Where Can I Buy Samsara Perfume
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where can i buy samsara perfume
Perfume Parlour do a dupe. BUT: IMO, (and I have over 50 PP dupes of the real perfumes, and some I prefer- they seem much closer to the original pre EU law reformulations- Opium and Rive Gauche for example) Guerlain is one house where PP are not quite on the nose (pun intended) Chanel being the other. They're good, but not quite good enough. Most probably due to the guerlinade "secret formula" etc Your best bet is eBay for a pre-reform. But for about a fiver, PP may be worth a try. I have the Samsara and I do like it and wear it, but it's just slightly lacking that Guerlain oomph.
boisdejasmin.com/2011/10/guerlain-samsara-new-and-vintage-perfume-review.html#::text=On%20Reformulation&text=While%20I%20fully%20expected%20that,is%20sharper%2C%20brighter%20and%20crisper.There's a lot less sandalwood in the newer versions due to restrictions on harvesting it, so the newer ones smell "creamier" and less "smoky" I'd say. Bois de Jasmine (a fabulous and very knowledgeable Ukrainian perfume blogger well worth following) seems to prefer the new ones. I've had a look on eBay and there are some old ones, but they're spendy!
As a samsara wearer of 30 year the new formula is a disappointing substitute smells chemical like and doesn't last on your skin the way the old one did u can source old bottles but they are half used and crazy prices I know this sounds sad but I feel I've lost my signature scent identity and can't find anything else that suits me and I'm just refusing to buy the new bottles not worh the money come on guerlain yous can do better than this poor substitute
According to Michael Edwards in Perfume Legends, Guerlain Samsara was the result both of love and a calculated business decision.1 First the part about love. In 1985, Jean-Paul Guerlain made a perfume for an Englishwoman he wanted to seduce. She said she liked sandalwood and jasmine, so he designed for her a fragrance loaded with both notes. She wore it faithfully and told him people would cross the street to ask what her perfume was. (I guess when the chief perfumer for Guerlain supplies you with free, custom perfume, you wear enough to be smelled across a couple of lanes of traffic.)
Now the business angle. About the same time Jean-Paul was pitching woo to his English girlfriend, the house of Guerlain was rethinking its business strategy. For a century the company had created fragrances it thought were pretty, and marketing played a backseat role. By the mid-1980s, perfume wasn't just a luxury item created by a handful of perfume houses anymore. The tidal wave of entities selling perfume that now includes car manufacturers, jewelers, country music stars, and even fast food restaurants was just cresting the horizon. Guerlain realized it had better draw up a new business model.
Big, exotic perfumes were popular. Yves Saint Laurent Opium raced to the top of the charts in 1977, and Chanel Coco followed in 1984. Opium claimed the red-lacquered world of the Orient, and Coco snapped up Marco Polo's Venice. Guerlain decided to focus on India. For the first time, they created the concept for the perfume before the actual juice. Also for the first time, they opened up the creation of this new perfume, to be called Samsara, to outside perfumers. Jean-Paul entered his Englishwoman's perfume in the competition, and after two years and 300 perfume trials, it won.
Guerlain Samsara comes in extrait, Eau de Parfum, Eau de Toilette, body lotion, shower gel, body cream, and spray deodorant. For information about where to buy Samsara, see Guerlain under Perfume Houses.
The EDT and EDP come in clear bottles. The extrait comes in the red glass. There was a red plastic refillable container for EDP at one time. Un Air de Samsara (frosty bottle) was my favourite for a long time but now that my perfume knowledge and tastes have matured fifteen years later, I find it a bit too sweet.
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Yesterday I was in someone's garden for some hours, and suddenly I noticed myself getting breathless and a bit wheezy. Nothing much, and with ventolin I could ease quite quickly. i have been better for at least a year now than I have been for a long time. My asthma is not allergy related, I react on respiratory infections, cold and pollution especially the indoors variety so as I wasn't even rushing anywhere (that can trigger it too) I really wonder what could have triggered it.
Yes - these allergies come out of nowhere. I don't have much of an issue with pollen, but I sat under a tree one day and within a minute or two I was coughing and struggling. Felt much better about half an hour later as I'd got up and moved immediately. I take a wide walk around that tree now!
Thanks! As I could think of no other explanation I did wonder if it could have been. As it was in someone else's garden I have no idea as to what it was specifically, so as yet have no means to avoid, but I'll keep noticing if it happens again. I had noticed before that clearing out areas that have got overgrown in our garden, and where plants have died, can irritate and make me feel a bit breathless. I can't pin it down to specifics but as it is at home I can just go in for a bit if it happens.
Your message rang a bell with me. I recently visited a garden centre where they were demonstrating how to dry flowers. We were in a poly tunnel with the most beautiful bunches of dried grasses and flowers. It only dawned on me when I continued to cough and wheeze all the way home! At the time I didn't even stop to think that I might be inhaling grass pollens from the dried flowers. Will be much more cautiuos and not drop my guard around such floral arrangements in future!
Now cheap scents is another matter........years ago I saw a client in a fairly small room. I could smell his aftershave when he arrived. I didn't like it but it was manageable. It would have come from somewhere like Aldi or Lidl, or a car boot, and would have been a cheaper variety.
As the hour went on I noticed the scent became stronger and stronger, and I rather desperately started to look round if someone was piping it in through somed hole in the wall somewhere (yes, one can get paranoid for less!). It was highly unpleasant.
That must have felt highly awkward! I myself get triggered by people's fragrances, and I never have the guts to tell them (what would I say anyway?) For me, it's almost as bad as cigarette smoke -- which is slowly becoming less socially acceptable (but not in all countries). Luckily, I wear a carbon FFP2 these days everywhere which takes care of low-level odors and smoke, and my apartment is isolated from the outside world (BBQs etc) pretty well.
What you would say anyway is to those who know you - I'm really sorry but as you know I'm asthmatic or allergic to things and unfortunately I feel awful having to say this - your perfume/cologne is making it very difficult for me to breath and causing me to feel unwell can you open a window/wash/wipe it off/wear another or none next time. Please don't be offend or angry it is not your fault, you have done nothing wrong, it is just my medical condition is flaring up. If they are friends/family/doctors/nurses/in the know work colleagues they will understand and not be offended. People in line of your employment as customers/clients just forewarn and they probably won't wear any fragrances. As for out and about, just move away. I use the train service a lot and often have to change carriages because of smells from people's fragrances, washing powder/gel/liquid, food or drink they are consuming. I start feeling really unwell from fruity sweets smells, sick to my stomach needing to open all windows or move far away. Strawberry flavour smells make mee so ?. Actual strawberries are no problem. I react badly to tomato plants growing, my chest goes ultra tight and I become ve?ry wheezy struggling to breath. Yet I love the smell, reminds me of my grandad growinng fruit and veg when I was a child. Cucumber smell sets me off also. Redbull drink is banned anywhere around me. ? Most people understand as they also have issues with certain things. Foxes fruits ? Jelly babies ? wine gums? Wrigley's juicy Fruit chewing gum ? samsara perfume, joop cologue, opium perfume, dewberry, marker pens, Indian food, bread baking, tomato soup, bacon under the grill or in a pan frying, barbecue smoke, zoflora cleaning liquids, dettol, bleach, disinfectants but not all, diesel fumes, whiskey, yoghurt, chocolate smell, floral or fruity air freshers, those scented things people hang in their cars, fly spray, furniture polish, cut grass but not when mowing own, but emptying it. ? All that and more cause asthma flare ups and nauseating ? and allergic reactions. 041b061a72