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Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Angelic
Once upon a time it was 1992. Everyone and their sister were wearing Calvin Klein : Either Escape or Eternity (their mothers were still wearing Poison). Then came Thierry Mugler and created his chocolate infused fruity-floral, which became the scent of the decade and stank up elevators around the globe.
Try as I might, I can't think of another gourmand fragrance that gained this much popularity prior to Angel. I actually think that this was what started the trend (epidemic?) of "yummy". Perfumes used to smell sexy, seductive, pretty, clean, dangerous... Not edible. Can you imagine one of the great houses of yore creating a scent that would make you think of fudge?
The "yummy" factor makes the Angel wearer want to bathe in it. Hence the very successful line of Angel bath and body products. And the amount of the stuff sprayed by the fans. Now, I'm the last person who can complain about strong perfumes and the amount sprayed. I love my fragrances, I want to smell them on myself for hours and I want you to smell them on me. And, I expect compliments on my good taste. But even I have to put the limit somewhere, and making the entire room, movie theater, or subway car smell like this chocolaty melon and peach concoction is criminal.
Angel has spawned countless imitators and several legitimate offspring. I'm actually fond of Angel Innocent, because it lacks the harsh fruity opening with the weird chocolate, and instead there's a honeyed musky dry-down that works quite nicely on my skin. The amber helps as well.
Angel haters can be divided to two groups. The first is the anti patchouli people. I'm not one of them. While there are many examples of patch gone wild, I'm more likely to enjoy it. I belong to the group who recoils at the fruity blast of the opening. Melon and peach are among the notes I dislike most and never work for me. It's everything I dislike in a fruity floral, and no amount of chocolate can help it.
This is why, upon reading Marina's review of Il Profumo's Chocolat Frais I wasn't all that thrilled at the chance of trying it on. But I did have the sample and I do write a beauty blog, so there I was, applying this fragrance to my skin...
The bad news is that Marina was right. It's another Angel clone, from the first pineapple note (funny how often a chocolate note turns pineapple. Some smell it in Tom Ford's Black Orchid, while I have no idea what they're talking about, but I fully get it here). It develops very much like Angel and gives the same foody vibe.
The good news is that it's not as bad or as fruity. It's a kinder, gentler Angel. When the pineapple goes away, the feel of it is closer to Angel Innocent, even if not as musky and not as long lasting. It's an okay fragrance, really.
The only question is: Why?
Patchouli and chocolate is Angel. Put that in anything and it's an Angel clone. I'm so done with any chocolate and patchouli combo. :O)
ReplyDeleteAngel -- the enigma. You've taken me a little further down the road to understanding, but its popularity baffles me. It smells like someone had a mai tai and a box of chocolates. And then threw it up.
ReplyDeleteAngel Men, however, I would wear. And you're right -- I think it's pretty much missing the fruit.
I swapped something for a bottle of Tom Ford and have never been sorrier. I get up every morning and glare at it.
Angel was *my* perfume when I was in my twenties. I have graduated on to Blue Agava and Cocoa from Jo Malone, which is a more grown-up, subtle mix of lime, grapefruit, blue agava, vetiver, cinnamon and cacao.
ReplyDelete