Anatomy flavor: Fairy Dust, Paris Hilton
 Everybody hates Paris, but it is always on the front pages.

These are the words of Neil Katz Parlux. Parlux has licensed perfume Paris Hilton, and Katz has good reason to be optimistic about its "power outlets" - fragrance Paris Hilton reportedly made about $ 90 million to date. In early October, Fairy Dust added to total an additional $ 1.5 million, plus the plan is expected to about $ 20 million.

I am puzzled by the charm of Paris Hilton. It's a certain kind of schadenfreude - people enjoy watching the young girl, who allegedly bathed in luxury. But gloating is not able to sell perfume, is not it? No, rather, perfume sold at some aspiration level. Perhaps the girls suggest that the way to be more consistent with Paris or assume that someone with her style of life must have a different taste in perfume plus funds to release something fabulous.

Who knows, maybe Paris Hilton has excellent taste in perfume? All I can say is that it is not as thin, which is reflected in her perfume line, because, the amount of money, time and creativity that has been invested in the duo Parlux + Paris Hilton, played the trick. About four flavors Hilton, who appeared before the Fairy Dust (Paris Hilton, Just Me, Heiress and Can Can), we can say that they, at least, adequate and suitable for use. My favorite of the four - Heiress (heiress): the very name connotes - she really got enough money, moreover, perfume smells like chewing gum. Tania Sanchez called him "a fun mix of cheap shampoo and canned peaches." Hey, at least he's hilarious! Today is very hard to find the funny perfume.

Fairy Dust is neither the best nor the worst of the perfume lines of Paris Hilton. It starts very sweet and fruity, and presumably based on the wine grape variety Prosecco (notes Fairy Dust: sparkling chords prosecco, pink peony, orange blossom, spring gardenia, water lily, peach nectar, patchouli, cashmere musk and vanilla cream) . But if you close your eyes, it presents a picture of a cheap wine. In the central part of the aroma - a vague floral accords with fruity overtones. In fact, there is no feeling of something rare, or at least, some special, "star fruity floral blend," but if tense, I would say that most stands out "Gardenia". Later, it smells like "stellar wood-musk based" with a touch of "pure, but at the same time, the dark material that is created by the action of patchouli."

It is not very heavy or sweet, but terribly boring. I did not expect that it will work of genius, but at least I was hoping for a share of the fun, but it is not found.

Author: Ann, New York