Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

4.06 из 5
(18 отзывов)

Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

Rated 4.06 out of 5 based on 18 customer ratings
(18 customer reviews)

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

SKU:  ccbd7f0dbff5 Perfume Category:  . Fragrance Brand: Notes:  , , .
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Description

Tubereuse by L’Artisan Parfumeur is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Tubereuse was launched in 1978. The nose behind this fragrance is Jean-Francois Laporte. The fragrance features tuberose, ylang-ylang and coconut milk.

18 reviews for Tubereuse L’Artisan Parfumeur

  1. :

    4 out of 5

    Unfortunately this has been discontinued.
    There is another tuberose themed perfume by L’Artisan Parfumeur called “Nuit de Tubereuse” which as I understand, is completely different and which I really love: one peppery, spicy green tuberose rounded by sandalwood.
    There are other- actually there are plenty of tuberose scents, some of them creamy, some are green, some soliflore, some are…
    As for me, I believe that there is a tuberose for everyone, so go on, find your own and when you do, please let us know all about it!!!

  2. :

    4 out of 5

    Hello? Does anyone know where one might find Tubereuse?
    Merci!
    L

  3. :

    4 out of 5

    Peppery, spicy tuberose…with a slight whiff of suntan lotion, which I suspect might be the coconut.
    I like it because it makes a change from the voluptuous creamy tuberoses I have in my collection, such as the vintage Fracas, Montana, EL Private collection Tuberose Gardenia. Some occasions require a lighter and spicier fume, so if you want tuberose without the heady accompaniment, this could be a nice option.
    Not one of my faves, but a nice alternative.

  4. :

    4 out of 5

    Tuberose by L’artisan is like an explosive bouquet of white flowers, is the smell of Paris in a summer day,romantic,a poetical and simple interpretation of the tuberose; sweet, creamy, buttery,exotic,without the narcotic notes ,it feels sexy on the skin, you can’t escape to its seduction,evolves you in an Aurea of temple Deities. I don’t feel is synthetic at all,no metallic or confusing notes.For me the best Tuberose I have in my collection besides the natural EO’s..

  5. :

    5 out of 5

    I suspect candidenise’s review below is referring to L’Artisan Parfumeur’s Nuit de Tubereuse, which is a different perfume. Nuit de Tubereuse is a beautiful pink pepper bomb.
    As for this one, Tubereuse, it’s one of the most “true” tuberose perfumes I’ve smelled, and it’s gorgeous. Full-bodied, rich, enormous sillage, nearly touches the line of “too much.” You only need a tiny bit. I will remember this as a reference point for a tuberose perfume done right.

  6. :

    3 out of 5

    Old fashioned (but in a good way), oily, buttery, almost vanillic tuberose with a milky, mesemerising quality. Heady and fantastic. This is my favourite tuberose “soliflore”!

  7. :

    5 out of 5

    When I first tried it, I didn’t know if I liked it because of the pink pepper in the perfume. When I first apply this scent, thats the first thing I notice. Once it dries down, it smells amazing.
    The scent lasts a really long time. When I spray it on my clothes, it smells strong for the entire day. On my skin, I can smell it very well for at least 8 hours.
    I have many tuberose scents, and I don’t get a strong tuberose smell from this. However, when my friend wears this, I can smell it a bit more. I guess it depends on the person who wears it.
    IMO, this perfume is a great buy. I feel sexy when I am wearing this scent. Its a bit pricey, but worth every cent.

  8. :

    3 out of 5

    oh lord sometimes i love you and sometimes i loathe you , is very strong sillage is montrous is very sinthetic and is loud
    i get the coconut vibe , is incredibly sweet too
    i have a love-hate thing going on for tuberose

  9. :

    5 out of 5

    Tuberose is a flower I adore in real life but in perfumes it can be overpowering and often soapy. It was the soapiness that made me get rid of Fracas, I just couldn’t take it on me, despite loving it in the bottle. It was the cloying quality of Amarige that made me dislike it.
    But L’Arisan’s Tubereuse is beautiful. It’s calm and delicate. Has no drama in it, just a soft, fleshy beauty. No soap according to my nose, no indolic white notes either, no greenery. I do get the already mentioned pencil shavings smell in it too, but it doesn’t bother me. Coconut and ylang don’t bring much sweetness on skin, yet on clothes it seems to be much sweeter ( and better).
    The silage and lasting power aren’t great; who needs a cloud of tuberose anyways?
    As a side note, I layered it over my beloved Armani Si… and heaven happened. I had some SI left over on my shirt, and sprayed this one on top. Suddenly the tuberose took a sweeter turn and became a warmer, sexier persona .
    Highly recommended to tuberose lovers, although if you love the shouting of Fracas you might find this one too soft. Keeper for me!

