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BPAL Madness!

oakmoss

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Posts posted by oakmoss


  1. Opening this one in the car in the post office parking lot -- I couldn't remember what the description was, other than I had been looking forward to it. First sniff and my head is blasted backwards from the STRONG caramel-foody smell, wowzer! But since I know better than to buy scents that have nuts or butter listed, I figure this must morph into something I like, so.... dab dab in the closed warm car and WOWZER, it's a nuts and butter extravaganza. Waving my wrist out the car window on the drive home, witch.gif hoping it will drydown into a scent I can love, but alas, on my skin Cockaigne is like being dipped in a big vat of butter, with some nutty bitterness for good measure. If you like Jack and Gingerbread Poppet, this may be for you.


  2. A lot of people here say they can smell orange in blends that contain orange blossom, so you might do a search for those and see what YOU smell. (I can only smell the blossoms myself.) Moxie is a bright vivid orange scent and might be what you are looking for. Since you like orange, you might also look for scents with peach or apricot, which have a similar sweet-tart thing going. Marquise de Merteuil is particularly nice.


  3. A tart-spicy fruitiness like walking by a roadside fruit stand in autumn, with all the apple varieties side by side with ripe plums and late apricots, and the sun warming the bales of hay stacked in a picturesque way for the real down-home country autumn feel...

     

    And then you keep walking and *poof* the scent disappears. The staying power of this blend is very short on me. But it is oh-so-delicious while it lasts!


  4. Determined to power through some things that have been stacking up and bugging me for WEEKS, I dabbed on some Determination, over my heart chakra. Man oh man, do I hate the vetiver. :P But like some foul-tasting herbal tinctures, sometimes yumminess is not the point. My focus stayed on point and my energy stayed high, without falling into spaciness or discouragement. This is not a blend that is conducive to quiet thoughtful work, perhaps, as I felt a restless energy that wants to be moving and doing. Next time, though, I think I'll try it on a candle or in a burner, especially since vetiver is very determined to not wash off my skin!


  5. I skipped this when the bottles were offered because <good reason> foody scents aren't really my thing </good reason> and <dumb reason> I didn't like the name </dumb reason>. But my curiosity got the better of me and I finally bought an imp (thank you, sookster!). On first sniff, all I could smell was vanilla. Warming on my skin, the spiciness came forward to blend with the sweetness, but still it was mostly vanilla. I had a friend smell it and she said it was like Midway, but not so gooey, which I think is a great description. I was also strongly reminded of Antique Lace, though I have NO idea why, as they really don't have anything in common. All in all, I'm glad I have the imp and I'll definitely use it up, but there are so many other vanilla/sandalwood scents that I love that I don't feel deprived for not having a whole bottle of Underpants.


  6. I haven't tried this yet with BPAL scents yet (and I don't really want to go put some vetiver on my fingers to test it! :P ), but it works for onions, garlic, fish smell, etc., and those are also oils: Just rub your skin with a steel item. Real steel (like on an old knife blade from a sterling silver or silverplate set) seems to work better than stainless steel, but that will probably work too. Instantly removes the scent, in some magical way. Let me know if it works for perfume!


  7. According to Juliet's nurse (and she should know), today is Juliet's birthday! "Come Lammas-eve at night shall she be fourteen" -- or rather, on THIS Lammas-eve she shall be... ummm... 425. :P So I was going to find my imp of Juliet and wear it in her honor, but lo and behold, a BPAL order appeared and the very first thing I saw when I opened it was a frimp of Juliet! That kind of "coincidence" warrants a bit of a review, for sure.

     

    In the imp, this is a strong, sweet floral, like burying your face in a big bunch of fresh sweet peas. It's not a little girl scent, but it is innocent, in the sense of not being cynical yet about love and romance and hot summer nights filled with the scent of blossoms. There is a slight aquatic note that reminds me a bit of swimming pools and suntan oil and memorizing "Romeo and Juliet" when I was 13 and wishing with all my heart that I was Olivia Hussey. On the skin, the musk adds darkness and depth, and the flowers just get more intense, with a very faint hint of the pear somewhere underneath. A suitable scent to evoke a young Italian woman who passionately defied her family for true love one hot summer's night, only to kill herself in despair days later. No, NOT a little girl's scent at all....


