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Lucchesa

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Everything posted by Lucchesa

  1. Lucchesa

    St. Clare

    Oh, wow, St. Clare is really, really good on me. Wet, there's tobacco and tonka, vanilla and rum, nothing sharp, everything gorgeously mellow. It's difficult for me to pick the notes apart once they've dried down into a smoky sweetness. I am not getting any noticeable oudh with this, just a lot of golden-brown warm comfort vibes. Lovely, and I'm so happy I had the chance to try it!
  2. Lucchesa

    A Lady Tall and White

    Wet, this is a lot of sweet vanilla snow, and I don't get pine or mint at all, fortunately. I think Beth somehow interpreted "frosted" as both snowy and sugary frosting, which is so lovely. The sandalwood starts to emerge on drydown but is never strong on me. Since the frosty vanilla was reminding me of Frostbitten Dorian, I put that on my other wrist. On me A Lady is a little higher and brighter than Frostbitten Dorian. As much as I like A Lady Tall and White, it checks a lot of the same boxes for me as FD (which, unusually, lasts really well on me), so I don't need to go in search of a bottle. But I'm so happy to have had the chance to test it!
  3. Lucchesa

    Nymphes de Pave

    I finally got a chance to try Nymphes de Pave! While I can smell the bourbon note wet, it's not boozy on my skin at all. Instead, I get dried figs poached in vanilla honey and a very mellow rose. It's very pretty and I agree with LizziesLuck, it would be lovely in spring. I have the nagging feeling that it reminds me of something else in my stash, so I need to retry all my honey fig scents to see if there's something more easily obtainable that smells similar on me.
  4. Lucchesa

    Ysabel

    Ysabel is gorgeous! Carnation is my favorite floral; I’m not a rose hater, but it can go sour on me, especially in combination with incense. On me, the velvety red rose takes a backseat to the carnation and clove. The musk and cedar and incense all combine into spicy sexy incensey goodness. I can’t really perceive any pomegranate unless it’s just a hint of sweetness. But the dominant note on my skin is spicy carnation, quite like Spanish red carnation SN, and the backdrop is stunning. So thrilled I got a chance to try this!
  5. Lucchesa

    Gypsy Queen

    I finally got to try this (thank you!!!) and it is absolutely as beautiful as I expected. I don’t think I have any other scent where where rich smoky rosy incense combines with neroli and my beloved bergamot for a citrusy tarot-reading vibe. Tragically, my middle-aged skin just eats this beauty up, though. I want to walk around in clouds of this...
  6. Lucchesa

    Haunted Bonbon

    How can one improve upon Haunted? The elegance, the beautiful simplicity. Hmm, maybe by wrapping it in chocolate? Dark chocolate, of course, not too sweet. And it works. It adds a rich cocoa layer to the perfection of Haunted. It doesn't read as foodie, but it's not a dry cacao either, just another layer of richness with the amber and musk. Really lovely. It didn't last long, but I didn't slather or reapply.
  7. Lucchesa

    Venus Genetrix

    This imp must be roughly three years old now, and it has aged beautifully. Jasmine can be a really problematic note for me, but jasmine tea is usually OK, and I love dark ambers and bourbon vanilla. And in fact the jasmine tea is strong while wet, but it takes a back seat as it dries down to the rich amber and vanilla bourbon. It is kind of boozy on me -- I don't think I'd wear it to work -- but I don't want to feel this sultry at work anyway. Rich and lush and wanton, with a little throw. Lovely.
  8. Lucchesa

    Two Loves

    Testing blind what must be a pretty old imp by now, the only note I can make out is rose. That doesn't surprise me when I look at the list of components; when there's this much going on, I usually have trouble picking out notes. What's surprising is that the florals stomp all over the red musk instead of the other way around; I usually amp red musk to heaven, and I can barely tell it's there. The frank is imperceptible; the amber and blood orange, once I know they're there, are a warm glow. But ultimately this is too floral for me to enjoy wearing.
  9. Lucchesa

