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- Feb 23, 2012
Pride, Prejudice & Perfume - Feb 23, 2012
Womanity EDP by Thierry Mugler - Feb 23, 2012
Quote of the Day 11/02/2010
Things We Love
Oh, Thierry Mugler, you crazy Frenchman! I love you and your olfactory genius! I love Angel, I love Innocent , and now I love Womanity!
However, this is a love that, at first, did not seem meant to be. Let's go back in time to a few months ago, a time before my nose had ever touched this fragrance and my knowledge of Womanity was based purely on press releases and preliminary product reviews. In spite of loving Mugler's other creations and a consistently concerted effort not to formulate opinions about scents I've yet to smell, I hated almost everything I knew about Womanity from the first moment I read about it.
Let's start with the name: Womanity. What? Really, Thierry? When someone asks me what I'm wearing, I'm going to have to say that ridiculous "word" out loud? Yeah, no. I'm not doing that.
Then we have Womanity's ridiculous "bond between women" brand messaging - I'm convinced there's an army of ad executives somewhere that are still working on replacing all the pants they ruined when they forced this campaign so hard they shit themselves. I'm extremely insulted by the entire concept and its components:
The notes in Womanity are simply said to be caviar, fig, and fig wood, and early reviewers actually described the top note as being somewhat fishy which nearly sent me over the edge for reasons that should be obvious. Luckily for Thierry, my going over the edge would never affect him in the least and even if it magically did, I didn't completely fly off the deep end because:
Now let's fast-forward to 3 days ago when Megan finally caught me in a moment when I wasn't already doused in another perfume. She had me try on the Womanity she received in the form of a deluxe sample from a Mugler rep. and what can I say? I LOVE IT.
There's absolutely nothing fishy about it – the caviar note manifests itself in the form of the fleeting essence of a salty sea spray that almost immediately melds itself with the sweet, rich aroma of figs. The heart delivers on Mugler's attempt to create a fragrance that is both savory and sweet, and the "caviar" note's transformation to just plain salt adds a dimension to the fragrance that, much like the hearts of his other creations, cannot be compared to anything else. The base retains the salty-sweetness of the heart, but the understated fig wood note smooths things out and allows the scent to live out its extended dry down in a form that's still sexy but much less dramatic.
If you're not into sillage, Womanity is definitely not for you. In fact, neither the sillage nor the lasting power leave anything to be desired – I sprayed it on myself early in the evening and could still smell it the next morning.
Everything about it sings autumn and winter to me just as richly as Angel and Innocent do, but with less spice and more sugar. I love the smell of fig, but find it's usually executed in a way that's perfectly pleasant but just a touch too dainty ( Guerlain's Aqua Allegoria Figue-Iris) , or with a cheap, heavy hand ( Bath and Body Works' Brown Sugar and Fig).
Womanity isn't cheap but it's not over-the-top expensive, and for a normal perfume user, even a 1.7 oz. bottle ( $78) should last for quite some time.
However, I still wish the ad campaign had been entirely different and it was named something I wasn't embarrassed to speak aloud, like maybe "Fig de la Mer" or "L'océan de la Figure" or even just, "Fig and Sea Spray." Really.
Posted in Cruelty Free, Perfume Reviews, Weekly Top 3 by Kerry at 02, Nov 08:00 am | 2,815 Comments »
Perfume Boxing Day is nothing like regular Boxing Day, mostly in the sense that "Boxing Day" is an actual holiday and "Perfume Boxing Day" is something I just made up a few hours ago. Perfume Boxing Day is the day I've decided that the season specific scents that have been in my current rotation are no longer relevant, so they are stored away until they are, once again, seasonally appropriate.
The activities that take place on Perfume Boxing Day are not to be confused with the activities that take place when a perfume of mine has been "Permanently Boxed." A Permanently Boxed perfume has underwhelmed, disappointed or disgusted me to the point of being stashed inside a giant box in my closet, where it patiently awaits its fate, a fate that is very much akin to that of a boxed Cylon or a Dollhouse Active that's been sent to the Attic. Perfume Boxing Day is not nearly so grim. It's fun and temporary! It's like wintering in the islands or going on the lam until the statute of limitations for your crime finally runs out!
