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Kenzo
Acordes principales
Descripción
Kenzo by Kenzo is a floral fragrance for women launched in 1988 by the house Kenzo. The nose behind this composition is Françoise Caron. The top notes reveal an explosion of peach, spices, orange blossom, plum, mandarin and bergamot. The heart of the fragrance unfolds with a harmony of neroli, sandalwood, coriander, iris, gardenia, ylang-ylang, carnation, jasmine, cedar, iris root, rose and lily of the valley. Finally, the base notes land on a warm and persistent foundation of oakmoss, amber, patchouli, musk and vanilla.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
1,005 votos
- Positivo 86%
- Negativo 12%
- Neutral 2.7%
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 Kenzo y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
Ver en AmazoneBay
Más opcionesMás opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.
Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.
Ver en eBayCaracterísticas
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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16 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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It is a unique and exquisite fragrance. A pity that it is so hard to find in the market. I don’t remember its smell very well now, only that I loved it.
Its scent is enchanting… perhaps old for current blends, but it is sweet, floral, and spiced. I love it; it is very persistent and embracing. Ideal for a romantic, active woman with classic tastes. It does not go unnoticed. The bottle is beautiful and adorns the dressing table. These perfumes should be eternal; new designs lack the charm of the vintage. A star in my collection!
Perhaps ‘old’, but let’s be realistic: many of these ‘vintage’ perfumes outshine the new ones. Long live the classics! This Kenzo is intense, feminine, and a real gem. And in Argentina, very hard to find 🙁
I’m realistic: nobody denies this is a crack. In my review, I highlight the charm of vintage fragrances, and most of my collection consists of them. Greetings!
A journey to the Orient and to inner peace. A fragrance that calms the spirit. I think it must be sandalwood. I had the joy, back in the 90s, of gifting it to my mother, who now enjoys definitive peace. And I also regret that it is hard to find nowadays.
A journey to the Orient and to inner peace. A fragrance that calms the spirit. I think it must be the sandalwood. I had the joy, back in the 90s, of giving it to my mother, who now enjoys definitive peace. And I also lament that it’s difficult to find these days.
Tragically discontinued was my sister’s favourite perfume for a long time. I remember it was an exuberant floral with very real Japanese touches. Very feminine and elegant, distinguishing itself from the average in women’s fragrances. I’d say it was special.
The perfume of my adolescence and youth… what nostalgia. It doesn’t exist in Chile anymore after a long time; it was discontinued when I was at university… later I discovered Lolita Lempicka’s L, which has also been discontinued, and I still haven’t found my perfume. I still remember the scent of Kenzo; I have a small bottle kept among my memories. It was delicious, elegant, and long-lasting.
What an exquisite perfume! I love wearing it in summer… there’s another version of this perfume but it has nothing to do with this scent… it’s also among my favourites for its longevity… it lasts all day… a timeless classic… I love this perfume!
Kenzo offers a prescient floral, anticipating the fashion that would rule in the 90s. A floral with salty tints, airy, volatile, yet with a sturdy structure that plays with notes of apricot, plum, white flowers, and citrus. The citrus and white flowers (gardenia, neroli, orange blossom, and jasmine) are elemental in its composition. The mandarin is perfectly articulated with the bergamot, making the union clearly noticeable in the aroma but without standing out too much to disturb the florals, which always demand attention. Though that’s not all; this acidulated floral also has a semi-oriental side thanks to the contribution of sandalwood, coriander, and spices, which play more of a supporting role, aiding the complexity of this Kenzo. As the hours pass, the fading of some notes reveals others, such as musk, amber, moss, and vanilla; the fragrance becomes somewhat talcaceous without losing its citrus and floral character. The connections with Cacharel’s Eden are more than obvious; they look very similar, sharing several notes, but compared to the vintage version of Eden, the latter is denser, smokier, and cloying, which doesn’t happen with this first Kenzo floral. In comparison, this one remains freer and lighter. Note: the perfume bottle is a beauty, and let’s not forget the delicate details of its stopper.
