Fleur du Lac fragrance notes
- floral notes, vanilla
Latest Reviews of Fleur du Lac
Coming between Elizabeth Arden's 1934 creation, Blue Grass, and Millot's 1947 creation, Insolent, Coty's 1942 Fleur Du Lac is a fusion of both visions.
Translated as "lake flower," the name for this scent, still available for purchase on line, would at first denote the water lily. Alas, that flower has no scent.
The obvious alternative is the stately reed. Fleur Du Lac has the celeriac notes of Insolent and the grassy, artemesia dry fragrance of Blue Grass. It is quite pleasant and quite demure, refreshing to splash on in the heat of summer.
It's rather a find as I'd never heard of it before and it certainly doesn't have the press or exposure of other Coty scents of the past.
Worth seeking out as the one ounce bottles of the cologne are very affordable.
Translated as "lake flower," the name for this scent, still available for purchase on line, would at first denote the water lily. Alas, that flower has no scent.
The obvious alternative is the stately reed. Fleur Du Lac has the celeriac notes of Insolent and the grassy, artemesia dry fragrance of Blue Grass. It is quite pleasant and quite demure, refreshing to splash on in the heat of summer.
It's rather a find as I'd never heard of it before and it certainly doesn't have the press or exposure of other Coty scents of the past.
Worth seeking out as the one ounce bottles of the cologne are very affordable.
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