Men
09 Orange Star
Acordes principales
Descripción
09 Orange Star by Tauer Perfumes is an oriental floral creation designed for both men and women. Launched in 2010, this fragrance was composed by Andy Tauer. Its olfactive structure opens with top notes of mandarin and clementine; the heart reveals the presence of orange blossom and lemon grass; while the base settles on ambergris, tonka bean and vanilla.
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Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
955 votos
- Positivo 67%
- Negativo 27%
- Neutral 6.1%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
Comunidad
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Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
Preferencia
Cómo valora la comunidad esta fragancia.
Uso recomendado
Estación y momento del día con más votos.
Dónde comprar
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Amazon
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Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.
Longevidad
Escasa
Débil
Moderada
Duradera
Muy duradera
Estela
Suave
Moderada
Pesada
Enorme
Género
Femenino
Unisex femenino
Unisex
Unisex masculino
Masculino
Precio
Extremadamente costoso
Ligeramente costoso
Precio moderado
Buen precio
Excelente precio
Reseñas
Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.
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25 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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Starts with a realistic, juicy mandarin blending perfectly with pale orange blossom and a touch of cinnamon. It then evolves into a sweet, seductive amber that transforms the scent, though it ultimately settles into a very soft vintage barbershop soap. Longevity and projection are top-notch; a beautiful, original balance for mandarin lovers. Rating: 7/10
Opens with realistic mandarin and clementine juice, accented with neroli and cinnamon. Then a sweet, warm amber appears that hooks you. The dry down is synthetic and soft soapy, balancing the amber like vintage barbershop soaps. Longevity and projection are very good. Original and balanced; it’s among the best if you’re looking for mandarin.
Very citrusy and salty at first, like oranges and mandarins, but it quickly becomes soapy, like an orange bath gel. I’m not convinced. The drydown sweetens slightly with vanilla and tonka bean, but very little. It seems to have quality, but I don’t like it. I can’t find the Tauer DNA present in LDDM or Lonestar. It’s a good citrus, but the soapy mid-notes ruin it for me. Lasts quite a while and projects well, ideal for heat and unisex wear
Opens with oranges and mandarins, citrusy and salty. It quickly turns soapy, like orange bath gel. It doesn’t convince me. The dry down sweetens slightly with vanilla and tonka bean, but not much. It has quality, but I don’t like it. I can’t find the Tauer DNA as in others. A good citrus, but the soapy mid-notes make me reject it. Good performance, lasts hours and projects. Recommended for heat, totally unisex.
I agree with the previous comments: the opening is intense mandarin, which, while not fascinating to me, is the best part. In the mid-notes, it smells very different, soapy like detergent, and improves slightly towards that barbershop soap at the end. Quality is noticeable, but it doesn’t excite me; I see it as dispensable. The performance is beastly; I applied it nine hours ago and it’s still there. It’s unisex, but I definitely wouldn’t buy the bottle
I agree with the previous reviews. The intense mandarin opening doesn’t fascinate me, but the dry down is very different, soapy like detergent. As it dries, it improves and recalls barbershop soap. You can tell it’s quality with nine-hour performance, but it doesn’t excite me; I see it as dispensable. Unisex, half man, half woman. I like it but wouldn’t buy the bottle.
A blend of ambergris, tonka bean, neroli and mandarin. Creamy citrus and versatile for casual or semi-warm weather. It fixes well but lasts seven hours. I smell it more on women. A unique and exquisite scent. Rating: 9/10 for quality, versatility and presentation.
One of my favourites. A sweet, ambered orange opening that lasts for hours. It quickly transitions to a five-star hotel shower gel with realistic orange, then returns to the ambered orange. It lasts a very long time; sillage and longevity are top-tier for citrus. It’s a fake citrus because it’s a complex orange soap. Deeper than Lush or Prada L’Homme. Suitable for daily wear in hot weather if you have the means. Everyone loves it; they say ‘what soap’.
It’s the second Andy I’ve purchased. Excellent and versatile aroma, but so rich that I don’t wear it daily. It’s a gem.
It’s enchanting. It’s a fake citrus, so don’t expect a pure fruit scent. It opens with luxurious soap and juicy orange, smelling clean and artisanal. It’s elegant, versatile, and in warm weather lasts over 10 hours. The projection is wild at first. There are subtle animal and floral notes, very much in the Tauer DNA. The dry down is vanilla-soap-orange. An exceptional buy.
Not bad, but it doesn’t quite convince me. It starts well with a realistic mandarin, yet fades within 15 minutes and then smells like detergent. Look elsewhere for something fresh; you won’t find it here. Try it before buying.
Not bad, but I don’t get it. The opening smells great of real mandarin, but it lasts barely 10–15 minutes. Afterwards, it turns into a mix that smells like laundry detergent to me. It’s not bad, but it doesn’t convince me. If you’re looking for something fresh, Orange Star isn’t for you. Try it before buying
I agree with some comments on Fragrantica. At first, it promises with those citrus notes, but then it smells like detergent with lemon undertones; if you want the Orange Star scent, go wash your clothes. For a citrus, the longevity is beastly, lasting me over eight hours. I didn’t like it and ended up selling it
I agree with some comments on Fragrantica, although when you spray it there’s a promising opening with those citrus notes, but the fragrance turns into a detergent smell with lemon undertones; if you want to know what Orange Star smells like, go wash your clothes. The longevity for a citrus fragrance is something bestial; it lasted me more than eight hours, I didn’t like it and ended up selling it.