I don’t recall the nuances of how this smelled, but I remember it was heavenly. Cloying, woody, intense, alcoholic, and steeped in a sandalised peach that was less an aroma and more a physical presence. This perfume had weight; when you smelled it, you felt as though by the mere act of inhaling it, you’d gained a couple of kilos. A gorgeous, cheerful, narcotic, luxurious, and exuberant turban that made you think of happiness, fantasy, exoticism, and legendary worlds. The bottle was a treasure, one of the most beautiful I’ve ever seen: heavy crystal with engraved leaves and a flower-shaped stopper, opaque yet letting the inner liquid show, back when all perfumes were yellow, alcoholic, amber-hued, and smelled of luxury, of a product you couldn’t buy every day. I remember my aunt used it, and my little cousin would steal a few drops. One day it fell to the floor and burst… the house smelled of Kenzo for weeks. Before minimalistic, whispering perfumes (also beautiful), this beauty, this elixir of the gods (I’m sure Ganymede, the cupbearer of Greek mythology, smelled like this): half Paris, half a fantasy Orient.
I don’t remember the nuances of how this smelled, but I recall it was pure bliss. Cloying, woody, intense, alcoholic, and steeped in a roasted peach that was more a physical presence than a scent. This perfume weighed heavily; when you smelled it, you felt as though you had gained a couple of pounds just by inhaling it. A gorgeous, cheerful, narcotic, luxurious, and exuberant aura that made you think of happiness, fantasy, exoticism, and legendary worlds. The bottle was a masterpiece, one of the most beautiful I have ever seen: heavy glass with engraved leaves and a flower-shaped stopper, opaque yet revealing the inner liquid, when all perfumes were yellow, alcoholic, amber, and smelled of luxury, of a product you couldn’t buy every day. I remember my aunt wore it, and my cousin, when she was little, stole a few drops. One day it fell to the floor and burst… the house smelled of Kenzo for weeks. Before minimalist, whispering perfumes (also beautiful), this beauty, this elixir of the gods (I am sure Ganymede, the real cupbearer of Greek mythology, smelled like this): half Paris, half a fantasy Orient.
Does anyone know where one can get this little gem? I have the Kenzo Ca sent beau and it smells delicious, but I feel this one is better. If anyone knows of a website where it can be purchased, please let me know.
I had it over 20 years ago and managed to find it on Mercado Libre. It has that 90s perfume vibe, vintage, musky, talcaceous. It wasn’t the memory I had from when I was a teenager.
I remember it as an intensely floral perfume, one of those you’d test and your wrist and the cuff of your sleeve would smell for hours, very much of the 80s and early 90s, a floral bomb. Poor you if you didn’t like it; to get it off your skin, you had to wash for several minutes, just as Spartacus says. It had a beautiful bottle, a smell of expensive and exclusive perfume, the kind a young actress from Dynasty or Dallas would wear. Why did they discontinue perfumes like this? I’d buy it reformulated in a heartbeat.
Kenzo by Kenzo, and that’s that. Why look for another name when the bottle and the scent are pure beauty? That carved glass bottle, adorned with flowers, leaves, and a little crown dripping with dew, tells you exactly what you’re about to smell. I don’t notice much difference between the opening and the dry-down; from the very start, it’s a delicious floral explosion that dries down to a very, very elegant talciness. What’s curious is that the main notes are intense neroli, peach, and flowers, yet the fruit sweetens it just right, accompanying it until the sandalwood, musk, and amber give it a spectacular dry-down. Talcaceous, but not powdery, just in the right spot without losing a shred of sensuality. I almost always wear it at home, all by myself, reading and letting myself be enveloped by that floral, slightly resinous and spiced cloud that makes me forget everything bad that might exist outside. The projection and longevity are like standard magic clouds: forever, even after washing clothes or showering. Simply wonderful.