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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 KATHY |
SYLVIE |
01/29/06 04:29 AM |
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| MESSAGE BY SYLVIE |
| Hi Kathy, you posted a nice review. I agree with you that Red Door and Vanderbilt have some similarity. Both fragrances are underrated IMO. Red Door is "too 80ies", and Vanderbilt is a "drugstore" fragrance. These are the permanent negative arguments against both scents. I let my nose decide, what's good :-). I love Vanderbilt more than Red Door. Vanderbilt seems to me more complex and mysterious. The soft-oriental drydown is incredible wonderful and ultra-feminine! If I'm informed correctly, Vanderbilt was created by Sophia Grojsman, a great perfumer. She is very popular and successful (Paris, Eternity, Yvresse/Champagne for example).
Vanderbilt is a great fragrance! A masterpiece. Happy sniffing, Sylvie.
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