Men
Silvestre
Acordes principales
Descripción
Silvestre by Victor is an aromatic fougère fragrance for men. Launched in 1946, this composition features top notes of bergamot, lavender, and herbal notes. The heart unfolds with pine, spices, bay leaf, rose, oregano, and carnation, while the base settles on oakmoss, vetiver, cedar, and musk.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
67 votos
- Positivo 85%
- Negativo 7.5%
- Neutral 7.5%
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 Silvestre 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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13 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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Finally my favourite fragrance on the page. Many thanks for adding it. It’s a wonder of the old school, with a rich, rugged aroma, in the style of Loewe Essence and Agua Brava. It’s not for very young people, although I’ve used it since I was 16; as they say, taste is in the eye of the beholder. At Selfridges you can buy it alongside Aqua di Selva and Victor Original, other excellent fragrances from the brand.
It has always been there, discreetly, in the less frequented corners of the shelves, perhaps because its minority audience is tremendously loyal. Its emerald green presentation, so out of fashion, encloses an opening that perfectly describes the name: Silvestre by Victor, 1946. An opening of 10, one of my favourites, radiating everything contrary to what is currently in style: WILD NATURALITY, fresh and bitter green, wet field, pine, oregano, spices. It fully convinced me. It’s the closest thing to my longed-for petrichor, to earth and wet forest. A dream opening, but once it settles, things change; the multitude of notes forms a curtain similar to an undeclared bitter and uniform incense. Others experience this too; many believe it contains incense, perhaps our noses are not yet domesticated. Incense is ambiguous to my taste; in Silvestre, that herbal sensation disappoints me after such a fresh and invigorating opening, full of nuances. But the heart seems to be a single fermented note. At that moment, the green turns more yellowish and burnt. All in all, it’s a classic school wood green, of the kind that are no longer made. Highly recommended. I always have a bottle; it’s economical and lasts longer than other expensive perfumes I own. Being a cologne, it projects like an Eau de Toilette. 8 out of 10.
It has always been there, discreetly, in the less frequented corners of the shelves, perhaps because its minority following is tremendously loyal. Its emerald green presentation, so unfashionable, encloses an opening that perfectly describes the name: Silvestre de Victor, 1946. An opening of 10, one of my favourites, radiating everything contrary to current trends: WILD NATURALNESS, fresh and bitter green, wet field, pine, oregano, spices. It fully convinced me. It is the closest thing to what I have always sought: my longed-for aroma of PETRICOR, wet earth, field, and humid woodland. A dream of an opening, but once it settles, things change; the multitude of notes forms a curtain similar to an undeclared, bitter, uniform incense. This happens to many of us, perhaps our noses are not yet domesticated. The incense is ambiguous in my taste; I love it in certain perfumes, it annoys me in others, and in Silvestre, that herbal sensation disappoints me after such a fresh and invigorating opening. But the heart note seems to be a single fermented one. At that moment, the green turns more yellowish and straw-like, something burnt. All in all, it is a woody green of pure classic school, of the kind no longer made. Highly recommended. I always tend to have a bottle; it is economical and lasts longer than other expensive perfumes I own. Being a cologne, it projects as much as an Eau de Toilette. 8 out of 10 24-08-2018
A classic that my grandfather always kept in the large bathroom of his house. A scent of family, class, herbaceousness, woodland, and grass; it has always been there since its launch in the 1940s. The most iconic thing for me is that my name is Victor Silvestre, what a coincidence, hehe! I don’t wear it myself, but I always keep one at home. I love having the bottle in the bathroom just as my grandfather did; it transports me to happy times.
A classic that my grandfather always had on the shelf of his large bathroom. A scent that for me is family, class, herbaceous, forest, grass… it has always been there, launched in the 40s. The most iconic thing is that my name is Victor Silvestre. It’s great, hehe. I don’t use it myself, but I always keep one at home. I love having the bottle in the bathroom just as my grandfather did. It transports me to happy times.
