bay Rhum – it is almost exactly the same, with perhaps just a bit more vanilla.
    I have had visions of ‘Poivre’ being a kind of holy grail of perfumes – a classic, a hard-to-wear (which is fascinating to me), exceptionally rare. I love black and pink pepper scents, and I think I mistook the name of the perfume to actually mean that it smelled ‘like pepper’. Instead, it is (basically) a carnation/clove kind of scent… something like what you’d find in a gentleman’s cabinet. It has a very aftershave-y quality to it.
    It’s linear, doesn’t last too long, and a bit ordinary. I was really hoping for a bit more.

  12. :

    3 out of 5

    Poivre reminds me of a botanical carnation oil that I used to wear in high school. Years later, I realized that this oil most likely did not contain any actual carnation, because carnation extract is extremely pricey and rare (despite the flower’s reputation as “common”). Most carnation perfumes have traditionally been made with some combination of black pepper, clove, vanilla, and rose or ylang ylang. Poivre incorporates this “doppelgenger” carnation note — perhaps along with a bit of precious carnation absolute.
    Poivre is ideal for clove lovers or spicy carnation lovers — it is heavily laden with spices. The hot pepper top note is a bit shocking initially, I must admit. As Ron Burgundy, on the hilarious movie “Anchorman,” exclaims (upon smelling his co-workers pungent cologne): “It stings the nostrils!”
    I also pick up on notes of carrot and celery: this isn’t unpleasant, just very unusual and distinctive — a bit like a pot of vegetable stew. This, along with oakmoss and vetiver, provides a very earthy undertone to the spices and sweet floral notes.
    Despite these other notes, clove is what remains most prominent throughout the drydown, along with the very recognizable Caron powdery note (from Oppoponax and a bit of Sandalwood, I imagine). I’m not sure this is a perfume I would wear regularly; I like clove, but prefer it in lighter doses. I accidentally spilled my high school carnation oil inside my purse one fateful day, causing a clove-carnation overdose from which I have yet to fully recover.
    Poivre is an intriguing perfume and worth a sample, if simply for the experience and the fact that it provides a little a peek into 1950’s fragrance history. And if you love spicy carnation scents, it is a must-try!

  13. :

    4 out of 5

    I love this scent. It was recommended to me by the clerk at the Caron shop on Rue Montaigne to wear with the Tabac Blond I had purchased. She was right. Worn together they are complimentary and complex. I do find the Poivre to be short lived on me in winter, but I do get a couple of hours of scent.

  14. :

    5 out of 5

    Straight clove. Disappointing.

  15. :

    3 out of 5

    Just tryed a decant sample. Very sophisticated. A bit to clovery at first but perfect for a luxurious night out. The smell of opulence with a sexy slick twist.

  16. :

    5 out of 5

    The vintage sample that I tried begins with a slight peppery note, but within seconds it changes to cloves. However, it’s not just cloves from the spice drawer, there are other notes in there softening and expanding on the clove theme. That expansion does not just create a carnation scent, either, it’s something bolder and better.
    There’s wood, there’s a little bit of resin and incense, and it all fits together perfectly. After about 2-3 hours it dries down to a light skin scent that persists for another few hours. It’s surprising to me that this perfume was created by a mainstream house in the 1950s, because it could easily be a modern niche fragrance, and one of the better ones, at that. If I bought full bottles, this version of Poivre would be FB-worthy. However, I understand it’s probably been reformulated, so none of this may apply to the current Poivre.

  17. :

    5 out of 5

    (Pure Parfum Review)
    I think Tabu smell like an Egyptian incense and Poivre smell like a Medieval incense.
    Spicy, dark and misterious, Poivre is the most complex spicy fragrance I have ever smelled.
    While I really like the smell, I simply don’t feel this fragrance is easy to wearing it. So Poivre must be applied in small quantities.

  18. :

    5 out of 5

    (Parfum review)
    I”m going to believe that my parfum sample is recent, and NOT what was put on the market in 1954.
    Why this was reformulated I can’t say, but what I can say is that I could walk through the eye of a hurricane and stop to pick out a Caron, and this ain’t one of them.
    When Poivre was reformulated someone simply opened their kitchen spice drawer, unscrewed the lids from the pepper and clove jars and mixed it with a little water.
    I’d be less harsh with my review if this were an EDT, but as a parfum I have to keep it real.
    Caron needs to be called to task on this one.

  19. :

    4 out of 5

    Peppery and sexy! I tried to buy it last year while in NY Bergdorf, but I was told they were sold out and it was only in France at that time.

Poivre Caron

Add a review

About Caron