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Incense Flash

Andy Tauer
Perfumista
Andy Tauer
4.05 de 5
260 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Incense Flash by Tauerville is an aromatic woody fragrance for men and women. Launched in 2015, this composition was created by perfumer Andy Tauer.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 46%
  • Primavera 14%
  • Verano 2.8%
  • Otoño 37%
  • Día 37%
  • Noche 63%

Notas clave

  • Salida Sin dato
  • Corazón Sin dato
  • Base Sin dato

Comunidad

260 votos

  • Positivo 83%
  • Negativo 15%
  • Neutral 1.9%

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Incense Flash y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

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Características

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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4 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Yadorán d'Vinea

    Incense Flash is a piece that appeals to hyper-realism, as Andy Tauer fragrances often do, and to a fascination with incense. It’s so realistic, thick, and rough that it leaves Avignon by Comme des Garçons in the dust. It is truly a flash of incense, raw, realistic, dry, penetrating, and harsh. There aren’t many nuances; basically it’s incense and perhaps some vague woods. It contains a huge hint of a common piece of charcoal. It’s simple, forgetting the gothic abstractions usually attributed to incenses; it’s rustic, smoky, like something freshly burnt. It has a trail and longevity ranging from moderate to impressive. It doesn’t require you to overthink it to enjoy it; you just have to love incense a lot. On the other hand, it’s quite expensive and I don’t think it justifies the price, but whatever.

  • Dry incense and leather give it a fairly animal touch. If you like incense in all its forms like I do, you’ll like it. Ideal for cold or fresh climates and days.

  • This is my first Andy Tauer and I couldn’t be happier with this debut: pure incense, beautiful all around. Although it attempts to recreate an incense accord, it’s not flat; it has great depth and two very distinct phases that make it a master of the genre. It opens with a woody incense, literally fresh pine wood just cut. If you’ve ever cut resinous pine, you know what I mean: a fresh, very resinous aroma with that slight smoky tone from the friction of the saw. It’s so realistic that, even though I’m far away, it transports me to the heart of Doñana, a genuine pleasure. Gradually it smokes up, becoming more resinous with an ambered tone; the leather isn’t very strong but adds a bit of dirt to the scent, bringing it closer to what we all know as incense. It’s dense, balsamic, and almost liturgical. Either of the two phases puts me in a state of ecstasy. The performance is good, lasting 8 or 9 hours on skin, although the trail is moderate, very noticeable at first and then it stays close to the skin. Given the price, it could have been better. It’s for cold and mild weather, with a leaning towards night; on a cool summer night, who would say no? For lovers of incense, it’s a must-have, a mandatory test. It’s expensive for 30ml, but the quality shows.

  • Espartaco

    This incense breaks away from the ecclesiastical or erotic clichés of the 2000s. It smells of nothing mystical, but rather dry 1980s leather, as if you’ve just walked out of a car workshop. Imagine a Gucci Guilty Absolute with incense: that manufactured leather made of oil scraps and black grime, barely dusted with a hint of incense you hardly notice at first. It smells of a motorcycle workshop, leather sofas, plastics, and tar. It’s rough, super masculine, and even a bit unpleasant; it doesn’t seek your affection. It evokes an abandoned sawmill in a hostile landscape, an open field where nature struggles to survive, or a stalled construction site with scrub growing around it. It’s abrupt, unfriendly, and smells of a dying campfire, dry bushes, leather briefcases, motorcycle oil, drums, rubber soles, charcoal, and raw wood. Only after three-quarters of an hour does a more bearable musky sweetness emerge, but I didn’t like it because I prefer sacramental incenses without waiting for the industrial smell to fade. It’s not bad, just for fans. Longevity and projection are good.