Exquisite. Although the main chords say wood, I would put citrus and herbs first. The first spray is a zesty lemon and a beastly pine; the woods and mosses come out after half an hour. It seems super fresh, herbal, citrusy, and nothing invasive. I use it as an aftershave. Great value for money.
At the entrance of a forest dominated by lichens and mosses, where you barely see the wood or leaves, there is a central clearing with light. There grow immaculate lavender that shades dusty flowers seeking the freshness of a stream with soapy waters. If Agua Brava is known and heads towards verdancy and wood, the steps of Silvestre are less known, cleaner, neater, and I would dare to say, longer-lasting.
At the entrance of a forest dominated by lichens and mosses, where you barely see the wood or the leaves, although they are there giving body to the landscape, there exists a central clearing where more light falls. There grow clean, spotless lavender flowers, shading other timid and dusty flowers that seek the freshness of a nearby stream, loaded with crystal-clear soapy waters. If Agua Brava is known and walks towards the greenery and wood notes, the steps of Silvestre are less known and its path is cleaner, tidier, and I would dare to say longer-lasting.
Silvestre by Victor is very pleasant and nostalgic. Close your eyes and enjoy the opening, which recalls the legendary Aqua di Selva. The city disappears and you perceive a slap of lush green that transforms into freshly felled trees, very stimulating. In the middle of the walk through the jungle, the scent softens, becomes rosier (rose is key here), and a good vetiver and musk appear. It’s exquisite, but it has a major problem: poor longevity, even for an Eau de Cologne. Curiously, the tester performed well (I always thought testers were better), but the bottle I bought, identical to the tester, lasts no more than an hour and a half on my skin. It’s worth a try if you like greens and don’t worry… they won’t confuse you with your grandfather.
Worse than Prima de Quórum and Paco Rabanne Homme for me. It has too much pine, cinnamon, and cumin, all jumbled together. I don’t like it.
This is the scent I have searched for so long! It is an olfactory memory, but I cannot determine when or where. Perhaps it was many times I sensed it in my childhood; something makes me intuit that is how it was. I saw a tester bottle in the perfumerie ‘Primor’ and upon testing it, that sensation of having heard it many times in my childhood came to me. Perhaps my grandfather would have used it at a certain time, but I do not know. I intuited that this lost scent would be in one of the ‘green bottle’ fragrances: Agua Brava, Pino Silvestre, Paco Rabanne, etc. Well, without thinking much, I finally found it. The concept of ‘old barbershop cologne’ is unequivocal: pine, moss, vetiver, soap, cleanliness, freshness, woodland, undergrowth, water, cleanliness, tidiness, elegance, simplicity, and, using personal subjectivity, a vein of sober man. I find it a virile, calm, pleasant aroma, absolutely at the antipodes of neon lights and metrosexuality. Unfortunately, its longevity is brief and the projection is not high. Perhaps it was not so in the past, but today it is a little short. Surely it will not be to the taste of young people, but the fact that they continue to produce it speaks very well of it.
This is exactly the scent I was searching for! It’s an olfactory memory I don’t know when or where I experienced, perhaps in my childhood. I saw a tester at Primor and felt that sensation of having always smelled it. Maybe my grandfather used it. I intuited it would be among the green bottles: Agua Brava, Pino Silvestre, Paco Rabanne… Without thinking, I found it. It’s the old barbershop cologne: pine, moss, vetiver, soap, cleanliness, freshness, forest, elegance, simplicity, and a sober man. I find it virile, calm, and pleasant, far from neon and metrosexuality. Unfortunately, it doesn’t last long and the projection is low. Perhaps it used to be different, but nowadays it falls short. Surely it won’t appeal to the young, but the fact that it keeps selling speaks well of it.
I remember my father introducing a work friend with a grey, strong beard who smelled of Silvestre. It’s a brutal masculine scent, packed with pine and lemon, along with other green notes listed on the bottle. The pity is that its longevity is typical of a cologne; it would be ideal if it were an Eau de Parfum, but don’t fool anyone.