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jonik – :
Vecci Rossetti is something you will like a lot of you like Piguet’s Calypso or Teint de Neige. It shares with them the powdery and the floral notes. It earl a slight resemblance to Loukhoum as well. There is definitely a common denominator between the three scents. It also ever so slightly reminds me of Insolence. By no means they are the same, but there are similarities. So if you enjoy any of those, chances are you will like Vecci Rosetti as well.
Vecci ROossetti opens up with a lovely bouquet of powdery roses. It is pretty sweet (hence the Loukhoum comparison), more than a theatre, it makes me think of Turkish delight with a violet twist.
However- being so similar to so many others- does it really stand out? I think Hilde Soliani is a creative and skilled perfumer, but her scents, despite me liking them a lot, so far never made a big impact on me or never surprised me to the extent where I would love to buy a bottle.
aaiisstt – :
I was immediately struck by the similarity of Hilde Soliani Profumi VECCHI ROSSETTI to Bvlgari’s first fragrance, POUR FEMME, created by Sophia Grojsman back in 1994. The key links are the violets and the roses, but there is also a glamorous—even theatrical—quality to both of these resinous perfumes. In a side-by-side comparison, I find that BVLGARI POUR FEMME is richer and more complex to my nose—which makes a lot of sense given the vast range of notes present in that composition, as compared to the modest number included in VECCHI ROSSETTI.
So I guess that Sophia Grojsman has outshined the competition once again. I’m not one to charge perfumers with plagiarism, and I certainly don’t think that a niche perfumer such as Hilde Soliani would consciously copy a famous perfume and then charge more for the so-called knock-off than the original costs, but I do think that Sophia Grojsman has managed to stake so many claims to so many clearly identifiable segments of the grand olfactory map that she represents a force to be reckoned with! She seems to possess a particular form of perfumic genius which is able to identify uncharted territory and make it her own in an iconic perfume against which all others in the same neighborhood (but created later on down the line) are bound to be invariably measured.
Vioxincenem – :
I think this could easily stand out as a vintage.It’s flowery-rose,it seems like the flowers are pressed,also it has something powdery and woody too,maybe there’s a bit of tobacco.In my mind I have the picture of a victorian lady wearing this at her evening walk.