Der Duft Monopteros Review  (Anselm Skogstad) 2020+ “High voltage” Draw

Der Duft Monopteros review 

Der Duft Monopteros and Josh Riemer unsplash image, edit by Nicoleta

“I strive finding abstraction, beauty and fantasy deep within our vivid and challenging reality. It inspires and motivates me to push boundaries and create insight into stories worth telling!” — Anselm Skogstad, creator of Der Duft

The idea of an outside threat for humanity (aliens, meteors, various natural disasters) has some sort of heroic romanticism about it, and – at least in fiction- a silver-lining, a sense of unity, and a push for collective salvation and optimistic resolve. On the opposite spectrum, we have the non-climactic, slow-motion dragged down “end of days” feeling of the pandemic and the homeopathic daily pill of impending doom constantly numbing our senses, fogging up the colors of the days and drawing rifts between individuals and even ourselves (the “still-needs-a-name” BC/AD demarcation of our lives before and after the pandemic). Andrew Solomon wrote in “The Noonday Demon”: “The opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality and my life, as I write this, is vital even when sad.” Considering this essential “loss of vitality” this year has brought upon us, I often found myself superimposing onto reality scenes from one of my favorite movies – Lars von Trier’s Melancholia.

Lars Von Trier Melancholia movie

still from Lars Von Trier Melancholia (2011)

In Melancholia, we watch the life of Justine, separated into chapters – before and after the news of the planet coming in collision with Earth. In the “before” life Justine suffers from depression, and we witness the endless struggle with the emptiness of everyday rituals and her falling-apart relationships. In the second part of the movie, as humanity gets closer to doomsday, and all the tragic elements begin to unfold, Justine seems to be the only one able to function and be “normal” in the chaos surrounding her – as she has been preparing for the inexplicable unknown “worst” her whole life, battling depression. The worst possible scenario has now arrived, but it’s external, thus easier to explain, process, and accept for her, as opposed to everyone else. In the last scenes of the movie, we see Justine, together with her sister and her kid, the three of them huddled in an open tepee made of branches (the “magical tunnel” the child requested the two sisters to build) with the planet, named Melancholia, that fills up the horizon, before the imminent collision with Earth.

 

Lars Von Trier Melancholia

 still from Lars Von Trier Melancholia 2011

Morphing a tent to a more complicated architectural building – a monopteros (Ancient Greek:ὁ μονόπτερος : μόνος, only, single, alone, and τὸ πτερόν, wing) which is a wall-less circular colonnade supporting a roof. Some were dedicated to gods or deified mortals (like Hercules) or served more mundane roles as pavilions in markets or others housed tombs. Nowadays we most often find them in parks, as the gathering place of all the modern demigods a.k.a. the cool kids of the cities. I treasure the memories of youth, freedom, long talks, first heartaches, cigarette ashes, red sunsets, in the monopteros that guarded the entrance to the park, in my hometown (if I think about it, the first SMS I have ever received was (“meet me at the Rotonda”).

 

Monopteros in Nicolae Romanescu

  Monopteros in Nicolae Romanescu park, wikipedia photo

Der Duft’s fragrances have simple messages attached to them: “each scent will create their own story and association for the person wearing it. It all begins with a good sniff while understanding the name of the particular perfume”. You can say Der Duft has an artistically irreverent minimalism approach to their marketing, but their fragrances are far from being austere high-brow experiments.

This stripped-down, no rabbits coming out of royal hats, no props, no “special marketing effects” style of Der Duft pushed me further the association rabbit hole, to Trier’s “Dogme 95 Manifesto”- a set of rules made to create films based on the traditional values of story, acting, and theme, and excluding the use of elaborate special effects or technology, rules created as an attempt to “take back power for the directors as artists”, as opposed to the studio.

 

Derr Duft Monopteros

 Der Duft Monopteros bottle, image from Der Duft Instagram @der_duft

Der Duft Monopteros is a conceptual perfume done without the over-conceptualization stiff-upper-lip aura about it. Notes are scary, I must admit, but FUN (for it reads like a movie in which you would find the fragrant equivalent of Yoda (coconut- FEAR it – I do), mixed in with the camera works of a nature documentary (a wet cucumber note), the rapid cut-scenes of a horror (adrenalized coffee) and the classical vertigo of a Hitchcockian aldehyde.

