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alien123 – :
I am not sure if it is the indoles, but this smells like a strong, pungent cheese from the first spray. Very potent and green. I am wondering if I should layer it with something because it lacks the sweet, oily coconutty texture of most other tuberoses I know and love. I may keep it as a natural soliflore, it almost hurts my nose to smell it, though…
yrik68 – :
This little-known beauty is the most beautiful, realistic tuberose perfume I have ever smelled. Its rich and creamy without being sweet. I adore it. I have to agree with houzi regarding the opening of this perfume. It does open a little harsh, but dries down very quickly into a realistic rendition of the flower.
I once tested this on my skin after acquiring some fresh tuberoses from my gracious neighbor. I set the vase of flowers next to me and let the lovely fragrance of tuberoese surround me. I couldn’t tell where the perfume ended and the scent of the real flowers began. Truly lovely.
khusainov – :
I bought this perfume concentrate in late spring, while strolling in Florence. As a tuberose lover with a strange kind of skin I’m always looking for a scent that doesn’t turn weird on me after the first 10 minutes. If you take a look at my perfumes choices you can see that my seek for the perfect tuberose has been long and still going strong. Well, surprisingly this not expensive perfume is one of the best tuberose I’ve tried so far. It stays stable on my skin without harsh peaks and bitter under notes. It lasts a while, radiating the comfortable warmth that is the signature of this flower, with our being overpowered by any other note.
Definitely a nice find for tuberose lovers.
varnyk – :
Tuberosa d’Autunno opens quite brash, with a kind of conspicuous, artificially upbeat accent, perhaps coconut, that feels as if it’s there to give the tuberose a round of cheer just in case it decides to get stage fright.
It’s a straight-forward and non-dramatic rendition of the flower, like a not-too-artful but esthetically pleasing portrait that succeeds at drawing viewer’s attention towards the flattering features of the subject matter. The tuberose in here smells lush, yet is simple and clean. It doesn’t hit any awkward notes, quite the opposite, it rests comfortably on a bed of powdery violets. I quite like this phase but it doesn’t last very long.
After about an hour the base notes come along and, rather unceremoniously, upstage the tuberose. At this point it’s the warm, ambery vanilla I end up smelling the most, while the namesake note is more like an afterthought. The scent is very nice still, but not in the way I was hoping for. I even recognise some elements of Ambra del Nepal in that drydown. However, while Ambra del Nepal lasts and lasts on me, Tuberosa d’Autunno tends to fade away a lot faster.
Easy and likeable tuberose with a violet undertone, but I would probably like it better if it could stand its ground with more success.