Reviews of Smolderose by January Scent Project

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Smolderose opens with a scent reminiscent of rose water, with a subtle jammy or amber tinge. It’s not as jammy or sweet as Rose Flash by Tauer, but the amber helps balance it, preventing it from becoming too watery. There is a hint of smokiness, though it’s mild—don’t expect a strong or overwhelming smoky aroma. Labdanum and oud aren’t very prominent. It has a slight sangria-like, tart vibe. Up close, I can detect a faint fruity sweetness, likely from the amber and floral notes. On paper, the smokiness is more apparent, but on my skin, the rose takes center stage and persists into the drydown.

As the fragrance nears its end, I catch hints of a light woody base and possibly patchouli, but it remains fairly linear. If you’re a fan of rose and want something a bit more complex than a typical rose air freshener, give this a try. I prefer it over other rose fragrances like Tea Rose. It's well-composed, with the rose not coming off as overly perfumey, as it’s nicely tempered by the other notes, despite the dominant rose scent.

This fragrance could work well in the fall, spring, and possibly winter due to its decent performance. Be sure to test it on both paper and skin. Like many scents, Smolderose smells different on skin—my partner detected salty elements and more woodiness on skin, while the smokiness was more apparent on paper. It’s one of the better rose fragrances out there, and if you like rose scents, it’s worth sampling. However, it may resemble other rose fragrances you already own, so I wouldn’t give it points for originality. It’s still a great fragrance, but I personally prefer Burvuvu for its incorporation of more woods and red cedar.
15th September 2024
283245
Smolderose was so what I wasn’t expecting when I first wore it that all thoughts of reviewing it were banished in a fug of ‘is that it?’ disappointment. This is one of those perfumes that had a near-perfect – for my taste – notes list and knowing the unafraid assertiveness of John Biebel’s other creations my expectations were raised. So, on first go the disappointment was that that the smoke was light and aerial rather than heavy, the rose similarly thin and clear rather than heady, and – oh woe – no saffron to be detected, far less the agarwood.
I revisited knowing a bit better what to expect and setting aside hopes of something smouldering – and it was worth it. While by no means anywhere close to being one of my favourite rose perfumes Smolderose nonetheless has its moments. It wrongfoots the wearer almost immediately by coming on quite airy and light, but then uncoils to offer the lovely BDSM temptation of freshly polished black jackboots that brings out my inner masochist, combining it with an almost reedy smokiness and that thin, rose water kind of sweetness that trickles through it. The cade keeps wanting to drag the thing into sordid, tarry depths, with the patchouli valiantly attempting to beef up the rose, but the rest strains the other way, pulling into the light. And that makes for a certain dynamism that enlivens the wearing experience – there is the ozonic tug of the sea at one end combined with the grease and fumes of the automobile workshop at the other, with bang in the middle a ritual involving starched white robes and the sprinkling of rose water.
21st April 2024
280232

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Smolderose (the EDP version) is beautiful and arresting, but I have to admit straight up that I cannot smell the rose in it. What I smell is primarily the head-spinning fumes of a room where tins of black boot polish are stored, a smell that is tarry and (pleasantly) chemical rather than smoky.

I smell the lemony-minty green sting of geranium in a minor key, which is a rosy note, I guess, as well as the leathery undertone of choya nakh (roasted seashells), a distillate used in very careful doses in traditional Indian attar perfumery to add a marine-leathery tone. Choya nakh is also used by Mandy Aftel to give Tango its smoky, skanky-leather undertone, and indeed, there is a somewhat similar tarry boot-rubber effect in that perfume too.

But, for me, that almost benzene-like honk of black boot polish is what prevails. This seething, fizzing, gaseous miasma of fumes joins with the scent of our old Calor Gas heater, whose electric bars, when heated up, emitted an addictive aroma of heated electrical cogs and springs. I have a fondness for this accord, which I smell also in Gris Clair (Serge Lutens), because it seems to occupy a physical space in the air, charging the oxygen particles with ions and static electricity. I should mention that Smolderose takes up such a firm physical presence in the air that my head swims if I inhale too deeply.

Some may be offended that I don't pick up on the charred rose or the other multi-layered complexities that I'm sure are actually there, in the fabric of the scent. But what I smell works for me anyway. If you, like me, loved the cozy smells of the school supplies closet, with its vaporous, almost intoxicating fumes of glue, polish, paper, ink, and other chemicals, or have experienced the particularly Irish childhood experience of hugging the Calor Gas heater until it heated up enough to thaw your frozen limbs, then perhaps Smolderose EDP will strike a memory chord for you too.
17th August 2020
232919
A very interesting and unique take on rose. I haven't smelled anything like it. There is rose all the way, but paired with what smells like gasoline to me. Not oud or wood, but more like gasoline from a petrol station. There are other notes of course, likely resins and florals and even sea shell is mentioned in the notes pyramid above.