The fragrance evolution is difficult to pinpoint, as it shifts and morphs and tricks the nose, in all its adrenalized spiced-up green-ness. It opens up with a smoked coconut accord that quickly morphs into a bitter ristretto, then veers to an unexpected wet cucumber note, surrounded by zesty raspberry. The high pitched notes of the lift-off are mirrored back by aldehydic airy reinterpretations in the dry down, like actors wearing different costumes, taking their turns coming in the headlights, each one easily singled out, but all in tune with the play. I had the feeling of watching an intricate electric panel with different rapid note switches in its maze, making it hum and crackle on the skin. If I were to name its genre it would be a high-voltage spicy green that feels like touching a plasma globe.

 

 

 Kirsten Dunst in Lars Von Trier Melancholia 

Confusing? For sure!

Polarising? You bet!

But it works. The result is a sheer joy that tingles on the skin, bouncing between sweet and spicy, airy and deep, keeping your senses on edge and veering away from conventional. It’s unusual, free, fun,  and charged with vitality. Yeah, pretty much like a monopteros with all the legends woven around it (both the ancient and the modern, urban ones).

Der Duft Monopteros was launched in 2020, and the nose is Anselm Skogstad.

Notes: Coconut, Aldehyde, Coffee, Neroli, Raspberry, Cucumber, Rose, Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cardamom

Editor’s note: Der Duft  was bravely born in the year of the pandemic and has won ÇaFleureBon BEST DISCOVERY.  Der Duft Monopteros was one of my top Ten of 2020. Five fragrances launched in 2020: Pride, Bubble, Grasse, Monopteros and Cinematic. Their new fragrance “Act” is in collaboration with Thai perfumer  Prin Lomros… coming soon in 2021.

Nicoleta Tomsa, Editor

Disclosure: Sample kindly provided by Der Duft, thank you so much!

 

Der Duft Anselm Skogstad Composed Monopteros

Anselm Skogstad via Instagram

Thanks to the generosity of Anselm Skogstad  we have a 50 ml bottle of Monopteros (120 Euros) for one registered reader in the the US, EU and UK.  You must register here. To be eligible, please leave a comment with what sparks your interest based on Nicoleta’s review of Monopteros and where you live. Draw closes 1/25/2020

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62 comments

  • From reading this, I can’t wait to try Monopteros. It must be quite distinctive, to inspire such depths of thought and feeling. “Melancholia” stunned and haunted me, but I didn’t get the same clear meaning from it before. (USA)

  • I don’t think that notes are scary. Indeed there is a note of cucumber that I am not very used to seeing in perfumes, at least nof from what I’ve tried so far, but I think that if it helps the overall composition, then it’s a great addition!
    Thank you for the draw and and for the review!

  • Kristin Baker says:

    I love the description of the fragrance as electrifying, dancing, energizing, with notes that appear fear-inducing/cacophonous on the page. I live in Missouri in the USA.

  • I do love a challenging fragrance. Monopteros seems crafted for the person interested in the abstract, for someone who would rather smell interesting than conventionally ‘pretty’. For me the ‘scary’ note would definitely be cucumber! I remember seeing the movie Melancholia and being unsure how I felt about it afterwards, but I never forgot it. Commenting from MD, USA.

  • Wow Monopteros excites me so much! First of all I love Nicoleta’s review and her intro. I agree with her about everything she said about pre and post pandemic life. Although true post pandemic we have yet to witness. I must admit I do secretly love coconut. I love to eat it, smell it and I even love it in perfumes if it is done well. The combination of notes in Monopteros is scary, interesting and very exciting! Coffee and coconut with cucumber…? I really have never heard about anything similar let alone smelled it. I would loge to try it! I’m from Illinois, US.

  • My interest goes way up when Nicoleta is describing what sound like rapid shifts and changes in the notes of the fragrance at any given time It sounds almost uncategorizable, but somehow the perfumer has been able to keep it, I take it, from just being a crazy mish-mash. I was already interested in Der Duft from other reviews, but this just intensifies my curiosity. I am in the US, in North Carolina.

  • Firstly, I really want to watch Melancholia now, it sounds like a perfect pandemic movie. I have enjoyed trying other Skogstad scents because they were all so unique and this new line seems to take that even further. I’m always looking for something that doesn’t smell like every other scent on the market or something a focus group came up with. I also appreciated the brand’s motto that each scent will take you on your own journey. I’d love to try this one. Thanks for the draw. I’m in the US.

