Men
Dama Bianca
Acordes principales
Descripción
Dama Bianca by Xerjoff is a floral musk woody fragrance for women. Launched in 2012, this composition features top notes of kumquat and lime; a heart of violet, Italian iris, lilac, Egyptian jasmine, and valley lily; and a base of vanilla, malt, white musk, ambrette musk, sandalwood, and cedar.
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5,247 votos
- Positivo 77%
- Neutral 11%
- Negativo 11%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
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Unisex femenino
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Unisex masculino
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30 reseñas
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A very sophisticated gourmand fragrance, sweet without being cloying, with a liquorish touch (be careful not to overapply). The powdery base highlights an excellent vanilla with floral violets; I don’t detect the fruits, but they might provide that slight acidity and liquorish quality. It’s not original—I’ve smelled similar things—but the quality and longevity are incredible. It’s not the best vanilla… but it’s very pretty!
A very sophisticated gourmand fragrance, sweet but not cloying, with a liquorish touch (be careful when applying). The powdery base brings out an excellent vanilla and floral violet notes; I don’t notice the fruits, but they might give that slightly acidic and liquorish vibe. It doesn’t seem original, I’ve smelled similar ones, but the quality is undeniable and the longevity is tremendous. It’s not the best vanilla… but it’s very pretty!
Bought the body milk blind because the perfume costs over $200 and seemed risky, but I feel ripped off. It just smells like soft vanilla, lacking the powdery notes and violets I expected. I’ll never pay $67 for the lotion again; any cheap one smells better. What a disappointment!
Very different from my usual scents: to me, it’s a vanilla beer due to the prominent malt and vanilla on my skin. Slight projection, though it lasts 6-7 hours very close to the skin; not annoying and the scent is unusual. I see it for spring-fall due to that freshness, though it also works well in the heat. Ideal for specific outings, like eating with friends or family, during the day or mid-afternoon; I don’t see it as too evening-appropriate. What stands out most is the malt and vanilla creating a vanilla beer scent, accompanied by a bitter citrus fruit note of kumquat that pairs well with the malt. Drying down, violet and iris talc is noticeable, plus a lily floral, finishing with woody and musky notes with amber. In imagery: vanilla beer surrounded by violets, lilies, and iris on an amber-musk and wood base. If I were to assign it to a character, it reminds me of Harry Potter’s butterbeer; I’d give it to Professor McGonagall or Hooch due to the white hair that matches the name and the malt scent that evokes someone like them. If you like distinct, clean, and discreet floral scents, it’s recommended, but keep in mind it lacks strong projection, so I recommend it to those who don’t like very strong perfumes.
A perfume with a smell very different from the usual; for me, it would be defined as a vanilla beer due to the predominant malt and vanilla on my skin. I see a weak projection, although the duration is usually 6-7 hours but very close to the skin. I don’t see it as annoying and the smell is unusual. I see it for spring-autumn; it suits the freshness, though it wouldn’t go wrong in the heat either. I see it for specific outings, like eating with friends or family, daytime or mid-afternoon, not too much for night. What stands out most is the malt and vanilla smelling like vanilla beer, accompanied by bitter kumquat citrus that go well with the malt. When drying, you notice violet and iris musk, lily floral, and woody and amber notes. In my image, it would be vanilla beer surrounded by violets, lilies, and iris over an amber and wood base. If I were to assign it to a character, it makes me think of Harry Potter due to the butterbeer and the white hair that reminds me of the name, so I would give it to Professor Hooch. If you like different scents, floral, clean, and discreet, it’s recommended, but you have to keep in mind that it’s not a high projection, so I would recommend it to people who don’t like strong perfumes.
A cloud that wraps and caresses your body. That’s how it feels. Dama Bianca is a soft, fluffy floral vanilla with a particular malt note. It has an acidic, sour, and fruity opening; a soft, slightly sweet floral center; and when drying, a malted vanilla shake with bubbles. On top, it’s foamy and creamy, but the bubbles tickle your lips and nose. The comparison with Harry Potter’s butterbeer is apt, because now I can’t stop thinking about that every time I try it. It’s a subtle, delicate, ethereal, pleasant, warm, powdery, innocent, and happy perfume. I can almost feel like a damsel in a billowing white dress. Despite how much I love it, in less than an hour it stays close to the skin and the duration isn’t good for my powerful tastes, so I wouldn’t buy it; it falls short, but I recognize it’s precious.
A cloud that wraps and caresses. Dama Bianca is a soft, fluffy vanilla floral with a touch of malt. Acidic, tart, and fruity opening; soft, well-blended floral heart; drying down to a malted vanilla milkshake with bubbles. The top is foamy and creamy, but when you ‘take a sip,’ the bubbles tickle your lips and nose. The comparison to Harry Potter’s butterbeer is spot-on: now I only think of that whenever I wear it. It’s subtle, delicate, ethereal, pleasant, warm, powdery, innocent, and happy. I almost feel like a damsel in a billowing white dress. Despite loving it, it fades to skin-level in under an hour, and the longevity isn’t good compared to others in the line; I wouldn’t buy it as it’s too short for my preference for powerful scents, but I admit it’s gorgeous.
