Reviews of Vert Bohème by Tom Ford
Aptly named. The big, loud and extremely free-spirited galbanum note pervades the entirety of the fragrance. Splashed with some white florals and orange, it gives a very lively, happy, energetic feeling that is absolutely impossible to ignore. Unfortunately - but much like most people of a bohemian inclination - it is flighty and short of attention, as it can never quite decide what it is that it wants to do, and before a decision could be made it's moved on. Had this fragrance taken a direction, and stuck around for more than 3-4 hours, it would get high marks. But it didn't.
AMAZING. Just amazing release from Tom Ford. Its sharp, green, ozonic, floral, citrusy, creamy...a real spring gem right here. This smells like a mix of Chanel Bel Respiro and Hermes Iris Ukiyoe. One of my favorite spring releases ever, its so vivid and paints the picture of late march in the most perfect way.
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The opening blast is dominated by a galbanum, which is a touch bitter but not very astringent, in combination is an orangey mandarin impression. The latter is not very fresh, bit quite bright nonetheless. A bit later a violet leaf adds a green undertone, and this leaf, together with the galbanum, are the main 'vert' elements in the composition.
Some florals arrive, with a magnolia especially noteworthy, with and undertone of whiffs of lilies and gustavias.
Touches of honeysuckle add a bit of sweetness, but it is not a particularly impressive rendering of a honeysuckle fragrance - this is not Creed's Chevrefeuille after all, but with time it develops a bit more, albeit in a very synthetic manner.
I get moderate sillage, very good projection, and eight hours of longevity on my skin.
An agreeable spring creation, that is not bad, but eventually too gennric to convince. 2.75/5
Some florals arrive, with a magnolia especially noteworthy, with and undertone of whiffs of lilies and gustavias.
Touches of honeysuckle add a bit of sweetness, but it is not a particularly impressive rendering of a honeysuckle fragrance - this is not Creed's Chevrefeuille after all, but with time it develops a bit more, albeit in a very synthetic manner.
I get moderate sillage, very good projection, and eight hours of longevity on my skin.
An agreeable spring creation, that is not bad, but eventually too gennric to convince. 2.75/5
Florist shop greens (cut stems + water) ruined by unconvincing floral notes rendered in a cleaning product style. Comes across as a cut-price Cristalle rather than the wallet emptying aspirational stuff TF would like it to be. Stick with Cristalle if you like this kind of thing; it has the archness to put any wearer in their place.
I am concluding that To Ford fragrances can be grouped into classes...quite a few of them smell alike enough to be flankers of each other.
Such s the case here...falls in line with Oud Mineral and Oud Fleur. There is another one but I cannot think of it now.
There is a sparkling, metallic quality to it as others have mentioned. This limits the application to only a group of people that can pull this off...and I am not one of them.
I find it leans feminine as well, with a prominent floral lead and a patchouli backing.
You should like this if you like the ones I mentioned above.
Such s the case here...falls in line with Oud Mineral and Oud Fleur. There is another one but I cannot think of it now.
There is a sparkling, metallic quality to it as others have mentioned. This limits the application to only a group of people that can pull this off...and I am not one of them.
I find it leans feminine as well, with a prominent floral lead and a patchouli backing.
You should like this if you like the ones I mentioned above.
"Boheme: A person with artistic or literary interests who disregards conventional standards of behavior"
As a whole, that seems to describe Tom Ford's approach in his Private Blend creations. And now, we have the "Les Exraits Vert" series EdP with such a moniker: Vert Bohème.
This is a really "green" fragrance, unquestionably. I'd summarize it as an aromatic bitter floral loaded with greenness.
The South American gustavia superba note - commonly known as "membrillo" - appears to have a sweet, waxy odor during bee pollination season only. But after too long, the membrillo flower can end up smelling awful.
So Tom Ford's utilization of this note is rather ambitious and thinking radically outside of the box - apropos to the name of this fragrance!
I can only assume that part of the floral mix I perceive with Vert Bohème includes membrillo. Overall, I find it a bit odd for me and leaning feminine, with magnolia dominating, violet offering a touch of its presence, and a nice honeysuckle note. It resembles Chanel's Cristalle EdT perfume for ladies.
An acquired taste EdP, IMO.
As a whole, that seems to describe Tom Ford's approach in his Private Blend creations. And now, we have the "Les Exraits Vert" series EdP with such a moniker: Vert Bohème.
This is a really "green" fragrance, unquestionably. I'd summarize it as an aromatic bitter floral loaded with greenness.
The South American gustavia superba note - commonly known as "membrillo" - appears to have a sweet, waxy odor during bee pollination season only. But after too long, the membrillo flower can end up smelling awful.
So Tom Ford's utilization of this note is rather ambitious and thinking radically outside of the box - apropos to the name of this fragrance!
I can only assume that part of the floral mix I perceive with Vert Bohème includes membrillo. Overall, I find it a bit odd for me and leaning feminine, with magnolia dominating, violet offering a touch of its presence, and a nice honeysuckle note. It resembles Chanel's Cristalle EdT perfume for ladies.
An acquired taste EdP, IMO.
An intense green floral that sparkles. Galbanum and mandarin first erupts into a green fizziness and segues into a white floral middle phase of magnolia and honeysuckle then fades (mercifully and quickly) into a hint of faint violet cloud.
A Tom Ford creation that I cannot, in good conscience, endorse.
For the record, this is not unisex.
A disappointment.
A Tom Ford creation that I cannot, in good conscience, endorse.
For the record, this is not unisex.
A disappointment.
The magnolia and violet smacked me in the face. I can see where TF tried to go with this one, but it just didn't work for me. The notes seem generic and kind of cheap IMO.
It's not bad, but on me it's just a boring and cloying bitterness. Nothing Boheme to it. Decent longevity and sillage.
An infallible jewel? Funny description! The gustavia tree of heaven also sounds an unlikely species, just marketing candy floss which fools nobody.
Objectively, it's certainly green. Hyacinth, nasturtium, ivy, flowershop, that sort of area. This type of green from various synthetic molecules risks associations to air fresheners and similar products. It is better done by some of Fueguia's creations, especially Lago del desierto where the green is truly pure and naturalistic, reminiscent of a lake in the open air.
Here it is muddied by conventional perfumey notes, but may be ok if you can't get hold of the Fueguia product. I put it somewhere between neutral and thumbs up.
Objectively, it's certainly green. Hyacinth, nasturtium, ivy, flowershop, that sort of area. This type of green from various synthetic molecules risks associations to air fresheners and similar products. It is better done by some of Fueguia's creations, especially Lago del desierto where the green is truly pure and naturalistic, reminiscent of a lake in the open air.
Here it is muddied by conventional perfumey notes, but may be ok if you can't get hold of the Fueguia product. I put it somewhere between neutral and thumbs up.
This is a lovely, green, spring-like scent. The crisp galbanum is softened by a white floral heart. Not sweet or heavy. The green eventually diminishes and the scent becomes a pretty white floral. A faint hint of violet pervades. I don't get any wood.