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Flore
Acordes principales
Descripción
Flore by Carolina Herrera is a floral fragrance for women. Launched in 1994, this composition was created by Rosendo Mateu and Carlos Benaïm. The top notes feature green tones, aldehydes, fruity accords, and bergamot; the heart reveals valley lily, jasmine, lilac, rose, and iris; while the base settles on iris, musk, woody notes, and sandalwood.
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Cuándo llevarla (votos)
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Comunidad
274 votos
- Positivo 80%
- Negativo 18%
- Neutral 2.9%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
Comunidad
Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.
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
Compara tiendas verificadas para Flore y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
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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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17 reseñas
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Rich and long-lasting. The scent is strong, and on hot days it intensifies even more.
I agree with Yorleny: this is for those who love fragrances and enjoy complex floral blends. It’s not for everyday wear, but it’s very special and lasts forever. I’m Venezuelan, and over there, with the humidity and heat, it’s noticeable even with sweat. I’d buy it again if I could find it.
Bloody hell. It makes me gag when someone wears it on the street or in the tube; it suffocates me.
THE POWER OF FLOWERS: Flore was a very fragrant bouquet with leaves and stems, hard to distinguish individual notes due to the intensity. I dare to say that lily of the valley with herbal touches led the way. The aldehydes, the iris, and the unmistakably soapy and talcum touch defined it. It was floral, intense, green, and soapy, evoking femininity from another angle: the perspective of a strong woman, of great spirit and overwhelming personality who doesn’t handle grey tones; with her, things are either white or black. A great proposal by CH, what a pity they discontinued it.
THE POWER OF FLOWERS: Flore was a very fragrant bouquet with leaves and stems, making it hard to distinguish individual notes due to its intensity. The valley lily with herbal touches led the composition. The aldehydes and iris gave that unmistakably soapy, talc-like nuance. It was an intense, green, soapy, talc-like floral fragrance that evoked femininity from another angle: the perspective of a strong woman with a great spirit and overwhelming personality who doesn’t deal in grey tones. A great proposal from CH; what a shame they discontinued it.
I’m sorry they discontinued such a gem. It was among the best from the brand. If they could, I’d ask them to bring it back. I’d love to have it again. It was one of my first fragrances and I adored it. It makes me very sad not to find it anywhere.
I’m sorry they discontinued such a gem. It was among the best of the brand. If they could hear me, I’d ask them to bring it back. I’d love to have it again. It was one of the first fragrances I owned and I adored it. It makes me very sad not to find it anywhere.
I just saw a battered one in a perfumery. Would you recommend it?
Here in Argentina there hasn’t been any of this for a long time. I got it at a replica lab. I love it. I like it more for its different opening compared to Aquaflore. What wonders! I hadn’t smelled them in over 20 years.
Marvelous, from when Carolina Herrera perfumes had quality, throne, and power. The first CH feminine was a bomb of white and yellow flowers, a nuclear creamy nard, a sensory explosion. For the second, they decided not to repeat that yellow cocktail and revisit classic aldehydic and green florals. Was Flore necessary? Yes, because many of those crunchy titans would have become outdated. Flore updated them for the 90s, an aldehydic floral that didn’t feel out of fashion, giving you the urge to bathe in it. It’s a green and crisp bouquet preserved in a futuristic laboratory, vegetable milk and aldehydes that recall the crunch of a grape leaf, all in jasmine, lily of the valley, lilacs, and that 80s green accord. It’s a green floral with bits of laboratory, futuristic and retro at the same time. Smelling it was like floating in a cloud of expensive vapours. It had an aesthetic commitment to the house: sobriety, cleanliness, and tidiness, polishing the Latin essence until leaving its core. Both this and Aquaflore, or the first Herrera, were synonymous with things well made. A small and precise catalogue, with brutal honesty. In the 2000s the brand became a hydra birthing irrelevant perfumes, and today, after five hundred launches, only Good Girl remains good, though it loses points for its bottle. They don’t make them like that anymore, and it’s true. Flore was simply precious, essential for lovers of cold metallic flowers. A modernised Diorissimo, a gem.
Marvelous, reminiscent of when Carolina Herrera perfumes had quality and power. Flore updated the classic aldehydic green florals, bringing them back to the nineties without feeling dated. It’s a bouquet of crisp, preserved green flowers kept in a futuristic lab, with plant milk and aldehydes that recall the crunch of a leaf, all drenched in jasmine and lilacs. It’s a green floral with hints of the lab, too modern and classic at once. Wearing it felt like floating in a cloud of expensive vapours. It was one hundred per cent Carolina Herrera: sober, neat and clean, yet packed with Latin intensity. Before, the house made things well-made with brutal honesty. Now, with hundreds of irrelevant perfumes, only Good Girl survives, though it loses points for the bottle. Flore was simply precious and essential for lovers of cold, metallic flowers, a true gem.
Back in the day when Puig created great fragrances of excellence. The 100ml bottle is enormous, with thick glass and a fabulous cap. The most striking thing is that Carolina Herrera abandoned the narcotic animal nard of her first perfume to explore the more romantic and timid side of a floral bouquet. It’s not showy nor too fresh. Upon application, green notes and lily of the valley remind you of Diorissimo, but the fruits and aldehydes give it sweetness and sparkle. Flore has its own personality, updating the vibe of the 40s, 50s, and 70s with a touch of the 90s. There’s no civet, moss, or iris root, just soft musk and subtle woods. Lilac is present and iris shines from the depths. It’s floral, sweet, and romantic, soft but with character.
Its dry-down on my skin is very similar to Swiss Army for Her. If you’re looking for a modern option of this delicious perfume, you could try the Swiss, which is affordable and available.
Its dry-down on my nose is very similar to Swiss Army for Her. For anyone wanting a modern option of this exquisite perfume, they could try the Swiss, which is affordable and still on the market.
I love it; I adored it in my adolescence. I’ve searched for it a lot and hope to find a bottle somewhere. This perfume is simply spectacular. My admiration to all who own this little gem.
Flore is a vintage pride, a fresh and enormous bouquet. Perhaps younger generations don’t appreciate it as much, but my goodness, flowers are always beautiful. After her first success, Carolina Herrera wanted something quieter and more feminine, perceptible without being strident, and she achieved it perfectly. It’s a bouquet with stems, leaves, and dew, with soapy and powdery touches. On my skin, the lilacs, jasmine, and lily of the valley stand out among green notes, over a base of musk and clean woods. There are other fragrances from that era with that vibe, but that soapy and woody touch makes it unique, like a sunflower among thousands of jasmines. It’s a living perfume, spring in a bottle. The last reformulation lasts about 6 or 7 hours with moderate sillage.
I stumbled upon one of these gems at a flea market; it’s a brutal floral reminiscent of Wesker Imperial, very potent, as if you were wearing a bouquet of intensely scented white flowers. I use it occasionally to layer with City on Fire by Imaginary Authors to give it a masculine twist. Undoubtedly a marvel from when Carolina Herrera still had quality.