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Estrella de la Manana
Acordes principales
Descripción
Estrella de la Manana by Une Nuit Nomade is an oriental woody fragrance for men and women. This creation, launched in 2024, is a new addition to the collection. The nose behind this composition is Jérôme Di Marino.
Resumen rápido
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Comunidad
411 votos
- Positivo 66%
- Negativo 20%
- Neutral 14%
Comunidad
Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.
Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
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Uso recomendado
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Dónde comprar
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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
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12 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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A genuine real cacao, oriental and resinous scent, devoid of sweetness. It smells like burning cocoa powder over wood. It’s a true olfactory experience, but not one to buy blindly.
Very real cocoa, oriental and resinous, without any sweetness. Smoky. As if you were burning cocoa powder over a wood fire. A genuine experience for the nose, but not one to buy blindly.
This perfume is not for blind buying; it’s very, very strong. It even gives me a headache. A resounding no for me.
It’s a high-impact perfume. You need to know what you’re smelling. It’s lots of cocoa and resins. Even with just that, it’s an extra-strong scent with impossible longevity and sillage that you can’t ignore. You must like the dark, resinous, pasty, and dense. It’s special. If you like cocoa, it will suit you; if you’ve never smelled it, it’s a good place to try it. Be careful, there’s no versatility. It’s for cold climates, informal occasions, and open spaces. Indoors, it could kill someone. As it dries down, the cocoa, the star of the opening, fades, and the resins take over. I don’t smell woods.
It’s a chocolate perfume, but as if it were 100% cocoa, dark and bitter. Probably due to the resins and birch, it gives a sensation of smoke and sweat, something animal. The vanilla rounds it off like a gourmand, but an outsider. Surely it won’t please those who love the sweet, but it will conquer lovers of woody and smoky scents. It deserves all its awards.
Finally, I tried it and it seemed like a more ‘light’ version of Francesca Bianchi’s The Black Knight. It’s more wearable than the original. If I liked Morning Star, I prefer The Black Knight, more potent and powerful.
For a gourmand, there is no need to be a cloying, childish dessert without character. La Estrella de la Mañana proves this: it is dark, challenging, and grown-up. It opens with an intense, burnt, bitter cocoa powder, accented by balsamic and charred notes that smell of freshly detonated gunpowder. It is a dry, dense sensation that lingers longer than expected. This cocoa rests on a pitch-black, rough, masculine leather, providing a nocturnal and slightly dangerous base. Amidst this roughness, a resinous, pale, and restrained vanilla acts as a late caress. It does not sweeten; it humanises. It softens without taming. It is an atypical gourmand, with muted yet warm and sharp sweetness, blending comfort and discomfort with elegance. It demonstrates that cocoa smells of night and cured skin, not dessert. Dark, complex, and full of character. Here, the gourmand stops being nice and starts being interesting.
You need a refined nose to handle this. It’s masculine, absolutely not for morning wear. Smells like mechanic grease and a car workshop. Don’t expect compliments; it’s a pure, dark olfactory experience.
A gourmand doesn’t have to be a cloying dessert without character. It can be dark, challenging, and adult. Morning Star understands this. It begins with burnt cocoa powder, bitter and rough, with smoky, charred nuances. It recalls bitter cocoa mixed with freshly detonated gunpowder: dry, dense, and provocative. It rests on a tarred, rough, masculine, and nocturnal leather. A resinous, pale, contained vanilla appears, more a late caress than a greedy gesture. It doesn’t sweeten; it humanises. It softens without domesticating. It’s an atypical gourmand, with muted, sharp sweetness, moving between comfort and discomfort with elegance. It proves that cocoa smells of night, fire, and cured leather… not dessert. Dark, complex, and characterful. Here, the gourmand stops being nice and starts being interesting.
You need a trained nose to understand it; it’s masculine and nothing for morning wear. It smells of mechanic’s grease and an automotive workshop. Don’t expect compliments; it’s more for an olfactory experience.
Bought blind, which is risky. Test thoroughly. Smells entirely masculine, like leather and petrol. Horrible. It’s the noisiest in the collection precisely because it’s the least sellable. I detected a hint of cocoa on the blotter, but on the skin it reeks of petrol. At least I managed to get a sample. Personally, I’d steer clear of any man wearing this.
Don’t buy it blindly, always test first. It’s totally masculine; to me, it smells of leather and petrol. Horrible. It’s the loudest note in the collection precisely because it’s the least sold. The cocoa on paper was noticeable, but on skin, it’s just petrol. Thank goodness I managed to get a sample. I’d run from any man wearing this.