May 2019: Collection Update

I’ve recently added a couple of bottles to my collection, so I thought now would be the perfect time to do another collection update post!

Fig Tea is a scent from Parfums de Nicolai that I’ve liked for several years. I first wrote about it here. I wanted to mention this scent in particular because I bought the 30 ml size for $52 from Luckyscent. I think it’s a great value for a 30 ml EdT that lasts around 5-6 hours on my skin. Compare that with $68 for Jo Malone’s 30 ml bottles! (And it’s $72 for the limited edition spring collection bottles.) I adore Jo Malone and I don’t mind the shorter wear time because I frequently re-apply. But that price point just doesn’t seem like a good value to me for an EdC concentration.

I bring all of this up just to say that, if you haven’t tried Parfums de Nicolai, I highly recommend this house! The EdT concentrations are comparable to Jo Malone (some last slightly longer than Jo Malone, some don’t. It will depend on your skin chemistry, of course.) And the Parfums de Nicolai price point is fantastic.

My other recent purchase is Tocca’s Simone, which is an effortless and easy-going kind of perfume. Can you believe that this is actually my first full bottle from Tocca? I recently learned that they discontinued my other Tocca favorite, Margaux. So I figured I should snap up Simone while I still can! I love the Tocca bottles and the ornate caps (which I removed for the photo. The cap was so heavy, it kept tipping the bottle over!)

Simone isn’t a fragrance that I would usually go for. It’s a fruit-forward scent (green apple and watermelon). The pink juice is clearly intended to appeal to a younger demographic. I normally roll my eyes at scents with such obvious marketing tactics like this. However, on the skin, Simone is simply so pretty, I can’t resist it. There is a woody undercurrent that keeps the composition anchored and gives it some staying power. What can I say? I’m not immune to pretty pink scents! I’m excited to wear this one for the summer.

Looking forward, I only see myself purchasing a 75 ml bottle of Chanel’s 1957 over the summer. I don’t have any other full bottles on my list right now. (Or, rather, I have so many full bottles that I would love, but I have to narrow it down!) I want to leave myself some leeway to purchase a bottle or two during the Fall and leading up to the holiday season. We shall see how my full bottle Low Buy continues through the second half of 2019!

Have any of you purchased new full bottles lately?

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I purchased Fig Tea from Luckyscent and Simone from Nordstrom.

The photo was taken by me.

Fig Tea by Parfums de Nicolai

Fig-tea 100ml_new

Notes: fig, osmanthus, artemisia, mate, coriander, jasmine, guaiac wood, and amber.

I’m always happy to try a new (new to me, at least) scent from Patricia de Nicolai and Parfums de Nicolai. Fig Tea stood out to me, since I am still making an effort to try fig-centric fragrances to get a better feel for this theme in perfumery. Fig Tea is listed as an Eau Fraiche concentration, so I thought it would be a good refreshing scent to sample during this spring/summer season.

Fig Tea is indeed quite refreshing. It opens on a sweet fruity note. It’s a jammy fig, but doesn’t come across as too sticky-sweet. In fact, there’s a slight fizziness that keeps the opening lightweight. I detect apricot as well, most likely from the osmanthus. This opening is markedly different from the other fig scents I’ve sampled, which have focused on green fig leaves. The fruit opening here makes for a softer, more gentle impression.

Unlike a fig scent such as Diptyque’s Philosykos, Fig Tea never turns into a green fragrance, but it does develop to take on a noticeably herbaceous feel. After around twenty minutes of wear time, I notice something like mint coming through, only not as sharp. I’ve come to realize that it’s the mate or yerba mate note. I’ve never encountered this note before, but it’s very refreshing and pleasant. It’s green and herbal, but not sharp the way a mint note can sometimes be. This lovely herbaceous note serves to lift the overall composition so that the fruit and florals never turn too sweet or heavy.

As the fragrance develops, the fig note becomes much less pronounced, to the point where I probably wouldn’t identify this as a fig-centric fragrance if I were doing a blind testing of it. The tea aspect comes through much more strongly for me from the middle all the way into the dry down. This is not a smokey or cozy tea scent. It’s more like iced black tea and, because of the fruit notes, it makes me think of raspberry flavored iced tea.

I wasn’t expecting much staying power from this fragrance (considering the Eau Fraiche concentration) but I get just over 4 hours of wear time here, which is decent. The fragrance has a lightweight feel to it, so it can easily be reapplied without fear of being too heavy-handed. Even the dry down wears lightly for me. I really don’t sense any amber, but I do get hints of woodiness, like a dusted-over tea note, but in a nice way if that makes sense.

I really enjoy the herbaceous and refreshing tea notes here. I love cozy black tea perfumes for winter, but it’s nice to have a tea perfume that’s great for spring/summer wear. I have to admit that I’m personally a bit disappointed that the fig note isn’t more prominent here. Is this what I want from a fig fragrance? I’m not sure. But it’s good to sample a fig scent that isn’t just about green fig leaves. And the other notes here are so appealing, it’s hard to complain. Now, I have to see what fig scents I come across next.

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Fig Tea is available from the Parfums de Nicolai website. Full bottles and samples are also available from Luckyscent, which is where I got my sample.

*Updated image is courtesy of Parfums de NicolaÏ and the info on notes is from Fragrantica.