  • That cucumber note is the only one scaring me from the list! Everything else sounds very interesting. Nicoleta describes it as a sheer joy & unconventional which make it sound more appealing than a “conceptual” perfume. I’m curious about this line & I wish them all the best for having had their start in such an unconventional year! I’m in the US.

  • Wilson Chin says:

    Wow, the review makes the scent sound so fascinating! “A high voltage spicy green that feels like touching a plasma globe” is such a visceral description, and I’d love to smell what that feels like! I’m in NYC.

  • Would love to try this, the fact that it made your top 10 list and that it tingles on the skin, bouncing between sweet and spicy, airy and deep, keeping your senses on edge and veering away from conventional makes it a very interesting perfume indeed! Looking forward to that new collaboration with Prin as well, he must be my all time favorite perfumer. Living in the EU

  • Uh, the association with that movie doesn’t help me. I found it so unsettling back then rather than vitalizing. Still, as a scent, Anselms conceptual approach intrigues me. I’d love to win this to Germany, thanks for the draw!

  • Thank you for this article! And also the mini-review of the film Melancholia. Now I have to see if it’s available on Netflix 🙂
    Monopteros has some interesting notes like coconut, raspberry and coffee – things that I absolutely adore, both in perfumes and in real-life. I think I will enjoy this one.

    I am in Austria, Europe. Thanks!!

  • forrestanez says:

    I like how it is described as polarizing and confusing. Based on the review, I would go as far as maybe calling it mysterious. I am a huge fan of unique, “different” and anything that most consider to be abnormal. The note breakdown seems very in-your-face. I also liked that it is compared to Melancholia. Bravo! A wonderful read.

  • forrestanez says:

    I like how it is described as polarizing and confusing. Based on the review, I would go as far as maybe calling it mysterious. I am a huge fan of unique, “different” and anything that most consider to be abnormal. The note breakdown seems very in-your-face. I also liked that it is compared to Melancholia. Bravo! A wonderful read. I live in Hawaii, USA.

  • First thing that drew my attention was the picture with the pavilion in the park, as Craiova is my parents’ hometown, and I spent many holidays with my grandparents wandering around that place. Then.. I confess.. the notes scared me a little, but.. why not? Let’s be brave! And maybe after sniffing Monopteros, I’ll be brave enough to watch Melancholia.

  • bigscoundrel says:

    Monopteros sounds very interesting with it’s mix of notes that play between each other as the fragrance shifts and morphs. I’d like to try it. New Jersey, USA

  • Diana David says:

    The notes are very interesting, and intrigue me, and after reading Nicoleta’s review I am even more curious in wanting to explore Monopteros! (Diana, Europe)

  • WOW!! So interesting review…!
    What a interesting and unusual combination of ingredients in this perfume. Sounds very interesting!
    I am not familiar with Der Duft perfumes.

  • But it works. The result is a sheer joy that tingles on the skin, bouncing between sweet and spicy, airy and deep, keeping your senses on edge and veering away from conventional. It’s unusual, free, fun, and charged with vitality. Yeah, pretty much like a monopteros with all the legends woven around it (both the ancient and the modern, urban ones).

    Der Duft Monopteros was launched in 2020, and the nose is Anselm Skogstad.

    Notes: Coconut, Aldehyde, Coffee, Neroli, Raspberry, Cucumber, Rose, Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cardamom I am intrigued by the notes especially cardamom, black pepper, nutmeg and Rose in particular. A beautiful piece by Nicoleta a house that I am not familiar with but I am intrigued nonetheless. Thanks a million from the United Kingdom

  • The idea of an outside threat for humanity (aliens, meteors, various natural disasters) has some sort of heroic romanticism about it, and – at least in fiction- a silver-lining, a sense of unity, and a push for collective salvation and optimistic resolve. On the opposite spectrum, we have the non-climactic, slow-motion dragged down “end of days” feeling of the pandemic and the homeopathic daily pill of impending doom constantly numbing our senses, fogging up the colors of the days and drawing rifts between individuals and even ourselves (the “still-needs-a-name” BC/AD demarcation of our lives before and after the pandemic). Andrew Solomon wrote in “The Noonday Demon”: “The opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality and my life, as I write this, is vital even when sad.” Considering this essential “loss of vitality” this year has brought upon us, I often found myself superimposing onto reality scenes from one of my favorite movies – Lars von Trier’s Melancholia. A beautiful description by Nicoleta I am intrigued by the notes especially spices and rose. A house that I am not familiar with but I am intrigued by the concept. Thanks a lot from the UK

  • Great article! From ristretto to wet cucumber to raspberry…that is indeed a challenging note journey. I am intrigued with how they pulled it off, and would love to get my nose on it. Regards from NY, USA.