  10. :

    3 out of 5

    Wow! This is a prototypical synthetic tuberose floral scent right out of the vial, a tuberose soliflore if ever there was one. It has the sour washcloth, the wet cardboard, the wintergreen, and the indolic white floral notes, all rolled into one big package – and it is big, with powerhouse sillage. Beneath the tuberose is the scent of a coconut body lotion that’s starting to go rancid.
    Within the first hour or two, the scent on my skin evolves into a thick and creamy gardenia with a little bit of wood in the base, not a bad gardenia scent, but not as nice to my nose as some of the light, dewy ones that are out there. It’s interesting that the scent on my clothing retains the tuberose characteristics. Longevity is excellent, 10-12 hours on skin and longer on clothing.
    I generally don’t like floral perfumes, but despite what probably sounds like an unflattering description, I found Tubereuse interesting and fun to wear. For tuberose lovers, it’s a must-try.

  11. :

    3 out of 5

    I would like to convince myself that it is a tuberose theme, but my nose tells me it has INDOLE in theme. Quite good over all, flamboyant enough (though compared to Fracas.)

  12. :

    4 out of 5

    L’Artisan Parfumeur TUBEREUSE is a slightly woody tuberose perfume to my nose, despite the apparent lack of woody notes in the composition. Actually, I do not really believe that this is a three-note wonder: tuberose, ylang, and coconut. Surely TUBEREUSE has a base which includes some woody notes to create this warmth, given that the ylang is not detectable as such. Further evidence is the excellent longevity.
    TUBEREUSE is far less assertive–and flamboyant–than FRACAS, but it is not just a FRACAS wannabe, as so many tuberose perfumes seem to be. There is a somewhat tropical appeal here, but without any real sweetness. TUBEREUSE offers a unique take, introducing creaminess via coconut rather than vanilla.
    What others are describing as “buttery” seems to me to be more a matter of the characteristic creaminess of tuberose intensified by unsweetened coconut and grounded in a warm woodish base. I like TUBEREUSE and would wear it–especially in cold weather–were the perfume gods magnanimous enough to bestow a bottle upon me. (-:

  13. :

    5 out of 5

    It has taken me a while to really appreciate this stunning fragrance. I finally do and really appreciate its intoxicating sultry beauty. The composition is simple on paper and a fantasy on the skin. Ylang-ylang provides the substance while Coconut Milk aerates on the skin, revealing different aspects of itself as it melds with the skin. The Coconut Milk present in this fragrance is quite multi-dimensional and the gorgeous sultriness of it are quite intoxicating. This lasts longer than other L’Artisan’s I own but not very long compared with other heavier fragrances.

  14. :

    4 out of 5

    I haven’t actually smelled this perfume but, judging by the negative reviews here, it sounds like it’s yet another vastly overpriced but very mediocre perfume! Supposedly Demi Moore and Madonna adore this perfume but I’m guessing it’s really nothing special and there are countless other perfumes available out there which cost a tiny fraction of the price of this one yet which are, undoubtedly, a million times better. I would never waste a lot of money on crap like this!

  15. :

    4 out of 5

    I’m shocked at the bad reviews for this perfume. It doesn’t smell so crap to me! It actually smells a pleasant plain tuberouse with a coconut edge, which I see is very common in tuberouse scents. It maybe a way to give strenght to a chemical tuberouse?
    Anyway I like L’artisan Tuberouse more than other tuberouse scents, because it is simpler and a little tamed compared let’s say By Kilian Beyond Love (love!). I have no idea if it is chemical or not. L’Artisan claims to be natural based (more or less IMO).
    The problem is that tuberouse is difficult in itself and it can provoke repulsion in many people. It’s a flower that you either love or hate it. I also smell the buttery edge but it is so faint and mingles nicely with the flower.
    It smells to me like a fragment of Givenchy Amarige, as if someone took away a piece from Amarige’s puzzle and put it apart to make a separate perfume. Amarige also has a weird edge that many people describe as rotten fruit or vegetable, but I don’t smell this edge on me.
    All in all it is a very wearable tuberouse, joyful and sunny white, slightly soapy in the drydown and quite longlasting. Chemistry must be the trick here.

  16. :

    5 out of 5

    I liked the first initial burst of coconut with the powerful tuberose note, and I am not much of a coconut fan. I just thought the combination of coconut and tuberose was a good one. At first, it reminded me a little of my visit to Hawaii. I didn’t really like the drydown though. That reminded me more of stale vegetables. The fragrance lasted only a couple hours for me.

  17. :

    3 out of 5

    i liked it but oh god it is so synthetic not natural at all !!!! it smells like a body cream with cocnut and vanilla , things like that !!! it was so agressive and unnatural that i reacted physically with an instinctive move of repulsion, but i want to be fair, long time after the dry down it smells good but its not natural while im looking for a very natural smell of tuberose !

  18. :

    5 out of 5

    I generally like tuberose fragrances, especially those that combine it with coconut. I also like almost all l’Artisan scents I have tried so I was really looking forward to this sample. It is one of my least favorite tuberose scents – almost smells like rotting vegetation. I thought it would get better after the dry-down, and it did, but still was not anything I would want to try again.

Tubereuse L'Artisan Parfumeur

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