To those who say it smells like detergent, which supermarket are you shopping at? I don’t want to criticise, but it has some fabric. Perhaps art is a lie and I’m wrong, but it’s hard to be a genius. You create a unique sweet citrus that no other brave brand releases. There is no market; there is genius without worrying about pleasing everyone. It blends mandarin, tonka bean and amber. It’s citrusy but not fresh, with a tempting and dangerous sweetness. Ingredients of the highest quality and it performs like a beast all day. Let the citrus line up. Try it and you’ll see.
Hey, you people who say it smells like detergent, which supermarket do you shop at? For tomorrow, I say. One has to see what can be read down there… Far from my intention to criticise colleagues whose judgement is just as valid as mine, but it has some bite. Maybe Joan Miró only made lines and dots, just as Chillida barely managed to sculpt little dolls on the beach, and it’s also possible that with Starway to Heaven, Led Zeppelin only did something weird that can’t be understood. I understand as a very feasible possibility that art might be a lie, that you’re right and I’m wrong. And that Orange Star smells like detergent. But hey, it must be difficult to be a genius. You craft a sweet citrus almost artisanally that few houses, if not none, would have the courage to release because it’s simply an unplaceable aroma. It’s the opposite of market segmentation; here there’s no market, there’s a genius doing the only thing he can do: creating masterpieces. Without worrying about how many will like it. Believing it’s so good that it will fall by itself. You mix a spectacular tangerine accord with tonka bean, the queen of this perfume, and an amber that is part of the modus operandi of his killer label. You achieve something that is citrusy but not fresh, with such a tempting sweetness that it encloses so much danger. And with ingredients of maximum quality, no, not next. But on top of that, you manage to make it perform like a beast! Let the citrus scents line up and we’ll finish this review quickly, which is also a vindication. It will last all day, like every creation this man releases, and besides the compliments, if you’re one of those who values them, they’ll fall on you like a cascade. You’ll take an eternity to finish the bottle… But never mind, you do all that and others will say you’ve released something that smells like detergent. You deal with it, Andy. Don’t stop for anything in the world.
For those who argue that few houses would have the courage to release something like this, I say Lush launched a fragrance called Karma in 1995. You don’t need to be very sharp to know that Orange Star is a very close ‘inspiration’. That one was truly something new and innovative. The genius Tauer only had to do a copy-paste of Karma. Yes, the raw materials are better, but nothing outstanding. The tangerine citrus notes are synthetic; you can tell just by smelling it that it’s not natural, which is why I understand those who say it smells like detergent; this molecule is also used in some cleaners and air fresheners. In fact, that’s why it’s a nuclear scent and lasts so long; if it were natural it would be ephemeral and you’d only recognise it at the beginning. The difference with Karma comes in the dry-down: Karma stays green, earthy and deep thanks to patchouli. This one is sweetened by tonka bean and ends up being a sweet syrup.
A delicious ambered orange, one of my favourites for extreme heat.
Citrus aroma, tangerine orange that upon spraying reminds of medicine, but when it dries is when its quality really shines through. The projection is good and longevity is very good… 8 to 10 hours perfectly on skin, by 10 hours it starts to fade until it disappears.
Orange lollipops, extreme-quality incense and the magic of a madman from central Europe. There may be thousands of notes in between, but that’s what I perceive: a fruity-incense blend with a fixation that will leave your skin impregnated all day. A top-shelf extract. For smelling different, attractive and semi-formal, I see it as a very good option. Occasion… it’s not the most formal, nor is it a CK One, for the middle ground, of luxury hehe.
This happens to me with this and most of Tauer’s fragrances I smell in a single scent: here I smell something from Desert Air, something from Incense Extreme, Sundowner and in Desert Air I smell something from Orange Star. Presumably Tauer has a common base; they turn it up, turn it down, remove and add to create most of their perfumes. The detergent smell might be it; it has that effect of walking past the detergent aisle in the supermarket. PS: To those who defend perfumers as if they were their brothers, is everything alright on the roof?
It’s like sucking on orange lollipops with high-quality frankincense and a touch of a madman from Central Europe. It’s a fruity-frankincense blend that clings to your skin all day. A potent extract for smelling different, attractive, and semi-formal. It’s not for everyone, nor is it like a CK One; it’s something intermediate and luxurious, haha
Orange citrus with hints of amber and vanilla. For some it won’t be a head-turner, but it’s an exquisite aroma with great longevity. When the core of summer hits in the south, this fragrance clings to the skin and performs like a champion (8/10 hours). True, there are more expensive and creative niche options, but nowadays most prefer not to take risks and settle for something safe. In my opinion, it’s a very good acquisition. Even if it’s not the triple somersault of citrus scents, it’s excellent in quality and harmonic development, with great versatility for daily use or hot workdays. If you want a citrus that feels like the chicest of the niche, get this. It’s admirable that so much effort has been put into making it perform as well as it does for the price. About time. As always, I recommend testing any niche perfume on skin before buying.
Very rich, but in hot weather it makes me feel even hotter wearing it.
Brutal perfume. It’s citrusy, but in the height of summer it feels dense rather than airy. Smells of orange and tangerine that last the entire life of the fragrance, surrounded by heavy notes like amber, incense and vanilla. The best part is the dry-down: the fruit recedes slightly and a brighter, sharper accord emerges. Orange Star is a delight and lasts incredibly long on the skin.