I had huge excitement for this perfume because I tested it at a Corte Inglés and liked it a lot, but after a few days I bought a niche store sample and on my skin it turns very sour, seeming like pickles. The previous time I think I had my nose saturated from smelling so many perfumes; luckily I tested it again because I was about to buy it. It’s curious because I put it on my mother and she says it smells like vanilla and flowers; scents and noses are a whole world, I don’t recommend buying blindly.
It’s incredible how well women’s perfumes develop on a man. Among the ones I like most in my collection. Literally, on my skin, it smells like peaches in syrup with cream and vanilla. I’m a gourmand fanatic so I love this Dama Bianca: 6 hours on skin and one more on clothes. Soft projection, but nobody stops praising it.
Dama Bianca is a tender, soft, and airy vanilla, barely sweet with a very slight fruity and juicy touch. It stays close to the skin; it doesn’t smell creamy or powdery, rather like an aura, subtle, ethereal, and nothing invasive. It lasts about 6 hours. A beautiful perfume that I doubt could bother anyone.
The white lady, divine, elegant, and delicate. It’s hard to describe because, although subtle, it has complexities. I would define it as a green vanilla, like YSL’s Manifesto, but this one turns sweet and warm as it dries. Dama Bianca stays fresh due to the acidity of the kumquat, but you feel an oily (not creamy) density of osmanthus. Floral and ethereal. It’s reserved, tender enough to wear at home, but you can take it to a business meeting without looking bad. Truly a unique composition. If there’s anything to complain about, it’s that it stays linear. Trail is moderate to low, lasting about 6 hours.
Dama Bianca is divine, elegant, and delicate. It’s hard to describe, subtle yet complex. I’d define it as a green vanilla, like YSL’s Manifesto, but this one stays fresher due to the acidity of the sour orange and has an osmanthus oily density, not creamy. It’s floral and ethereal, reserved and tender for home, but also valid for business meetings. It’s a unique composition. If there’s one thing to complain about, it’s that it stays linear. Trail is moderate to low, and longevity is about 6 hours.
For ladies, ethereal and neat. If it were clothing, a simple but elegant white dress. The name fits perfectly. Although I bought it blind in a moment of impulse, it’s a quality perfume that evolves and grows with you. On my skin, the malt dominates the citrus, giving it a rare, almost brewer-like touch. It doesn’t smell like Cruzcampo, but rather malted cereal, musky, and clean soapy violet. It’s a curious and sophisticated blend, unique in its segment. I sense the vanilla is present but restrained. It’s versatile, feminine, and handles almost all registers, except very cold nights. On me, it lasts 5 hours with moderate trail and projection; it doesn’t fill rooms because that’s not its character.
It’s the vanilla a fairy tale princess would use. So light and airy, with that discreet violet and that musk that doesn’t overwhelm. Feminine, delicate, sophisticated. One of those fragrances that brightens your day.
It’s definitely for a lady, ethereal, dawn-like, neat, divine. If it were clothing, it would be a white dress or shirt, unadorned, simple but elegant. The name couldn’t have been chosen better. Although my first contact wasn’t as good as I expected (I bought it blindly in a moment of impulse), it’s a perfume of manifest quality that changes, evolves, and molds itself to you. I’m not just referring to the development of notes, but to physical time: on my skin, the malt stands out much more than the citrus, coming out with a strange touch, like a brewer. It’s not the air of a Cruzcampo beer in the rain, but malted cereal, musky, in a wash of soapy, clean violet. It’s a curious but sophisticated blend, with nothing similar in the segment. For me, who loves vanilla, I feel it restrained, present but not highlighting. It’s versatile, feminine, high quality, and has a nice development. It serves for almost any event, except very cold nighttime occasions. On me, after 5 hours, sillage and trail are moderate; it doesn’t fill rooms (that’s not its character).
I’m not sure if my nose detects something unpleasant or if Dama Bianca is just malt and vanilla like a body mist. The brewery scent is the protagonist from the fifth second. For the first four minutes, the kumquat deceives you by promising something delicious. Don’t fall for the trap: that synthetic vanilla of a cigarette butt in water emerges, highlighted by a distillery smell. The trail is non-existent even if you empty half a bottle. A few hours later, there’s no trace of this $250 perfume, equivalent to paying a thousand euros for a bag that breaks the next day. With luxury items, you must demand the minimum, and there are niche brands at outrageous prices that don’t deliver.