  • The link between Monopteros and Von Trier’s Melancholia is intriguing! It would be cool to be able to watch the film and smell the perfume at the same time.
    Thank you, Nicoleta, for a great review!

    Kind regards from The Netherlands,
    Diana

  • This sounds a fantastic fragrance journey. Whenever I hear a fragrance is challenging, I’m all in. I’d love to try this and thank you for the draw (USA).

  • When Nicoleta describe this fragrance as confusing, joyful and compared it to high voltage. It does spikes my interest.
    I also must say, that once again the visual used are perfect.
    From EU.

  • Scent and sound and Joy! Nicoleta has a fun way of describing Monopteros from scary to Melancolia the film. Love the notes. I would love to try this unusual fragrance. USA

  • doveskylark says:

    Nicoleta’s reviews are always so much more than mere reviews. I love the movie references, especially to “Melancholia” and to Trier’s “Dogme 95 Manifesto.” I love how all of this ties into the notes of Monopteros. And what notes they are! The coconut, raspberry, and cucumber sound intriguing!
    I live in the USA.

  • Bryant Worley says:

    What sparks my interest in Monopteros is Nicoleta’s pointing out the ‘wild rollercoaster ride’ that this fragrance will take your nose on: “The fragrance evolution is difficult to pinpoint, as it shifts and morphs and tricks the nose, in all its adrenalized spiced-up green-ness. It opens up with a smoked coconut accord that quickly morphs into a bitter ristretto, then veers to an unexpected wet cucumber note, surrounded by zesty raspberry. The high pitched notes of the lift-off are mirrored back by aldehydic airy reinterpretations in the dry down, like actors wearing different costumes, taking their turns coming in the headlights, each one easily singled out, but all in tune with the play. I had the feeling of watching an intricate electric panel with different rapid note switches in its maze, making it hum and crackle on the skin”, followed by her summation of the fragrance: “If I were to name its genre it would be a high-voltage spicy green that feels like touching a plasma globe.”

    During these times, who wouldn’t want to wear something so exciting to overcome the doldrums brought on by our current state of existence?

    I live in Waldorf, Maryland, USA.

  • Polarizing scent with the notes below must beautifully blended. With so many dominant scents this would have to be a symphony.
    Notes: Coconut, Aldehyde, Coffee, Neroli, Raspberry, Cucumber, Rose, Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cardamom

    Definitely enter me in to win.

  • Polarizing scent with the notes below must beautifully blended. With so many dominant scents this would have to be a symphony.
    Notes: Coconut, Aldehyde, Coffee, Neroli, Raspberry, Cucumber, Rose, Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cardamom

    Definitely enter me in to win

  • Very interesting perhaps Monopteros could be also classified as 2020’s “think outside the box” perfumes.
    What piqued my interest in Nicoleta’s review was by far the “high voltage spicy green” phrase (perhaps the cucumber note?!) and the fitting capture from Melancholia…
    I live in the EU (Spain)

  • What clicked for me was this line by Nicoleta while describing Der Duft Monopteros – “I had the feeling of watching an intricate electric panel with different rapid note switches in its maze, making it hum and crackle on the skin. If I were to name its genre it would be a high-voltage spicy green that feels like touching a plasma globe.” Notes are indeed unusual, but how they work is well captured in this description. I don’t think I have ever experienced something like Der Duft Monopteros before, so would love to try it. Thanks for the nice review and a generous draw. Writing from the USA.

  • I love weird and challenging fragrances and Nicoleta makes this one sound weird and challenging. I also loved “Melancholia,” for what it’s work. Thanks for the draw. I’m in Oklahoma, USA.

  • I definitely want to try this fragrance. I think that it’s interesting that Nicoleta said, in at least other words, that the genre that this fragrance belongs to would be high-voltage spicy green. I live in MD., U.S.A.

