The world is dark and, contrary to popular superstition, there is no moonlight to speak of. I hide amongst the wet, dead leaves of the forest floor, my hands grip the wet moss and there is fresh soil ...
I am not generally a Duchafour or L'Artesan fan (notwithstanding my admiration for an older version of Almairrac's Voleur du Roses for a l'Artesan in 1993 or Giacobetti's Tea for Two), but I like thi...
I bought this unsniffed... After reading all of the fragrance notes, I could not help myself from buying because it sounded so perfect for me- cedar, honey, hazelnut, and sandalwood... I finally got i...
This sounded like something I'd love, but it turns out Mechant Loup is one of those scents that my chemistry completely transfigures. I would have guessed it was composed of citrusy and herbal notes o...
This is one of the only L'artisans I'd buy, because the others are so fleeting there would be no point. As other reviewers have already said, this is a nutty scent. But what's different with my chem...
I like the uniqueness of this fragrance because it doesn't remind me of anything else. Can't tell any notes, except perhaps the hazelnut, but it's a spicy, woody scent not in the usual ambery or cinam...
A very smart, savvy woman at Fred Siegal in Los Angeles told me this was her favorite perfume and she wears it. That said, this is a masculine scent based on its wet, tobacco scent with a mild and sub...
Sexy, in the way only unisex fragrances can be, in their sexual ambiguity. Honey-nut like; may remind you of Mary Jane candies. A dash of smoke and perhaps some tannic leaves. A brisk dollop of cit...
Topnotes are masculine. It then goes into a slightly honeyed fragrance that reminded me of Serge Lutens. However, it didn't have nearly the sillage or persistence, and hence the low overall rating.
Well, my French is non-existent, so thanks to those who translated this title. I sure don't see the bad wolf in this one. What I get is licorice caramels, stored in a cedar jewelry box. It's really ni...