Today, among unreasonable similarities, after a while feeling this delight and thinking it had a certain touch that reminded me of something, I realized it smells like Kissing Burns by Kilian, and I can’t explain this phenomenon. I also have to say that, although I haven’t tried all the wonders of this world, I’m almost certain this is one of the most beautiful things that can exist.
I’m not sure if my nose is an expert at detecting unpleasant scents or if Dama Bianca is simply malt and vanilla à la bruma. The brewery smell dominates from the fifth second. For the first four, the kumquat deceives you, promising something delicious, but don’t fall for it: that synthetic vanilla of an extinguished cigarette in water emerges, highlighted by a distillery scent. The trail is non-existent even if you empty half the bottle; a few hours later, there’s not a trace of this 250€ perfume left, which is like paying a thousand euros for a handbag and having the strap break the next day. Luxury items demand a minimum, and there are dozens of niche brands at exorbitant prices that don’t meet it.
I like vanilla scents that aren’t body sprays; I prefer cleanliness, tea, rice, and sandalwood—minimalist things because warm notes overwhelm me in my country. I bought a sample due to the hype and to see if it was my perfume. They describe it as ethereal, princess-like, or fairy-like, and elegant. I don’t associate it with that; it’s floral that dries down with light, warm vanilla, more than I expected. It’s not overwhelming because when you apply it yourself, it doesn’t smell much, and by the time you have to press your nose to it to see the evolution, it’s not different at all, I say this after smelling many perfumes. It’s not a bad perfume, but I don’t need to buy it, not even in 30 ml. I paid for the sample to avoid an impulse buy mistake. They describe it as vanilla with violets, slightly sweet; it reminds me of Day Three by Raspberry, but here the raspberry isn’t there. I recommend trying it because it doesn’t smell much and doesn’t last, and it’s expensive. It’s a simpler scent than a designer fragrance; based on the descriptions, I expected something that would stand out. Even Itálica by Morati seemed more interesting to me—spiced with ginger, smelling of not-too-sweet cookies, lasting longer, and being very different from the market compared to Dama Bianca.
At first, it seems like the sweet version of Marc Jacobs Daisy with caramelized violet. Then it dries down to vulgar and simple vanilla. I don’t like it at all; it’s common, boring, and bland for the price. But they chose the name very well… lots of people will buy it blindly.
I tried it years ago and it didn’t impress me. Yesterday I tried it again, and it’s the same: pretty vanilla with an alcoholic opening, flowers in the middle, and it dries down just like Vanilla 28. I think it’s overpriced and there are better options. Definitely a no, although the bottle is gorgeous.
I tried it years ago without knowing the niche well and it didn’t impress me. I tried it again yesterday and have the same opinion. It’s a nice vanilla with a very alcoholic opening, flowers in the middle, and dries down exactly like Vanilla 28. I think it’s very expensive and there are better options on the market. Definitely a no, although I must say the bottle is gorgeous.
I really wanted it; they say it’s the best vanilla in the world, and since I love vanilla, I was obsessed with trying it. I received a decant, and oh, disappointment. It’s a lovely vanilla, but my skin highlights the lily of the valley, which drowns everything out. It’s floral with a powdery base from iris and violets, sweetening slowly with vanilla and light musk, but always with lots of lily. It’s for daily wear if you like minimalist aromas. I don’t recommend it as a marvelous vanilla; there are other more obvious and cheaper ones.
I like it; it’s subtle, soft, and creamy. At first, it smells very much like lily, very clean. As it dries down, it sounds like Lira but with pepper, very similar to Vanilla 28 but softer. It’s not new, but it’s a pleasant scent. In the end, it’s a vanilla flan, a pity that what lasts is too basic.
What a beautiful and romantic perfume. I smell lots of violet with powdery iris and that creamy vanilla. It’s very elegant and brings peace. I find it versatile, ideal for any day.
Pure tenderness and femininity. You can smell the violet, iris, and kumquat, though the vanilla calms the acidity. It’s gorgeous; it doesn’t scream or bother anyone—it’s affectionate with a powdery touch. Longevity and sillage are good.
I wanted to try it for a long time and was excited to buy a decant, but it disappointed me. It’s very aggressive; I don’t smell much vanilla, and I think it’s a perfume an older lady would use. Trail and longevity are moderate.
I wanted to try it and bought a decant, but I was disappointed. It smells very attacked; I don’t detect much vanilla, and I think it’s made for an older lady. The trail and longevity are moderate.
Delicate, ethereal, and powdery, it’s magical with a vintage vibe. On my skin, it’s very soft and doesn’t project much, but when I move, it leaves a trail of fairy dust.
Dama Bianca smells like an angel; it’s exactly what a lady in white would wear to look delicate. It perfectly balances vanilla and violet. It just lacks longevity, but I’d wear it to my wedding, even layered over Celeste by Giardini di Toscana.