The Scented Hound

Perfume blog with abbreviated perfume reviews & fragrance reviews.


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Hindu Honeysuckle by Providence Perfume Co.

Hindu HoneysuckleWHAT I SMELL:  Hindu Honeysuckle (how can you not love that name) opens with a rich, radiating and seductive heady, but not heavy, jasmine that is head spinning in its concentration.  It’s sweet, but in the way a flower on a vine is sweet and its as if the vine is going to wrap itself around you pulling you in as your captor.  After a bit, the fragrance begins to become more green but with tinges of spice lurking below.  I love the spice as it makes for an interesting balance between the sweetness of the floral, making it more exotic and earthy.  After around 15 minutes,  Hindu Honeysuckle is met with a layer of musk that creates a more flattened presence, but the beautiful florals continue to pulse and radiate as if to let you know that they the star of the show.  After around 45 minutes the fragrance becomes more comfortable as if the florals are now saying “ok, you know that I’m pretty, now just love me softly” and it stays there softly letting you know it’s there and that everything is OK with the world.

From the Providence Perfume Co. website:

From India With Love . . . Revered for its lush aroma, honeysuckle symbolizes generosity and kindness. Notes of sweet Indian Jasmine Sambac meld with green vetivert, musk ambrette, rose and coriander. Crisp bergamot belies the sweetness of honeysuckle.

indian rollers on honeysuckle sean milne

Indian Rollers on Honeysuckle, Sean Milne

WHAT IT SMELLS LIKE TO ME: Beautiful, colorful and vibrant wild honeysuckle that takes your breath away.

THREE ADJECTIVES THAT DESCRIBE HINDU HONEYSUCKLE: dizzying, captive, seductive

WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING ABOUT HINDU HONEYSUCKLE: EauMG, CaFleureBon, ScentHive

BOTTOM LINE:  I was going to complete a review on a fall fragrance, but I’m I just couldn’t give up on summer yet.  Hindu Honeysuckle is a great transitional perfume that could be worn in the summer and also in the winter when you want to chase the blues away.

  • Bone Rating: 3.5 out of possible 5 bones
  • Scent: Floral
  • Nose:  Charna Ethier
  • Classification: Leans feminine, but could work for a man.
  • Expense: $125 for 1 oz. Eau de Parfum


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Ambra di Venezia by Montgomery Taylor

Ambra-di-Venezia-Perfume-ExtraitWHAT I SMELL:  Ambra de Venezia opens with a soft delicate floral citrus in gauze-like sheerness; it feels like perfume that’s sitting upon fluffy light cotton balls.  Hidden beneath the cotton balls is a warm sandalwood that after around 10 minutes becomes lightly soapy.  Thankfully, around this same time, the projection pick up steam because in the first 10 minutes I almost felt like this was going to fade away on my skin.  After another 15 minutes, it begins to project some more and the soapiness has for the most part, left the scene.  What exists now is a lightly spiced jasmine warm floral that’s really very pretty.  And here your journey ends…the fragrance stays in this pretty floral warmth for the rest of the ride.

Ambra di Venezia Notes:  a blend of French narcissus, jasmine, mandarin orange, mango, lime and sandalwood.

The Gondolier, Venice - Guy Rose 1894

The Gondolier, Venice – Guy Rose 1894

WHAT IT SMELLS LIKE TO ME: A Venitian gondolier ride at the end of a lovely summer day.

THREE ADJECTIVES THAT DESCRIBE AMBRA DI VENEZIA:  soft, uncomplicated, semi-radiant

WHAT OTHERS ARE SAYING ABOUT AMBRA DI VENEZIA: Nathan Branch

BOTTOM LINE:  A very nice perfume when you don’t want to wear something that’s going to be a roller coaster of a ride.  There’s not a lot of projection in play here so it would be a great office scent because it’s not going to offend anyone around you.  My review is based on the parfum extrait version, but there’s also an eau de parfum that is almost as pretty, but lighter and without the depth of the parfum extrait version.

  • Bone Rating: 3 out of possible 5 bones
  • Scent: Oriental Floral
  • Nose:  Rayda Vega
  • Classification: Leans feminine, but could work for a man.
  • Expense: $130 for 1 oz. Parfum Extrait


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A CaFleureBon Hound Post: Vintage Perfume Review: Caron Tabac Blond (1919) by Ernest Daltroff “A Testament to Androgyny” + Claude Cahun Draw

Claude-Cahun 3Undoubtedly, if there ever was a classic perfume that was identified with early gender bending, it would be Caron’s Tabac Blond.  Created in 1919 by Ernest Daltroff, Tabac Blond has been a testament to androgyny, a beautiful yet mysterious fragrance that doesn’t ascribe to normal gender classifications.  We typically associate the infamous actress, Marlene Dietrich with this Caron masterpiece, but even before she started testing the boundaries of the male/female conventions, a little know french artist, Claude Cahun,  was breaking gender bending barriers. To read more about this intriguing artist and to read the full review on CaFleureBon and to enter in a draw to win a 7.5 ml bottle of Tabac Blond parfum extrait, click here.

You can also read my original Tabac Blond Scented Hound review by clicking here.