Artemisia

$6.99 USD

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

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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.
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a nostalgic, soapy-floral smell, like baby cologne or vintage perfumed face powders, and teeters on the edge of being outdated.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.

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.

Artemisia