From 258b69def98c53c8492b6f7ab5db7ea63c38b1aa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nathan Upchurch Date: Mon, 22 Sep 2025 10:18:09 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] typo --- .../blog/reviewing-dolce-and-gabbana-devotion-eau-de-parfum.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/blog/reviewing-dolce-and-gabbana-devotion-eau-de-parfum.md b/content/blog/reviewing-dolce-and-gabbana-devotion-eau-de-parfum.md index 06dd81b..8c7d19a 100644 --- a/content/blog/reviewing-dolce-and-gabbana-devotion-eau-de-parfum.md +++ b/content/blog/reviewing-dolce-and-gabbana-devotion-eau-de-parfum.md @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ I'm not a big perfume guy. I've been wearing 212 Men by Carolina Herrara (well, Further, as much as I like smelling things, reviewing them is another matter. Whether you're tasting spirits or wines, listening to incense, sipping tea, or cupping coffee, It's hard work to pick out notes, and while I have more practice than a lot of people, I still have a long way to go. This is especially true with perfumes. The bulk of my experience is with incense on the natural and botanical / whole-plant side. The aromatics used in this style of incense-making tend to smell very, very different when reduced to an essential oil, as would be used in natural perfumery, and may be yet further removed from the synthetic compounds that make up 99% of modern perfumes. Even when oils or synthetic approximations come close to their whole-plant counterparts, their sheer strength can make the notes seem wholly dissimilar. People who are *really* into perfumes can name the compounds responsible for a note in their favorite fragrances: I cannot. But, in all likelihood it is more useful to people to describe perfume in terms that non-enthusiasts (or chemists) can understand, as one would with whiskey, pu-erh, or incense, and so, I will do my best. On to the review. -My partner ordered a batch of perfume samples recently, leaving one on my desk when they arrived: Dolce & Gabbana's Devotion (by [Olivier Cresp](https://www.fragrantica.com/perfume/Dolce-Gabbana/Devotion-84951.html)). The perfume opens with a subtle sugared lemon note that was fleeting on the skin, but seemed to linger a little longer on paper. Beneath this lies a bed of very sweet gourmand notes and a hint of spice: angel food cake, toffee, salted butter, and a blink and you'll miss it hint of nutmeg. I had to go hunting for the orange blossom note that is meant to be present; I find it tucked subtly amidst the gourmand notes providing a clever floral lift for what would otherwise be an utterly cloying sticky toffee pudding and/or stack-of-pancakes accord; there is just enough brightness in this perfume to hold it back, kicking and screaming, from crossing that line into total sickliness. On my skin, I also noted a delicate ambrette-like powderiness in the dry-down. This is not a fragrance I would like to be trapped in a car with, nor is it one that I would subject the public to except in the dead of a Chicago winter. That said, I like it. To my humble nose, the composition is clever, carefully balanced, and just plain satisfying. It's simple, well executed, and fun to smell. +My partner recently received a sample of Dolce & Gabbana's Devotion (by [Olivier Cresp](https://www.fragrantica.com/perfume/Dolce-Gabbana/Devotion-84951.html)) and left it on my desk for me to try. The perfume opens with a subtle sugared lemon note that was fleeting on the skin, but seemed to linger a little longer on paper. Beneath this lies a bed of very sweet gourmand notes and a hint of spice: angel food cake, toffee, salted butter, and a blink and you'll miss it hint of nutmeg. I had to go hunting for the orange blossom note that is meant to be present; I find it tucked subtly amidst the gourmand notes providing a clever floral lift for what would otherwise be an utterly cloying sticky toffee pudding and/or stack-of-pancakes accord; there is just enough brightness in this perfume to hold it back, kicking and screaming, from crossing that line into total sickliness. On my skin, I also noted a delicate ambrette-like powderiness in the dry-down. This is not a fragrance I would like to be trapped in a car with, nor is it one that I would subject the public to except in the dead of a Chicago winter. That said, I like it. To my humble nose, the composition is clever, carefully balanced, and just plain satisfying. It's simple, well executed, and fun to smell. [^1]: Sort of. The full story is that I was once given a bottle of 212 NYC by my horrible ex-girlfriend, and I bought a bottle of 212 Men when I ran out thinking that it was the same thing. I've been occasionally wearing 212 Men since.