Francesca Dell’Oro Envoutant Review (Karine Vinchon-Speher) – The scented pendulum

 

Francesca Dell'Oro Envoutant review

Francesca Dell’Oro Envoutant collage by Nicoleta©

“You see, Casaubon, even the Pendulum is a false prophet. You look at it, you think it’s the only fixed point in the cosmos, but if you detach it from the ceiling of the Conservatoire and hang it in a brothel, it works just the same. Wherever you put it, Foucault’s Pendulum swings from a motionless point while the earth rotates beneath it. Every point of the universe is a fixed point: all you have to do is hang the Pendulum from it.”  Foucault’s Pendulum -Umberto Eco

We all have our “nexus”, that one place we periodically return to, only to see how much WE have changed. My pendulum has been firmly placed, for more years than I care to count, on the ceiling of a deserted casino, on the windy shores of the Black Sea.

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Constanta Casino, wikipedia photo

First, let me tell you a little bit about Constanta – with its historical roots reaching back in time as far as the VII century BC, a beautiful city by the sea, where every rock and every grain of sand hides layer after layer of forgotten history. I’ve been in love with it all my life, ever since my first visit there – when something *clicked. I remember, being 5 years old, and telling my grandmother that I felt like a radio antenna.  Even after all these years, I can’t find a better way of putting into words.

 Francesca Dell'Oro Envoutant perfume review

  The Black Sea, Dan Cristian Mihăilescu photography

 The heart of the city – the Casino- was first built in 1880, and had a long a troubled history: attacked and bombed by German troops in World War 1, renovated then ravaged again in World War II, transformed into a wartime hospital, then taken over by the Communist government, then finally abandoned.

Francesca Dell'Oro Envoutant by Karine Vinchon-speher

The luxury of the Casino and the mirage of gambling attracted rich people from all over the world, who came to the famed parties held in the Casino. The Romanian writer Petre Vulcan wrote about his impressions of the Casino, during its interwar heydays: “At first sight, we were attracted by the party pavilion, whose mammoth feet rise from the waves, with a wrapped porch pushed over the sea. From the interior music sprang, and cheerful couples dance Boston; from outside the lanterns hanging towards the sea dance enchantingly, under which noble ladies and lords converse intimately, vanishing into the sea of people before them, as in ‘A Thousand and One Nights’.”

Francesca dell'Oro Envoutant

Envoutant, image from the Francesca dell’Oro official site

Envoutant (translates as enchanting) seems to be built after an art nouveau olfactive print, with an unexpected middle eastern influence. With an intricate and sinuous construction, resting on the natural curves of flower stems, with striking colorful whiplash lines of sharp spices, and abrupt valleys of oud and vanilla, the perfume is both reassuring and startling at the same time.

best Alphonse Mucha illustrations

Alfonse Mucha, Moët et Chandon, 1899

The first wave that brakes on my skin is sharp and spicy – aromatic davana and high-pitched coriander, small pointy silver spikes that sizzle abruptly and retract. I awake to the shore, surrounded by lavish sweet and sandy oud, with saffron and rose giving it a Middle Eastern “deja-vu/ deja dream” feel. I slowly climb the stairs to the palace, surrounded by the halo of creamy pastel Osmanthus and jasmine, giving the air around me smoothness and roundness. I enter the hallways, where I can still smell the ghost of the sea, slowly seeping into the stone walls, insidiously digging clusters of thin green vetiver veins that run through the building.

The intimate, familiar-sweet-mold-like aroma of patchouli breathes new vegetal green life under the rich arabesque of the tapestry, laden with heavy, golden ornaments in which amber candles burn, overflowing with hot wax. The path unwinds further up, in mirrored halls, reflections revealing secret entrances to hidden rooms, filled with promises of ghostly musky delights and warm sensual vanilla whispers.

 Source of awe and sadness, as it’s on the verge of collapse, a mixture of beauty, ruin and faded memories of past glory and glamour, the Casino smells of ambery dust, salty mold, cold ghosts of the sea, wet wood, splendor, and decadence. Francesca Dell’Oro Envoutant (enchanting) smells like I’m there, on the doorsteps, in the only fixed point of my universe. And I thank her for that.

 Envoutant was launched in 2015 and the nose is Karine Vinchon Spehner (of Robertet).

Top Notes: Saffron, Davana, Coriander

Heart Notes: Rose, Sambac jasmine, Osmanthus absolute, Orange Blossom

Base notes: Oud wood, Indonesian patchouli, Haitian vetiver, Amber, Bourbon vanilla, Musk

Nicoleta Tomsa, Senior Contributor

Disclosure: My own bottle, opinions are my own

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12 comments

  • Sorohan Adriana says:

    Imi este dor de mare sa ii simt mirisul, sa inot in mare pana la epuizare, sa ma bucur de rasarit si de apus de soare. Imi place marea indiferent de anotimp ea stie sa fie spectaculoasa si frumoasa dar cel mai mult desigur vara cand pot sa inot.

  • Pixiedust2 says:

    What a beautiful article! That you were able to bridge your nexus to a fragrance, one that transports you right back to a space in time, is utterly enchanting. I must put this on my wishlist. Your description makes it feel otherworldly to me. You captured my feelings about patchouli exactly, that familiar sweet mold I love so much.

  • The Plum Girl says:

    What a beautiful read! Brava! Love the Casino and the way this fragrance flows in your description.
    We all need our nexuses now, and the fragrant fixed points are miracles in bottles.
    Stay safe, sending love
    Elena

  • strangedim says:

    It feels each of us swings from a motionless point while the earth rotates beneath us, these days. Bringing back the famous Romanian Casino from Constanta in your great review is a blessing for me. One can only poorly imagine the magnificence of the life once filled that place. Call it a building, after all it is a building, but it is so much more than that. In the same way, I guess, Envoutant is much more than a perfume. Thank you, your writing is always a treat! Reading you comes with a feeling that grows roots, branches and blooms even long after I weakly congratulate you.

  • NiceVULady says:

    What a pity that buildings like that cannot be saved for posterity. How fortunate you are that Envoutant brings you there.

  • dana.sandu says:

    You kill me!!! Deserted casinos, Eco, and Mucha- OF COURSE they go together. Amazing review, as always, and a very astute smell dissection. Thank you <3

  • Natalia306 says:

    Source of awe and sadness, as it’s on the verge of collapse, a mixture of beauty, ruin and faded memories of past glory and glamour, the Casino smells of ambery dust, salty mold, cold ghosts of the sea, wet wood, splendor, and decadence. Francesca Dell’Oro Envoutant (enchanting) smells like I’m there, on the doorsteps, in the only fixed point of my universe. And I thank her for that.”
    Reading this article it’s like read part of novel, and the name of this novel would be “Envountant” (enchanted) Thank you Nicoleta Tomsa for your seriously deep analysetion Francesca Dell’ Oro Envountant and beautiful description of this misteriose fragragrance. Thank you for mentioned Umberto Eco in the beginning:”Every point of the universe is a fixed point: all you have to do is hang the Pendulum from it.” Foucault’s Pendulum -Umberto Eco. Love your childhood feeling about Constanta and how you put together your experience with this fragragrance. Thank you….

  • chiaravirga says:

    Great article! I love Francesca dell’Oro’s fragrances, Envoutant is one of my favourites!

  • maria mihalache says:

    Wow! Constanta! Now, when we only dream of the sea, the sun is also due to the isolation. Beautiful description of the perfume. Bravo!

  • I started to say this sounded Enchanting, then I re-read the post for a second time. This sounds wonderful, love the notes. The photos chosen to accompany this review are just as lovely.