Men

Silence The Sea

3.35 de 5
219 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Silence The Sea by Strangelove NYC is an aromatic aquatic fragrance for men and women. Launched in 2016, the nose behind this composition is Christophe Laudamiel.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 17%
  • Primavera 29%
  • Verano 26%
  • Otoño 28%
  • Día 52%
  • Noche 48%

Notas clave

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

Comunidad

219 votos

  • Positivo 55%
  • Negativo 38%
  • Neutral 6.8%

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

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Amazon

Amazon

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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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12 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Apocalyptic? Very wild and without limits? Silence the Sea is basically an animalic perfume where ambergris dominates. It smells marine, salty and dirty. Accompanied by a little oud, a very light floral charge of neroli and jasmine lingers in the background. If you expect a chocolatey tone due to the truffle, it’s not like that. Unisex leaning towards masculine due to the ambergris. Performance very modest. Those who like dirty marine perfumes like Tom Ford’s Oud Minerale or Byredo’s M/Mink will undoubtedly enjoy it. Outside of this, it’s unlikely to please. It’s an acquired taste; if you’re a fan of ambergris for how it smells in Green Irish Tweed, avoid being tempted to buy Silence the Sea. I encourage you, but to acquire the sample set because the ‘worst’ is spending little to quench your curiosity. It’s not a bad perfume, simply ridiculously expensive for something that’s already been done and you can find with excellent quality at a more ‘grounded’ price. It didn’t quite connect with their perfumes; they seem good but the world is so competitive they don’t stand out and their prices are absurd. Is Silence the Sea more expensive than an Amber Cologne by Bortnikoff that uses raw materials of much better quality? The joke tells itself.

  • Dante_Perfume

    I quote @Dr.No: it smells marine, salty and dirty. More than a perfume, it’s an experience. I tried it thanks to his Discovery Kit. As an experience it’s interesting, as a perfume it’s not my type. Longevity and trail within the average.

  • Carlo Mendez

    A unique jewel, I’d never heard anything like this. As a perfume it seems unpleasant, but as an olfactory experience it’s very good. It’s a very salty and marine composition; its entire lifespan has a pungent part I believe is the ambergris. The price is madness, the ingredient quality is good but honestly I wouldn’t buy something like this. It lasts quite a while, it’s rare. I showed it to several people and nobody liked it. But very interesting.

  • Carlo Mendez

    It is a unique piece; I have never heard anything like it, although as a perfume it seems unpleasant to me; as an olfactory experience, however, it is excellent. It is a very salty and marine composition, with a pungent facet throughout its entire lifespan that I believe is the ambergris. The price is lunacy, the quality of the ingredients is good, but to be honest, I would not buy something like this myself. It lasts quite a while; it is something rare. I showed it to several people and nobody liked it. But it is very interesting.

  • I just love it. I find the opening slightly citrusy too, I also sense the chamomile. I’m not good at writing reviews, I can only say I love it. What I don’t like is the price: 225 euros for 15 ml and 900 for 100 ml, I don’t know what they’re aiming for.

  • When they first applied it to my skin, my senses flew away. A unique sensation, love at first sniff, not a blind buy. The strongest note is the ambergris: it smells of deep green sea, with seaweed and marine life, nothing of fish. The oud is present, giving a certain leather touch; honestly, I haven’t felt the flowers. It’s fantastic. It’s an olfactory experience; I wouldn’t take it to work or a café; it’s like smelling Godzilla if you wear perfume.

  • Perrolobo

    I spent three decants in a year before committing to this madness (they finish faster each time). It’s not kind or appealing if smelled in a decant or at home. The problem arises when you decide to wear it to a summer party; that’s when everything changes. Silence the Sea becomes a personal and wonderful scent, beyond Tom Ford’s Oud Mineralle, though they resonate in similar places. These aren’t perfumes to smell ‘rich’, they’re to leave an imprint. You can sense a sea full of nuances; although it may overwhelm, you’ll smell it again and again. I feel like the possessor of a deep-sea treasure and it makes me happy. Extremely high longevity, zero olfactory fatigue. I don’t recommend it: I don’t want people to smell like this.

  • I won’t talk about notes, better about the mental image it gives me. A spray that dries out and burns my room, as if someone were welding inside. A spectacular burnt aroma, salty wood and animalic. It’s an aromatic experience that all lovers of high perfumery should live. I can’t imagine any occasion to wear it; my limited experience doesn’t let me visualise how or when to use it.

  • The experience has been complicated and will remain so. The opening is so strong it gives you nausea if you get close to smell it in the first half hour, but if you don’t approach it to the point of mist, it’s imperceptible. After a few hours, that sharp blow becomes subtle and bearable, though it still doesn’t project into the environment. I’d heard it had poor projection, but that it feels like nothing is another level. It’s a perfume I’m not ready for; although I’m a fanatic of marine scents, this plays in a league my nose isn’t trained for.

  • My experience with this perfume has been complicated and likely will remain so. It has a very strong opening that can induce nausea if you lean in to smell it within the first half-hour. However, if you do not get close to where you have sprayed it, the scent is imperceptible. After a few hours, that strong initial impression shifts to something subtle and bearable, although it still does not project into the environment. I had heard it had poor projection, but saying it is barely noticeable is an understatement. At this stage, I am grateful for it. It is a perfume for which I am not yet ready; although I am a fanatic of marine scents, this one plays in a league for which I do not have the trained olfactory palate to truly enjoy it.

  • Not a perfume, but a perfectly executed marine experience. After weeks testing it in various conditions and on different skin types, here’s the summary: it’s a marine-salty scent without any seaweed stench, driven by a woody oud that reveals a hidden floral-fruity base. Moderate projection, eternal longevity. After three hours, dry down, a salty-musk-fruity facet emerges, like orange peels washed in laundry: clean but with salt. It’s hard to explain; it reminds me of that controversial ‘Secretions Magnifiques’ clone, but more balanced, natural, herbal, with the salinity of a harbour, not rotting fish. It’s expensive and hard to find; I recommend decanting, sampling, and studying to connect with that oceanic magnitude.

  • It is not merely a perfume but a perfectly executed marine experience. After weeks of testing it on different skin types and temperatures, I can summarise it as follows: it is a marine-salty scent that does not smell of seaweed, but rather of a woody oud that drives the fragrance, with a hidden floral-fruity facet that emerges over time. The projection is moderate, yet the longevity is eternal; after three hours, as it dries down, a salty-musk-fruity face appears, akin to orange peels after washing a garment: clean but with a salty afternote. It is difficult to explain, though without having smelled natural ambergris, I know there is a clonal molecule that delivers that sensation (fruity, milky, metallic) in excess in controversial perfumes such as Secretions Magnifiques. The Silence the Sea recalls that one slightly at the opening and dry-down, but here it is more balanced, natural, herbal, and possesses the salinity of a harbour, not of rotting fish, but of the ocean that permeates everything. Still under study… it is very expensive and hard to find; I recommend getting a decant, trying it, studying it, and seeing if you connect with the magnitude and silence of the ocean that invades all.