    Stillness

    Stillness wet is predominantly lavender, like nearly every lavender blend on my skin. But it also highlights pine, and as it dries down that pine edges out the lavender as the dominant component. My skin usually devours lavender, but it lasts longer than usual in Stillness, backed up by the chamomile. I'm not getting a lot of patchouli here (which is fine), and I have no idea what palmarosa smells like. All in all a sort of woodsy herb garden, maybe like the lavender gardens on the Olympic Peninsula, and a marvelous scent experience. I'm so pleased I got to try these imps -- thank you, Lisa!!!
  10. Lucchesa

    Silence

    Silence is all lavender on me at the beginning, but lavender never lasts long on my skin. It took 10 minutes or so for me to start to perceive the gardenia and cedar, but on the drydown this is a lovely gardenia/cedar blend with just a hint of the dry, herbal sort of lavender. The cedar is gentle, not pencil-shaving-like, and beautiful. Gardenia is always a good note on me, and its creamy sweetness plays well with the foresty cedar. I wish my skin didn't eat up lavender immediately, though...
  11. Lucchesa

    La Petite Mort

    I recently retested an imp of this after I was frimped it and couldn't remember why I had rejected it earlier. Looking back, my notes say only "Hello, red musk" and I'm wondering what I accidentally mixed up with La Petite Mort, because there's certainly no red musk here (which tends to take over completely on my skin). Instead, this is warm, creamy, insinuating. I'd call it a light floral with warmth and depth. It has a gentle, sweet myrrh, not a high church myrrh, and the ylang ylang is not screechy. Although it may be in the same family as O and Snake Oil, it is by no means a duplicate of either of those scents, so if you are looking for that vibe but O and Snake Oil don't work on your skin, this would be an excellent GC to try.
  12. Lucchesa

    The Book

    I have just a tester of The Book. I have tried several BPAL library scents because of all the time I've spent in libraries and archives, plus I love soft leather and beeswax as notes. And I think they are all beautiful (the other Book, Scholar's Tower, Buggre All This Bible, etc.) and my skin eats them right up. I tried The Book about an hour before bed last night. I can still smell it this morning. Not strong, but there, unlike La Petite Mort which was on the other wrist. This is shocking. My middle-aged skin rarely allows me such staying power. The throw is low, even when wet, making this a very appropriate work scent. On me, at first it is all warm dusty paper, and then the worn leather emerges as it dries. It is very soothing, as LizziesLuck mentions. I definitely need more than a tester!
  13. Lucchesa

    Chocolate Stout Cupcake

    Oh, I'm so glad I snagged a decant of this before Yules went down! Chocolate Stout Cupcake is delectable. I totally agree with the previous reviewer: dark chocolate brownie batter. The stout doesn't read boozy on me so much as deepening the scent and adding a less-sweet edge. But basically it's deep dark chocolate, and if that's your BPAL groove, don't miss this one!!! ETA 2017 version
  14. Lucchesa

    Gluggagægir

    It's funny, there are many unisex scents I love to wear, but this one read as too masculine on my skin. It had that cologne vibe zanzoku_zen mentions that always puts me off. Not a lot of spices, primarily leather-tobacco-sandalwood with a faint hint of rum. I don't have a scent-wearing man in my life, but this would be marvelous on a guy. Elegant, sexy, with a dry wit. It sweetens on drydown and I'm quite enjoying it now, but I don't need a bottle.
  15. Lucchesa

    Wolf's Heart

    I'm trying Wolf's Heart because courage has never been my strong suit, and I could use a boost. It's a nice dragon's blood fragrance on me. I'm not sure about the jasmine, which can go tragically wrong on my skin, but there is definitely some floral, so maybe it's star jasmine or one of the variants that work ok. Definitely more floral and less earthy than I would have expected from the concept. I'll give it a few hours and see if I feel any braver.
  16. Lucchesa

    Masquerade

    Wet, Masquerade is orange blossom-ambergris-patchouli, with maybe a little spiciness from the carnation. The fruitiness of the orange blossom fades quickly on me, though, along with any hint of carnation, and the patch gets stronger and stronger. It's one of the drier patchoulis that work less well with my skin chemistry. I can see this being a favorite of die-hard patch lovers, but it's not really my thing.
  17. Lucchesa