  • First of all: fabulous review – I’m a learning fan of Lars Von Trier, and if the perfume is as deep in interpretation as Lars’s films, then it must be great!
    That a perfume could be a reading of our reality in such hard times is, at least, curious, but truth be told most of 2020 creations were trying to run away from the theme, so, i’d love to feel how the perfume achieved to convey both the feelings of melancholy, apathy, and those of hapiness, energy and proactivity.
    We’ve been spending a lot of time just looking at the puzzle of weird notes that have been our days, and I think that such jolt of high-voltage energy is what we are in need right now.

  • First of all: fabulous review – I’m a learning fan of Lars Von Trier, and if the perfume is as deep in interpretation as Lars’s films, then it must be great!
    That a perfume could be a reading of our reality in such hard times is, at least, curious, but truth be told most of 2020 creations were trying to run away from the theme, so, i’d love to feel how the perfume achieved to convey both the feelings of melancholy, apathy, and those of hapiness, energy and proactivity.
    We’ve been spending a lot of time just looking at the puzzle of weird notes that have been our days, and I think that such jolt of high-voltage energy is what we are in need right now.
    Sorry, I forgot to sy that I’m from Portugal (EU).

  • Thanks for another fabulous article! I’m always learning something new. I certainly will watch the movie. Monopteros sounds different, but I’m drawn to the coconut, coffee, raspberry, nutmeg notes. Congrats on being in the top fragrances of 2020! Mich USA

  • What intrigues me the most are the unique notes. Coffee, coconut, raspberry…? It sounds so exciting! I really would love to get my nose on this perfume, and I will definitely order samples from the brand as soon as possible. I love their minimalist approach as well. This review really captivated me and I can’t wait to explore their other offerings. Kind regards from Illinois, USA.

  • Nicoleta made me so curious to watch Melancholia! I have a taste for apocalyptic movies so I think I’m gonna like it.
    About the perfume itself…wow, wow, wow! Opens with SMOKED coconut, evolves into coffee, then cucumber emerges and finally, aldehydes crown the whole thing. This sounds extremely interesting and a true manifestation of modern niche perfumery, which inverts the order of top/heart/base notes and uses nearly unimaginable combinations of notes, managing nevertheless to create an awesome final result.
    I am in the EU, thanks for the inspiring article and for the draw!

  • Andreea Florica says:

    I know that this house is getting a lot of attention lately. More and more articles about, it is often mentioned in the “best fragrances” reviews and I think that these speak for themselves. For a house that was launched during the covid pandemic and that took such a bold step, then it means that this house has some promising offerings.
    Thanks for the draw! EU

  • Thank you, Nicoleta for this awesome review! The phrase “Notes are scary, I must admit, but FUN” definitely sparked my interest on the perfume. It seems so intriguing to me :). I live in Bucharest, Romania (EU)

  • After reading the marvelous Nicoleta’s story about Monopteros, DER DUFT has climbed at the top of my list of the houses- to- get- acquainted – with in 2021. I was already impressed by the articles about Cinematic and Bubble, but this one sealed the deal.

    The house strikes me as really »etwas Besonderes«, but at the same time, based on Nicola’s presentations, I got the feeling of an unexpected long- searched-after familiarity. Maybe, just maybe, it has something to do with the fact that that house is based in the German city of Munich, through which I traveled numerous times when exploring Europe and myself in my early 20ies.

    I love how Nicoleta’s articles revolve around cinematic experience. The mini-review of Lars Von Trier’s Melancholia offers us even better understanding of the conceptual path to the fragrance, which exuberates freedom, vitality, and fun pleasant surprises. The list of notes is strikingly compelling. At first glance, if you turn a blind eye on aldehyde and swap neroli for another citrus, it seems like the random grocery shopping list. 🙂

    Even more exciting is the description of the evolution of the fragrance. From tricky, zesty, and verdant beginnings to the dry-out, that offers the solo presentations of each note, but at the same time being synergized with others.
    Thanks for a great article, Nicoleta.
    Kind regards from Slovenia.

  • As I grow older, the tendency to put myself in a regular box that would not create any discomfort to my peers, scares and numbs me. I think that this juice would be a very good excuse to get out of the box and play the way I like :)) Great review, once again! Hugs, from Romania.

  • I was already interested in trying out Monopteros when it was Nicoletas top ten, and also the others in the line sound very intriguing. I remember liking the movie Melancholia and after reading this I’d like to watch it again. I live in EU.

