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Monocle Scent Two: Laurel by Comme des Garçons, 2009

86% Positive Reviews
Rated #3619 in Fragrances

Posted
Laurel is over-priced, brutish, bone-dry, and heavy-handed on the herbs. Can't say there's really anything redeeming about this fragrance as this type of fragrance has been done to death many times before by just about any designer house that's been around since the 70s. Hinoki was promising and good but Laurel is just dreadful!

Posted
I used to love this scent, then I got Frederic Malle's French Lover. Tihs is a total rip-off! What a big disappointment. Actually this is a good scent, but compared to Bourdon's masterpiece it turns to be a rougher and kind of incomplete work. If you're into super-dry peppery incense fragrances go with no hesitation for French Lover: It's better and it was released 2 years earlier.

Posted
Laurel and other herbs, pepper, cedar, patchouli, frankincense, amber I'm revising my review. There are parts of this I like and parts that have trouble endorsing. I've tried this many, many times in the shop. Good points: very green and aromatic, a dry and powerful peppery-herbal mix. Reservations: on my skin, it gets tiresome after a while. For me, it is a very powerful and assertive one-note wonder. No grace notes. No subtlety. I love dry herbal scents. The fact that I keep trying this, and wanting to like it... and don't quite like it, says something to me. It is a marvelous, challenging, dry and aromatic scent. Try it and see how it suits you.

Posted
I'm a major Antoine Maisondieu groupie, but even with that bias in mind, I really think he's hit another one out of the park. Scent Two: Laurel is sharp, raw and substantial, and on me it seems to succeed due not to a fine balance but rather a fine <i>im</i>balance between the tingling, just-cracked quality of the laurel and pepper notes (I get a hint of cumin too, but not much) and the lighter dusty/dirty effects. The patchouli-amber base is also quietly present when it appears and just barely warm, while the spices maintain a fullness to the very end. The structure -- specifically the highlighting of the sharp, raw spice throughout the development -- reminds me of Maisondieu's recent treatment of Vetiver in ELd'O's Fat Electrician.

Posted
As a lover of spice prominent fragrances, I find it extremely easy to enjoy this. I remember focusing on the laurel (bay leaf) accord in two other fragrances and being slightly disappointed: Aqua Allegoria Laurier Reglisse by Guerlain and Acqua Della Macchia Mediterranea by Borsari the former being almost all licorice and no spice; and the latter being a wonderful fougere in its own right (in the vein of the fantastic [but discontinued] Calvin by Calvin Klein) but a bit too simple.

With Scent Two: Laurel I have found what I always hoped for in a laurel prominent scent. Realism, pungency and complexity.

The laurel note smells sundried, almost roasted in texture - with a bit of that oregano and/or thyme tickle and then starts off immediately blending with a strong and persistent ground peppercorn accord all swirling underneath a sharp cedar note. It is this definitive sharpness that lasts for the first hour a trademark of the Monocle x CdG fragrances that that showed up in Scent One: Hinoki, as eucalyptus and fresh cut wood. But this new release is much more aromatic. Fans of Lorenzo Villoresis heavy-handed aromatic fragrances (Spezie, Uomo) know exactly what I mean, because many of the LV scents typically smell raw, almost shockingly intense, and it is a style of perfumery that polarizes colognoisseurs. You either enjoy it or you dont.

Hidden among the intensity of the spices, is a fresh-turned-earth accord: dirt, moss, and branches of trees on the ground. Certain types of vetiver conjure up that feeling for me, and yet STL has no vetiver at all. Its more a feeling of natural, rugged earth. The spices smell like they have a bit of dirt still left on them they are not in the kitchen to be used for foodtheyre still being harvested in their raw, dry state.

If I smell my skin up close during the final dry down, I can make out a quite wonderful patchouli note and a tiny hint of crisp, salty amber. Pulling my nose away, the scent shifts back to its spices. Later on, Im able to smell the incense, hovering in the background. I think its what Antoine Maisondieu (the perfumer) added that gives it an aura of calmness & tranquility. Supposedly the scent is based upon the scent of a vacation to Lebanon and that regions handmade, laurel scented soaps. I have not smelled these soaps but I do know the feeling a hot, soapy bath give meespecially one that leaves traces of fragrance on skin: refreshment, relaxation and simplicity. The same feelings evoked by this wonderful scent.
Monocle Scent Two: Laurel by Comme des Garçons, 2009
Description:

Details:
DetailValue
Launched Date2009
GenderNeutral
AvailabilityIn Production
ByComme des Garçons
Base Notes
Bottle Designer
Middle Notes
Perfumer
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Model Name/TypeMPNEAN/UPC
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