🌸
L'Artisan Parfumeur
Champ de Fleurs Eau de Cologne
Gender: UnisexConcentration: Eau de Cologne
Community impressions
Sign in to add your vote.
Your relation
Longevity
Projection
Best seasons
Best occasions
Anne Flipo revisits of one of her most influential perfumes: 1999's La Chasse Aux Papillons. An impossibly soft, transparent tuberose that spells out spring in capital letters. In Champ de Fleurs, Flipo keeps the airy white floral in place, but takes it in a new and interesting direction. First, she freshens the topnotes with bitter grapefruit and a juicy pear note, giving the floral heart an icy ??morning dew' feel. Second, perhaps more significantly, she bolsters the airy tuberose with a creamy, full-fat pairing of gardenia and jasmine, so that the contrast between the fresh eau de cologne-style notes in the opening and the buttery floral heart feels even more dramatic.
Velvety, creamy, and hovering somewhere between suggestive and innocent, Champ de Fleurs lingers on the skin and in the air for hours. It melts into the muskiness of your own skin, forming an aura that will leave people wondering if you're perfumed or have just been luxuriating in a long, steamy bath with honey and milk soap. Like La Chasse Aux Papillons and Chanel Beige, Champ de Fleurs is suggestive of springtime meadows but in an abstract, impressionistic way ? you smell the gardenia, the tuberose, and the crisp green muguet not as a living, breathing flower per se, but as a gently creamy floral watercolor that swirls all the colors together. Unabashedly feminine, we see Champ de Fleurs as the perfect choice for those who prefer a discreetly luxurious symphony of spring flowers over the loud, fleshy sexiness of a tuberose or gardenia solo.
Where to buy
Snapshot
- Style
- Modern designer
- Era
- 1990s
- Year
- 1999
- Concentration
- Eau de Cologne
- Best in
- All year
- Wear it
- Everyday
- Vibe
- Everyday versatile
Reviews
No reviews yet. Be the first.
Alternative paths
Community impressions
Your take on how this scent performs.