Men
Textures Pashmina Dreams
Acordes principales
Descripción
Textures Pashmina Dreams by Zara is a fruity floral fragrance for women. This composition, created by the perfumer who designed it, was launched in 2000.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
8 votos
- Positivo 63%
- Negativo 25%
- Neutral 13%
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 Textures Pashmina Dreams 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.
Para dejar una reseña necesitas iniciar sesión.
1 reseña
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
Category:
It was in 2000 that Zara dipped its toes into the perfume world with the Textures collection, their first attempt. They had that cyber, dynamic vibe of the era: the bottles looked like laboratory tubes or condenser units, with a translucent matte finish that let you see the liquid inside, nothing like the totally matte look in the photos. The testers were pure glass set in reversed acrylic, à la CK2. I thought it was a brilliant line because we were fed up with brands like Puig neglecting design and failing to feel youthful; here they offered something good, pretty, and cheap for young people who didn’t want to fork out seven thousand pesetas for high-end stuff or sport a Depende. The boxes were signed by Jordi Labanda, the star illustrator who was absolutely on fire, without a notebook or pen that didn’t feature one of his drawings of posh girls. But this Pashmina Dreams was a disaster; it sat in my house for years, and by my eighteen years old I had a criminal disgust for acidic, soapy notes, and this was an ode to the sour-sweet. It smelled of fruit and acidic flowers; I don’t know how long it danced around my bathroom unused. What need is there to review something to say nothing? Let me tell you: this morning my sister ordered clothes from Zara Kids and came a little perfume tag with three children’s colognes. The Mickey one is a citrus rat-killer that smells like a one-euro cologne diluted to ten litres. The yellow one, Pluto, smells like a pleasant musky-citrus fabric softener. But when I sniffed the Minnie Mouse one, I got a Proustian magdalenazo that left me knocked out, wallowing in melancholy like a pig in a mud puddle… damn, it smells exactly like that Pashmina Dreams from twenty years ago. I nearly burst into tears. Truly, the sense of smell has no comparison with any other; it offers a photorealistic, vivid image of memories. Sniffing that Minnie Mouse made me relive 2000, with R&B on the discman and smoking and drinking Red Bull with my mates from back then. Damn. PS: Seeing the notes for Minnie (bergamot, pear, peony), I notice they are fruity and floral, both soapy and acidic. Could they not have used the same formula? PS II: The day I smell the first Zara Man again, with a similar bottle but in a green casing, I’ll take such a beating of crying that I’ll lose three kilos. Here flirting with self-pity, it will be in autumn.