  • From coconut and ristretto to cucumber and rasberry, I am intrigued by this unusual combination of notes! I like the description of confusing and polarising, and it would be nice to have the chance to try it.
    Thanks a lot from the UK

  • I have tried Monopteros and is with Pride my favourite from this House. The notes are polarising and weird, but as Nicoleta describes “it totally works!”. I love the minimalism of the brand and the fact that they want people to create their own experience with the fragrance. Nicoleta’s beautiful review is a testament to that. Marit UK

  • wandering_nose says:

    I loved how Nicoeta connected the uber unique character of the fragrance with von Trier’s masterpiece. Monopteros sounds hard to grasp, unexpected, and capricious but definitely satisfying and enjoyable. Also, the simplicity of the concept of the brand appeals to me a lot. I am in Ireland.

  • Claumarchini says:

    After this extraordinary review from Nicoleta… Me… A – coconut? No thanks!-person, just want to try this fragrance! The association with Melancholia was enough to convince me that it’s a peculiar fragrance, something you don’t come across so often and therefore worth trying… It’s one of those movies that leaves you doubt as to whether you liked it or not, but the more you think about it the more you understand that you indeed liked it, because of all the layers, the hidden meanings that you find in it. So it would be amazing to be the lucky winner of what seems like an unforgettable fragrance! I live in Milan, Italy

  • Michael Prince says:

    What sparks my interest bases on Nicoleta’s review of Monopteros is how like the movie Lars Von Trier Melancholia it ties notes from opposite ends of the spectrum that you normally don’t find together like coconut, coffee, cucumber, neroli, and rose. It sounds really pleasant how in transitions throughout the life of the fragrance. I am from the USA.

  • The notes seem very appealing to me. Coffee, coconut, raspberry are delicious, but I wonder what is the role of the cucumber in this mix. I am based in Europe. Many thanks!

  • I can´t wait to try this perfume after reading how Nicoleta describes how the fragrance morphs between such notes! I am particularly intrigued by the ristretto leading to cucumber phase, and the majestic way these notes must be assembled together for this perfume to be in Nicoletta’s 2020´s top 10.
    Thanks for the draw, I am from Spain, Europe

  • Iuno Feronia says:

    Thanks for this draw and the review. Monopteros sounds to be a very special scent with this mix of ingredients. I live in the EU.

  • Monopetros contains so many of my favorite notes, (coconut, coffee, neroli, raspberry) but it’s hard to imagine them all in one fragrance. I’m intrigued, and excited to try it. Thank you from Oregon, US.

  • That really is a confusing and scary notes list, but it sounds so exciting! Melancholia is one of my favorite movies, and that makes me want to try this too. I am in the USA.

  • It sound like a very unique and different perfume with some very interesting notes, that I haven’t tried before so it would be cool to get a hold of this.
    From Denmark

  • “…high-voltage spicy green that feels like touching a plasma globe.” Hmmm I am curious what kind of olfactory journey Der Duft Monopteros would bring me. I love the whole presentation of the brand. The image, the bottle, and the message from the brand are simply alluring. What an interesting review, Nicoleta! Love, from Arizona USA

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Wow this sounds really interesting. I’m loving all of the notes and am curious how the cucumber fits in with everything. I love your description of touching a plasma globe. Also, Melancholia is the most haunting film I have ever seen and I have never been able to shake it. Thanks for the draw, from the US.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Thank you for the great review Nicoleta!

    I need to watch Melacnholia – it sounds like such an interesting movie.

    I love the idea of this fragrance. The notes in this exude bubbliness, vitality, summer, favorite things and energy.

    If I were to give this fragrance a name, I’d call it “Not Today”

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • vickalicious says:

    Fantastic review! I’ve not tried anything from Der Duft, and Monopteros like one to try. I find interesting that it is described as having so many juxtapositions, airy but spicy, confusing, and polarizing. Thanks so much for the post and the giveaway! Located in the US.

  • The association with Melancholia intrigues me. Makes me wanna try Monopteros! Nutmeg, Black Pepper, Cardamom, Coffe, such an amazing mixture, love these notes. Cucumber next to all these previously mentioned sounds interesting. I live in Romania.

  • I’m curious as to how these notes work together. I enjoyed the review and many thank to Necoleta. Many thanks to Anselm Skogstad for making this draw possible. I’m in the USA