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Kenzo Power contains notes of bergamot, coriander, cardamom, abstract floral chords (by using jasmine, rose, freesia), tolu balsam, cedar wood and labdanum.
The first time I use perfume in the morning before dressing, as Never spray it directly on the clothes; Nevertheless, the first convergence with Kenzo Power was in the afternoon, when I was already fully dressed, perfume and got my collar and sleeves. Kenzo Power has a long 'life' in the matter, where it is developing differently than the skin (the smell Kenzo Tokyo is also different - on paper sticks better than on the skin).
Kenzo Power offers a strong vanilla chords with bergamot with a slight aroma of coriander and cardamom. After the citrus and spicy start to come into play "abstract flower" chords - there is the fragrance of moss, green tea is also reminiscent of the fact that perfumes usually referred to as "water lily." In general, the floral notes Kenzo Power fresh, but, at the same time, the artificial.
In conjunction with the matter, bergamot is in an active state (my favorite phase in Kenzo Power) for a long time, and. when in effect the flowers, it starts to fade smoothly flowing in spicy and woody accords. Kenzo Power on the skin begins to "fragment" and to soften in about 40 minutes, I noticed faint vanilla notes of cedar and labdanum verge at the base. During use, Kenzo Power I have a thought about it - spring flavor: its floral heart, very "cool" and "fresh" suggests this idea. The style of Kenzo Power reminds me He Wood by Dsquared2 (aroma, which has not yet appeared in America after a year ago, is now available in Europe!)
Kenzo Power ranked "above average" in my perfume Olympus, but I'm not a fan of cool, fresh, 'watercolor' flavors, and I rarely meet abstract floral chords that I would remember for a long time. Kenzo Power is much more interesting to play in conjunction with the fabric, so drizzle it on your skin before you buy. If you like fresh, clean, a little spicy and floral aromas suggest you try Kenzo Power. (Kenzo Power is designed for men, but women do not find it too masculine).
Author: Anatoly Sverdlov
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