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Wood & Absinth by Mark Buxton, 2009

40% Positive Reviews
Rated #8629 in Fragrances

Posted
Frankly a disappointing and conventional scent with an almost artificial woody final accord, a fruity-floral (rosey-orangy) feel and an anisy amber too sweet and boring. It reminds me slightly Rocabar Hermes with its minty and coniferous amber but i find it similar to a huge quantity of designer fragrances. Not the best work from Mark Buxton.

Posted
Designer in drag. I'm a huge Buxton's fan but Woods & Absinth it's just an unremarkable dry woody composition overloaded with woody amber. Uninteresting, unoriginal and cheap. I'm sick of niche brands pretending we buy average department store fragrances at high-end prices. Thumbs down.

Posted
A perfect mix between the anise top note and the mysterious wood basenote. The top note draws you in with an intense presence, and the woody basenote gives that dark mysterious touch. My favorite fragrance in Mark Buxton's collection.

Posted
Wood & Absinth comes across to me as quite translucent. I really dont smell citrus, sage, or anise. I will take the word of whoever supplied the pyramid that the floral note I smell is jasmine. But I do get definite woodnotes: rosewood and vetiver with an occasional airy shadow of absinth circulating through now and then. These woodnotes make up almost the total fragrance for me. Its a lovely fragrance soft too soft. I can barely smell it on my skin, but I do get delicate, wispy ends of sillage now and then for an hour or two. I like this the idea of this fragrance very much: It has the notes and the timbre and the ambiances that I love I just wish it would come across with a stronger presence for me.

Posted
Mark Buxton's Wood & Absinthe present a huge whallop of the 'woody amber' material used in many modern masculines, ranging from Givenchy Play to two different Boadicia the Victorious fragrances (Intense is one of them, the other I believe is Exotic but I may be wrong on that). Basically the fragrance is this woody amber with a progression of different accords that attempt to mask what we're really smelling. The intial blast of an herbal/anise accord similar to absinthe readily gives way to 'the' woody amber accord. At first there is a sweet floral/woody note (rosewood? perhaps) that joins the woody amber, then a sharper, more peppery accord takes over trying to hide the woody amber. From this point the fragrance persists for a few hours and fades out without further development.

For the purposes of full disclosure, this review is not based on a full wear but rather only three arm-samplings. Normally this would be wholly insufficient experience to gather enough information for a review, but sometimes you just know what you're smelling. I'm surprised Buxton, an excellent perfumer, would put his name on something like this. There's little structure and zero that distinguishes it from the myriad other woody ambers available at the mall these days. This is a rare thumbs down for me.
Wood & Absinth by Mark Buxton, 2009
Description:

Buxton describes this as: The contrast between 2 very different natural products: wormwood and vetiver like a love or hate relationship. If you find the right balance they are in perfect harmony

Details:
DetailValue
Top Notescitrus, orange, clary sage, anise
Middle Notesjasmine, rosewood
Base Noteswood, vetiver
Launched Date2009
GenderNeutral
PerfumerMark Buxton
AvailabilityIn Production
ByMark Buxton
Bottle Designer
Models:
Model Name/TypeMPNEAN/UPC
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