It is an intriguing fragrance. I like it, but because of its uniqueness I suspect one might get bored with it after some time. Although it is a rose-focused scent, it leans more masculine in my opinion.
28th August 2018
206120
A bright blast of citrus. It sparkles. The rose seems to change its character throughout the top, heart, and the base - from spicy sweet, honeyed, then earthy. I get a smoky, sugary wood vibe from time to time. This has an incense-y, patchouli base that goes on and on. Overall I love this stuff. I'm a huge fan of rose perfumes. And, this one is different from all I own. A decant of this will be in order one day.
5th August 2018
205016
Opens bittersweet, smoky-oily and jarringly chemical, pretty much like a noxious petrol spill. It settles quickly enough to reveal a drier a little less unpleasant but no less weird melange of fruity/smoky notes that reminds me of cheap shampoos.

I'm disappointed. I've heard wonderful things about Smolderose and had looked forward to sampling it. I love rose scents and I'm familiar with rose-oud combos but this oddball is definitely not one of them. I don't smell any rose of any known genre or subspecies here either.

Maybe I'm hyperosmic to the ‘fruity floral shampoo' note but IMO it has no business being here. In any case the ‘petrol fumes' introduction to rose & resins has been done before and with much greater finesse in Histoires de Parfums Rosam. It makes this effort by January Scent Project seems amateurish in comparison.

Ultimately it boils down to the scent. I didn't enjoy it, couldn't scrub it off soon enough. And that's why I'm giving it a ‘THUMBS DOWN'.

4th June 2018
202453
Smolderose is a delicious jammy and smoky rose. It is mysterious and alluring. Gypsy rose! Esmeralda. Add some incense smoke, olibanum, patchouli and wow, mind blowing. Perfect for Fall days. Excellent work by John Biebel.
30th March 2018
199655
A beautiful Rose and an unusual and novel way presenting it. In structure it is reminiscent of Dusita Oud Infini using the Bouquet of the Sea, rather than the Deer Musk. This has an effect of having the Rose as a Star rather than the Star and from a background of animalic.
Agarwood presents itself much the way of
Heeley's Agarwoud.
Is it the Cade and Labdanum working together to produce a gentle Smokey, Petrol, Leathery tilt?
Bergamot and Frankincense provide an acidic, slicing Pepper to counter to the sugars.
Not your average Rose Oud.
Now, laying down a layer of the Oil on my skin, I first meet an impression which is.
Working all day splitting Springs, wrapping in Cedar boughs, laying against the bonfire. A trinity perfume of: the Sea, the Forest and the Burn.
Anyone who has nosed a number of, particularly Moroccan, Damask Absolutes, will recognize the opening Spiciness and Fire.
Biebel highlights the Natural Smokiness of this nectar and expands upon it, just enough to have me recognize "Of Course", the Smoke.
The Rosiness whispers around the edges and with Absolutes the Rose comes into focus.
With John's creation he has managed to present a fuzzy Static Picture of the Rose's olfactory development.
For me, that is Art. I, will wear this, often.

Another beautiful and stunning, John Biebel Masterpiece.
10th March 2018
202661
i love this: a dry-ish, greenish, slightly fruity, slightly smokey and bitter rose (with faint oily undertones of something like slumberhouse pear & olive.) definitely not your usual rose in a field that is way over-saturated. i want a bottle.
1st December 2017
194740
My least favorite of the John Biebel offerings from his new line. Selperniku is definitely my favorite of the three with Eiderantler lagging way behind, and Smolderose just behind that. To be fair, I'm not a big rose guy when it comes to my fragrances, although I do have a couple with a rose presence.

Smolderose has a bit of a dirty edge to it. I believe this is due to the cade and the patchouli notes dirtying up the rose. I can also smell the saffron in the opening as well, which mixed with the rose note gives just a slight impression of the rose note in Slumberhouse's Sadanne. Smolderose is not nearly as syrupy as Sadanne, but there is a definite similarity in the character of the rose note in the way it's mixed with the saffron, the cade oil and the patch. The listed note, "roasted seashells" sounds like something from an Imaginary Authors frag, and I'm trying to imagine what that smells like? I think I'm picking up just a slight bit of olibanum as this dries down, which is a nice addition to the overall fragrance and helps move it into territory that I'm more comfortable with. Overall I think this is one I would enjoy much more if my wife wore it instead of me.
31st July 2017
189485