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OlimpiadGame – :
This is far too astringent to enjoy: it reminds me of Wood Sage & Sea Salt by Jo Malone London, and also Sel Marin by James Heeley.
Vavan4uk01 – :
I’ve never encountered Ivy before in a perfume and I’ve got to say I’m won over. There’s something deliciously off-beat but subtle about this fragrance. The vetiver, tomato leaf and galbanum are obvious – front and centre- but I also detect a slight cumin note and a definite Riesling-like minerality that brings a delightful lightness to the vetiver (which I find can be a little dour in some frags). It dries down delightfully – like slate warmed by the sun, a boot-crushed dandelion stem lain on its surface. This is a sedimentary stone – compressed, aged earth, warmed by the sun, with centuries of fresh greenery bursting through the groundmass.
Verner – :
All of you Green Irish graduates need to take notice. This can actually become someone’s Jesus!! Nice and piquant with sustainability. Maybe a slight vegetal presence but honestly, I wouldn’t have known this had i not looked at the note listing. This last quite a while under the guise of a flimsy soapy offering. Viridescent by nature but woody enough to be deemed a grown up scent. Just a really great usage of notes not ordinarily used in fragrances. All purpose as anything you’ve ever tried. Destined to become someone’s signature scent. I’m running out of adjectives….
BLIND BUY WORTHY
1sender – :
You ever had a Chenin Blanc with pronounced flinty, mineral notes? That ‘wet rock’ accord greets me in the opening of Atelier de Geste’s Stones. Although I struggle a bit with the beginning, the base is GORGEOUS with endless endurance.
Vetiver is the centerpiece here, with verdant expanses of ivy and tomato leaf. This is by far, one of my favorite vetiver dry-downs of all time. Projection lasts for hours, for a highly dependable all-day fragrance, even in warmer climate.
I’m glad I gave Stones a try!
Malovas – :
lovely, fresh, green opening of galbanum, mild tomato leaf and bitter ivy surrendering to a more earthy impression from salty vetiver. a mild imprint of ginger is there, giving the earthiness a little lift. as time moves on, some floral notes begin to emerge. it says lotus however what i detect here seems to be more influenced by muguet. it has that sort of crisp, slightly soapy feel usually imparted by the flower. all-in-all, i rather like this perfume, although the matter of ‘stones’ is a bit lost on me. i imagined it to be somehow more ‘hard’, ‘cold’ and monolithic, however this is more on the soft soil, green and fresh-stem side. perhaps there is a smidgen of minerality to it towards the late dry-down when the moss comes to the fore. all the same, i enjoy it very much.