    Gingerbread, Vetiver, and Black Clove

    I was fortunate enough to swap for a bottle of this and LOVE!!! It's not really morphing much on me at all; it's just big spicy dark sexy smoky wicked gingerbread goodness. Vetiver is not always my friend, but this is the deep molassesy vetiver, not the dirty barbecue pit vetiver. If that's the vetiver you groove on, this is gorgeous. This checks a lot of boxes for me -- warming winter scent, comfort scent, confidence scent, sex goddess scent. I'm thrilled to have it and will wear it often until mild weather arrives.
  18. Lucchesa

    Malediction

    This morning my husband decided to make coffee in the stovetop espresso maker. He forgot to put any water in. He didn't notice this until there was a fairly strong aroma of burnt coffee and rubber wafting through the kitchen. Malediction basically smells like that. I have been learning to love both vetiver and patchouli. This morning I was joyfully wearing Gingerbread, Vetiver and Black Clove. But this is a dry smoky vetiver and a dry dirty patchouli, no sweetness whatsoever, and this is a no.
  19. Lucchesa

    Goat BPAL? Hay and goats?

    Goats are awesome! Another beautiful goat milk scent is Maiko with Hair Unbound from last year's Lupers. Goats milk, coconut, rice milk, honey carnation, and sugar.
  20. Lucchesa

    Oof

    I have a head cold for the first time since I acquired OOF and fortunately remembered to give it a try. I don't particularly like the smell of this. I would never wear it as a perfume. But it seems to be clearing my sinuses quite nicely!!
  21. Lucchesa

    Carnal

    This is bright and fruity and upbeat. I initially thought summer scent, but mandarins and dried figs are things I eat in winter, so I think it would be good for brightening up a dreary day as well. I only had a sniffie with just barely enough for a skin test, so either it doesn't last long on my skin or I just need to apply more generously than I was able to.
  22. Lucchesa

    Crowley

    I can almost never do red musk as it turns nearly every blend it contains into SN Red Musk but I have gotten away with blood musk and decided to try "infernal musk" as Crowley is my favorite character in Good Omens. And it works! Yes, it's very red musk-forward, but I also get lilac cologne and soft leather and something sweet which must be the vanilla husk. The woods stay in the background, and I don't get the lemonrind at all, but for red musk it's a surprisingly ensemble scent. I always get good throw with red musk and this is no exception. I may need a bottle of this one. ETA I forgot to mention, as most everyone else has, that it's sexy as hell.
  23. Lucchesa

    In Templum Dei

    I had a liquidambar tree growing outside my bedroom window as a child, so I had to try this one. I'm so glad I did. It's outstanding. I see a lot of comparisons to Midnight Mass in the reviews, but where Midnight Mass 2017 (only one I've tried) does not last long on my middle-aged skin, I put In Templum Dei on yesterday around noon and could still smell it at 9;30 at night. It was a skin scent, but that's normal on me; such a long wear length is not. Wet, it was all glorious resins, but as it dried down the sandalwood made itself felt. I'm not sure I could really parse out the contribution of the liquidambar, but after about an hour I was looking up the ingredients to see what the whisper of spice was, so I think the gum was adding that hint of warm, slightly sweet spiciness. Some franks are too dry for my taste, but this is gentle and absolutely gorgeous.
  24. Lucchesa

    I Heard Many Things in Hell

    I really don't know what black iris smells like. For me, this went on in a blast of lavender, like so many lavender blends. Then it settled in to be a wonderful resiny herbal. From this mixture, I would say black iris smells green? The lavender-frank combination was what I was really interested in, and it is lovely, dry, a little sharp, herbal from the chamomile, but like so many lavender blends, my skin eats it up in short order.
  25. Lucchesa

    Cardamom Cream Pumpkin Cake

    Cardamom is my favorite spice note, and this is exactly as advertised. In a word, yum! The cake note in Eat Me is awful on me, but pumpkin cake is quite lovely, and I want to bathe in vats of cardamom cream. For me the cinnamon definitely took a back seat to the other notes. Average wear length on my skin.
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