Today I celebrated Perfume Boxing Day, bid farewell to my summer scents, pulled out the fall/winter perfumes that have been waiting patiently in their storage drawers, and made a list of the gaps in this season's collection that must be filled.
Perfumes that were boxed for the season include:
• Estee Lauder Brasil Dream EDT
• Estee Lauder Pleasures Bloom EDP
• Escada Ocean Lounge EDT
• Beyonce Heat EDP
• Escada Moon Sparkle EDT
• D&G L'Imperatrice EDT
Perfumes that weren't boxed, but won't be repurchased in the near future:
• Gucci by Gucci EDP
• Elizabeth Arden Mediterranien EDP
• L'Occitine Notre Flore Myrte EDP
• Annick Goutal Mandragore EDT
Perfumes that made the trans-seasonal cut:
• Christian Dior Miss Dior Cherie EDP
• John Varvatos for Women EDP
• Moschino Glamour EDP
• Every single one of my Wiggle Perfume Oils
• Every single one of my Alkemia Oils
• Bath and Body Works Japanese Cherry Blossom EDT
• Bath and Body Works Raspberry Vanilla EDT
• Stella McCartney Rose Absolute EDP
• Stella by Stella McCartney EDP
• Stella McCartney Stella in Two: Amber Perfume Solid
• Stella McCartney Stella in Two: Peony EDT (Just barely)
Perfumes that have been (or will soon be) reintegrated from last year's fall/winter wardrobe:
• Thierry Mugler Innocent EDP
• Badgley Mischka by Badgley Mischka EDP
• Versace Signature EDP
• Burberry London EDP
• Guerlain Mitsouko EDP (or pure parfum if I play my cards right)
• Tom Ford Black Orchid Voile de Fleur EDP
• Tom Ford Private Blend Champaca Absolute EDP
• Tom Ford Private Blend Amber Absolute EDP
Newcomers:
• Thierry Mugler Angel EDP ( It's been in retirement long enough to be considered "new")
• Queen Latifah Queen EDP
• Queen Latifah Queen of Hearts EDP
• Bath and Body Works Dark Kiss EDT
• Tom Ford Black Orchid EDP
• Guerlain L'heure Bleue (or pure parfum if I play my cards right)
• Givenchy Ange Ou Demon Le Secret EDP
Do you swap your perfumes when the seasons change? What didn't make the cut? What will you bring back from next year? Most importantly, what new perfumes will you be adding this cold season? Spill.
( Also, a quick reminder, September's Giveaway ends in 3 days and once again: not many entries, so your chances of winning? REALLY EFFIN' GOOD! Enter now! )
Angel was a big shit deal when it came out back in '92, and has managed to stay a big shit deal over the course of the past 18 years. I loved it as a teen and then moved on to other things – lesser things – and have recently rediscovered it thanks to Megan's recent obsession with it. There's nothing else on the market like it, and in fact, it's so distinctive that I thought I would have trouble wearing it again because the smell so intensely puts me in a specific time and place that it was actually a disorienting experience to put it on at all ( Yeah, you had your highlights, winters of '94 and '95, but I do NOT need to relive you ). Eventually, smelling it so often built up a cache of envy that overpowered my need to be oriented anywhere in time, and now I am once again Angel's slave.
Angel is BIG. It is not for everyone. It is over-the-top, and it will absolutely overpower any perfume anyone within a 20 foot radius is wearing. There are some qualities about it that are slightly gourmand, but it's not nearly as sweet as its notes would suggest. It's spices and woods I smell in the end – it could almost be described as a sweet patchouli except that it has far more dimension. Although it's big and wild – or maybe because it's big and wild – it's absolutely a smell for the extravagantly rich and those who mingle with (but don't serve) them.
This stuff comes in just about every shape and size anyone has ever imagined, many of which are refillable. I would not be surprised to find that there is a special edition dodecohedron container in existence. Even at a discount, this stuff will cost you, but the lasting power Angel has is unmatched, which means you can get quite a bit of mileage even out of the classic .08 oz. star bottle.
Expect to pay anywhere between $30 – $165 depending on the shape, size and rarity of your bottle.
Posted in Cruelty Free, Perfume Reviews, Weekly Top 3 by Kerry at 27, Sep 20:13 pm | 3,376 Comments »
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