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Orange Star by Tauer, 2010

83% Positive Reviews
Rated #1836 in Fragrances

Posted
I am not sure about this one - I want to love it, but when first sprayed, it has a rsther overpowering cheap bath bubble/soapy top note that stays on for an hour or so. It is very, very strong. Then it settles to spicy very sweet orange, violet and fizzy pop. A very femininine scent, too feminine for me, and perhaps a bit too overpowering for my workplace. A nice date scecnt, though.

Posted
I cant fully make up my mind about this one. I like the fact that, after an initial and somewhat confused outburst of fruity/green flavors, in the body of this scent the orange and citrusy notes in general are smoothened by a softer layer of vanilla and the likes.. The sweetness that remains uncontrasted towards the end however tends to bear too faint a resemblance to the picture I had drawn in my mind, inspired by such a bold label as Orange Star. Worth a try still.

Posted
Orange and Amber. L'Air Du Desert Marocain with Orange Sherbet. It's nice.Tauer fans will be able to identify this even if they have never smelled it before. The Tauer signature is very apparent. I admire Andy Tauer immensely. I adore L'Air and Incense Extreme and I have them both. I am still discovering other Tauer fragrances. This one, mmmmm, I can't help but compare it to L'Air. It smells a bit, but only a bit, lighter, zingier to begin with; the clementine, mandarin, and orange flower coming together to smell like a big juicy Jaffa Orange, but to me it is very close to L'Air in the drydown and in my view L'Air is more beautiful. Orange Star is maybe a bit more playful, younger. Think summer music festivals, warm breezes, love, and twenty first century hippies.

Posted
This has the perfect sillage and longevity by my standards. It isn't overwhelming, but it stays and is rather noticeable. Unfortunately, after the sweetness of the orange disappeared, I was left with a nasty green herbal/floral note that I absolutely hated. It's very grassy and mildly nauseating. It's not a total scrubber, but I won't be wearing it again.

Posted
The opening of this has more edge than a head shop full of orange fractals. I enjoy Tauers audacity; the upfront blast that says, Dammit, I love wearing fumes. Here we have tangy, bitter citrus peel, the slight gingeryness of lemongrass and what to my nose read as a spectrum of orangey aromachemicals ranging from the cleaning product to the juicy gumdrop. I know most swear how natural this one is, but to me the combination of the verité and the chemically enhanced is what makes this opening so extraordinary. The volume drops pretty quickly on this one, though longevity is excellent. And when the scent settles, there is a slight violet-like powderiness, the citrusy notes relax and get smoothed by a restrained almost-not-there sweetness nudging up from the base. An orange like no other, and one no-one should fear wearing.

Posted
This fragrance is intriguing- I smell honeyed incense, rather than any of the notes listed-the longevity is fantastic! Seems to belong to the same family as Miel de Bois and Alien Liqeuer- deep, throaty, very sensual-

Posted
This is one of the most incredible incense-based fragrances I've tried. Not sure how it happened, but I fell in love despite my not being a fan of citrus. Now I know this for sure: it's the bad, synthetic citrus accords that last forever and scar your psyche for life. Not the case here, I'm left wishing the intensity of the citrus present upon opening would come back, so I find myself spraying more. If you put me in a room with a bottle of this tonight, it would probably be drained by morning.

Posted
As with other Tauer scents, this is a very strong scent, big on both sillage and longevity. Do not be deluded that the word "orange" means a light citrus eau de Cologne! This packs a punch. The opening has a pleasant citrus orange scent that lasts a long time. The floral middle notes are blended well and enjoyable. As the whole warms down, the amber and vanilla are pleasant. This is an elegant orange scent. As with all luxe scents, try before you buy.

Posted
The mandarin opening should be refreshing and zingy, but it just smells like soap. This is followed by a waxy mixture of vanilla and cedarwood. It's certainly unusual, but I don't think it works.

Posted
Orange Star is hard to pin down. It smells almost suspiciously different from one person's skin to the next. It takes on alternate personalities depending on whether you spray it on paper, fabric or your own wrist. It makes you believe it's a citrus before pulling your senses into something thicker and deeper, and just when you think you've got it sussed, it lightens up and gives you a cheeky tangerine wink.

One one level, it does pretty much what it says on the can. Top notes of sweet mandarines? Check. A heart of orange flowers? Check. Ambergris and tonka beans in the base? Yes indeed, check. But this compelling new scent has a life far beyond a few words printed on a marketing leaflet. Sure, you get citrus notes when you first spray it, but there aren't many citrus openings out there that immediately make you think you've just sunk your teeth into a freshly cut segment of the most succulent orange this side of Eden. The juices run down the side of your mouth and you roll your tongue across your lips, trying to catch every drop... but wait, the analogy doesn't quite work, because this fragrance is never sticky, and whilst it flirts with gourmand sensibilities, you wouldn't mistake it for a confection.

Next comes the seamless (but perhaps too rapid?) transition to the blossoms, and you throw your head back and realise you're sitting on the grass in the middle of a pristine orchard with hundreds of fragrant blooms bursting upon the branches around you. The leaves above your head frame the sunlight into a thousand different shapes. And every now and then, a contrast appears, just enough to prevent the whole experience from becoming twee or sickly. Is it the richness of the soil below you, the smokiness of the tree bark or the bitterness of the pips you've just tasted? Perhaps it's all three, working in harmony with the petals.

Night falls. You know the orange flowers are still nearby, but now you realise that the orchard has been in a familiar country all along: Tauerville. Allowing your body to sink down onto the floor, you breathe in the delightful, vanilla-tinged riches of Incense Extrême - and to an extent, L'Air Du Désert Marocain - which have now been made suitably cleaner and lighter. You drift into sleep... and guess what, when you awake, you're still in the same place! Purple prose aside, if nothing else, Orange Star is easily one of the most long-lasting scents I've encountered for a while, not to mention one of the most diffusive. Indeed, when I wore it to work the other day - in the name of research for this review - I was virtually attacked by a horde of ravenous colleagues demanding to know the name of this astonishing nectar I was wearing.

There's no doubt I enjoy some Tauer creations more than others, but as far as I'm concerned, this one's a winner. It's perplexing and beguiling and, most importantly, it makes great company from the moment you apply a few judicious sprays in the morning, to the quieter hours of the early evening, when your attention is caught every now and then by that cheeky tangerine wink.
Orange Star by Tauer, 2010
By:
Description:

Details:
DetailValue
Top Notesclementine, red mandarin, orange flower
Middle Noteslemongrass, violet flowers
Base Notesambergris, vanilla, patchouli, Ambreine
Launched Date2010
GenderWomen
PerfumerAndy Tauer
AvailabilityIn Production
ByTauer
Bottle Designer
Models:
Model Name/TypeMPNEAN/UPC
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