Artemisia

$6.99 USD

4 reviews

Original bottle not included with sample/decant purchase. Scent Split rebottles the genuine fragrance into smaller bottles.

Retail Size The retail bottle of this fragrance is currently unavailable.
Sample Size

Artemisia is both floral and fruity with a beautifully sensual powdery drydown. The aromatic partner to Endymion. A modern classic, haunting and addictive. Caramel soft, sweet, powdery and silky. A tumble of green apples and nectarines washed with jasmine tea and sprinkled with a luxurious medley of violet, cyclamen and lily petals. All this softly unfolds with great subtlety surrounded with layers of honeyed vanilla and warm spices. A touch of amber, a hint of musk. Artemisia is a compulsive scent, a must have. Try it on, you just can't help inhaling its sweetness, it goldenness, its lingering lightness.

 

Notes:

Nectarine and Green Foliage, Green Apple, Lily of the Valley, Jasmine Tea, Violet and Vanilla, Oakmoss, Sandalwood, Musk, Amber and Vanilla


 

Customer Reviews

Based on 4 reviews
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Shannon N.
Luxurious Mystery

Ultra clean, inky, tobacco, very old money, like Sherlock Holmes in the study with freshly powdered feet.

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Lauren M. (Chapel Hill, US)
All the Soap, Hold the Fruit

I didn't really get any fruits or sweetness from this. It's a nostalgic, soapy-floral smell, like baby cologne or vintage perfumed face powders, and teeters on the edge of being outdated. A clean, soapy smell with a little bit of warmth from the musk and amber. Smells like grandma's favorite soaps, but not a particularly young sort of freshness. More of a vintage vibe. The opening is deceptively crisp, but the drydown is where it really mellows into that sudsy-powdery antique sensibility. I wasn't really a fan, since it just smelled like a toned-down version of those old bars of blue or purple soap you find in the homes of your grandparents.

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Rebecca G. (Davis, US)

Its a little sweet and a little powdery with a smooth blend backing it up. Personally I like it. However, when I first smelled it I thought it was really familiar but didn’t know why. I’ve since realized why: it smells a little like WD-40. Like a feminine WD-40. Proceed with that knowledge.

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Anna D. (Atherton, US)

Artemisia