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| Blends of floral and citrus-based fragrances are recommended for casual and daywear. Spicy, woody or warm amber-based fragrances are traditionally favorites for evening and special occasions. |
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| SUBJECT |
AUTHOR |
DATE |
RATING |
| TO BETHANY |
MAMZELE |
05/25/04 02:13 AM |
NOT RATED
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| MESSAGE BY MAMZELE |
| When really liking a scent but chemistry alters it... buy little purse atomizers [which I always use for perfumes, to pour into from bottles anyway, for purse AND at home], and spray lightly on clothes, not skin. Then you always exude the purest form of any perfume, and it's always on your clothes too, between dry cleanings... sometimes don't even have to re-apply... coats, & things! PS to my previous post... I've worn my later favorites [L'Interdit, Estee, Joy, etc., and never got as many compliments as with Emeraude so don't let these people who hate it because they may associate bad memories with it... influence you. And it should be applied LIGHTLY like all perfumes should. This is a delicious fragrance, and wouldn't be around if that Were not the concensus of most of the world.] Who could possibly NOT like vanilla, powders, or even COCONUTS that someone above [or below] mentioned LOL... doesn't smell like that to me, but for others: It could be worse! Todays scents smell like dirty feet that I smelled in an emergency room once. THere's that undertone with every one of the new rotten scents. The older established ones are unique and do NOT smell like eachother like today's do. THEY were works of art, when fragrances were fragrances and not only a money market. I live in the greatest city in the world [manhattan] and tastes are most sophistocated there and money is rampant, but Emeraude wins out all the time when I wear it to the best places or anyplace! |
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