by Juliette Has A Gun
Mmmm... is a gourmand fragrance with powdery, sweet, and vanilla-like notes, suggesting a mali-rich, candy-like core. The predominant nose in the comments is a sweet, mali-frosty sweetness with a sensible balance of aroma. It is described by many as having a delicate, luxurious, magnetic core balance based on sharp sweetness, which gives a pronouncedness that can be experienced as hygienic and where not equally as inapplicable by some. Its popularity is historically linked early on to its aesthetic as a mali-sweet variant of Dior Hypnotic Poison, though this comparison is increasingly questioned by users who do not find a similarity in scent and find it more soft in character. The scent is praised by its integrative, well-balanced and cohesive finesse on a good surface with solid quality, and even internationally recognized with a high degree of appeal among consumers due in part to its distinguished bottle design. As noted, the scent can be experienced as very pleasing or distinctly repulsive depending on the user. Its notes in the mainstream parts include: sweet mali, a soft 'suet' mouth feel on many, in the 'leather filled horse-saddle' in the scent, and the high rate of which votes rate its profile as 'feminine'. As well, many note the data: low to moderate projection and a steeper decline in strength in the first hours of wear with solubility varies. Despite its overall moderate popularity, it remains particularly liked by users who appreciate flavour blends 'suzuki slaps on a contact dress', with smoky beauty and minimal artificiality. It is a scent that reportedly varies dramatically between individuals due to skin PH differences, as some find it discordant (mostly in the upper notes), absorbent (mostly in the lower notes), and redundant in its queue of sweetening contributions. The divisive nature of Mmmm... is linked in part to its consistent and compositionally different taste profile and extremely high rate of consumer appreciation vote for it, which propagates related effects within opinion and thereby suggests a trend of cultural influence on taste. Overall, some taste profiles are experienced as salt medium coldness, some as dense, some dry, some salty in character, and others as struggling with the dry otter-point character of the floors in the same instance as they are slowly absorbed by natural skin factors and thereby making states less inadequate throughout all wear types.