  8. Searching for scents that will work in hot weather, I'm reaching for all my fruity favorites. In the bottle, Yerevan is mostly pomegranate and plum, a red-fruit smell, sweet and warm -- maybe a little TOO warm for summer wear. But on the skin, the higher notes of apricot and rose lift and freshen it, and then it all blends together into a perfume that isn't easily picked apart for individual notes anymore. Musk seems to do that on my skin -- it's rather like it smudges everything together like rubbing over a pastel drawing. What's left with Yerevan is a soft fruity-floral, inviting and subtle, and good for year-round wear.


  9. I grew up among the orange groves, so orange blossom/neroli is a favorite of mine, too. I don't get any orange scent from any of BPAL's orange blossom scents, though others seem to, and I wonder sometimes how much this is power of suggestion, which is powerful indeed!

     

    I highly recommend Bess, which doesn't start out with orange blossom as the top note (at least for me) but blooms into a passionate orange blossom blend, very evocative. Lolita is orange blossoms lifted and brightened by a bit of lemon verbena. Masquerade is orange blossoms warmed by incense. I also like Succubus, but not as much as these others.


  10. On a side note about the heat: I live in the mountains outside Albuquerque, so it rarely gets to 100 here (mostly high 90's), but of course, ABQ is desert, so it is often 100+. What astounds me is how many people I hear complaining, not of the being hot, which I understand, but acting outraged that it is actually above 100 for days on end. I always think, uh, duh, we live in the desert! It does this every year!

     

    Not too sound too defensive, but I grew up in the desert and my family still lives there, and one big difference between that and what's happening now is that in the desert, you're prepared for it. Homes and businesses are air conditioned or have swamp coolers or both. Here in northern/central coast California, we normally only have a short period of very hot weather and it usually comes in late summer, and we cope just fine. When it's over 105 degrees **inside the house** and no way to cool it (air conditioners are sold out everywhere, with a 2-week waiting list), and people and pets are literally dying, I think it's justified to do a little complaining.


  11. I packed all my BPAL and TAL into a cooler yesterday with a couple of gel packs, and it seems just fine. As a side bonus, it was fun to have it all in one place -- I have a lot more than I thought! :P One less thing to worry about, as we head into another day of record temps -- 108 here yesterday!


  12. Forgive me if this is a thread somewhere else -- I did look.

     

    It's :P HOT :D here.

    I'm sure it's hot where you are too.

    It's not usually this hot for this long, so I have no air conditioning.

    It was over 100 degrees in my house today, and has been in the high 90s for days, with no end in sight.

     

    Will this hurt my perfumes? They are in the dark, but every place in this house is hot. It does cool off at night. Should they go in the fridge, and will THAT hurt them? I'm not crazy about having my fridge smell like perfume, and I have nearly 100 bottles.

     

    Thanks for any and all advice, and I'm going back in the cold shower now.


  13. A ceremonial blend used to help you find your center, recover and maintain internal balance, and to align yourself and your consciousness with the divine.


    I used this blend for the first time today after receiving communication from someone who was quite angry with me, for things that I had tried my best to resolve to her satisfaction. The communication threw me off balance, to say the least, and from this place of shakiness and self-doubt, I happened to open my perfume cabinet and see Middle Pillar. Anointing my wrists and my heart chakra, I felt my energies calm and align again, grounding in a way that felt very much like the image of the High Priestess in the RWS tarot deck. The issues with the angry woman fell back into perspective, and with each inhale of the oil's fragrance, I felt more myself, more in tune with what is real and what is illusion. My sense of my own integrity and worth truly did feel realigned, almost instantly.

    The scent is a light powdery floral, with a soft rose note at the top. As it warmed on my skin, it smelled like rose incense -- rosy, but with a spicy dryness underneath. This is definitely something you could wear in "real life" as well as in ceremonial settings. It will be one I reach for often!

  14. Wanderlust has some fabulous blends -- I don't think I've ever been disappointed with a Wanderlust choice. My faves are Baghdad (spicy incensey deliciousness), Eden (fruity flowery coconuty, great for summer and for sleeping), Prague (one of BPAL's best florals, IMHO, light and fresh and watery -- I've never had anyone smell it and not like it), Tintagel (misty and mysterious) and Versailles (a walk in a sun-warmed rose garden).

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