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L’Amour
Acordes principales
Descripción
L'Amour de Lalique is a floral musk woody fragrance for women. Launched in 2013, the nose behind this composition is Nathalie Lorson. The top notes are neroli, bergamot, and rose; the heart notes are jasmine, gardenia, and neroli; and the base notes are musk, sandalwood, and cedar.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
2,252 votos
- Positivo 76%
- Negativo 13%
- Neutral 11%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
Comunidad
Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.
Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
Preferencia
Cómo valora la comunidad esta fragancia.
Uso recomendado
Estación y momento del día con más votos.
Dónde comprar
Compara tiendas verificadas para L’Amour y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
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Más opcionesMás opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.
Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.
Ver en eBayCaracterísticas
Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.
Longevidad
Escasa
Débil
Moderada
Duradera
Muy duradera
Estela
Suave
Moderada
Pesada
Enorme
Género
Femenino
Unisex femenino
Unisex
Unisex masculino
Masculino
Precio
Extremadamente costoso
Ligeramente costoso
Precio moderado
Buen precio
Excelente precio
Reseñas
Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.
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16 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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As a Lalique fan, I’ve been eager to try this since it launched. I bought it and absolutely love it; it smells like beautiful memories, like youth. It’s cheerful and soft, but it doesn’t last long, only about 3 hours, what a shame 🙁
Lalique L’amour is a beautiful and sublime perfume, full of floral notes and slightly sweet. It’s a fragrance for a romantic date (more not passionate). Its trail is soft and perceived almost close to the skin, ideal for personal enjoyment or a complicit kiss or hug.
Lalique L’amour is a beautiful and sublime fragrance, full of flowers with a sweet touch. Perfect for a romantic date, nothing too passionate. Its trail is soft, almost skin-scented, ideal for enjoying alone or for a complicit kiss.
L’amour seemed cheerful, subtle, light, feminine, and not overwhelming. It’s a balanced blend of flowers where I subtly sense gardenia and rose with a tiny sweet touch that surprised me. Floral, simple, clean, timeless. The dry-down is warm; sandalwood is perceived very softly, harmonizing with the flowers. I would like it and think it’s a good option for all year round. I agree with Selmabarba1.
It’s a perfume that evokes tenderness and childhood… a delicate floral aroma that makes you feel happy!
A divine, exquisite, and refined fragrance. The Lalique seal in unmistakable notes of refinement. A seductive and tender perfume that enchants.
L’Amour de Lalique is a strange fragrance full of clichés: it looks, smells, and is named like every other perfume, yet it works and I adore it. It evokes a tender, youthful romance, like a first date for new lovers, not something passionate. It’s a pure white floral, accessible and delicious. While it’s a midpoint between Eclat d’Arpege and Anais Anais, and its longevity is poor, I’m fascinated by how deeply feminine and French it is.
L’Amour de Lalique is quite strange due to an outrageous amount of stereotypes: it has the appearance, scent, and name of a quintessential perfume. It’s the most obvious and predictable representation of how one should smell, look, and feel, yet it works. In fact, I love it; it’s beautiful. Whether it’s my taste for romantic atmospheres, Lalique is romantic and accommodating. It’s not a passionate adult romance; it’s a James Bond scene: playful, tender, jovial, like two young people on their first date, blushing, her with pink lipstick and a white dress, him with a stolen cologne and a shiny shirt. L’Amour compiles these scenes masterfully, especially in strange times. It’s a proper white floral. If you’re looking for one, L’Amour exists and is accessible. It starts with bitter freshness of neroli, then sweet threads of jasmine, breezes of magnolia, and caramelized edges (I assume these are variants of the lactonic character of neroli). It can take woody or acidic bases, but it’s always a white floral from start to finish (and I love that it is). It’s captivating, but comparable to others: Eclat d’Arpege by Lanvin and Anais Anais by Cacharel. Eclat is fresher and more volatile; Anais is more intense and distinctive. L’Amour is the middle ground: fresher than Anais and stronger than Eclat (though it’s quite weak). I tried to say its predictable appearance was a plus, but for a jewelry brand, it’s disappointing (though Lalique doesn’t attract visually with its bottles). I’m fascinated; it’s deeply floral, feminine, French, and obvious. Plus, its longevity and trail are poor. I suggest using it for occasional occasions, not as a default fragrance.
A generous friend gifted me a bottle of L’amour, which I’m trying for the first time today. It opens very citrusy, dominated by neroli. Gradually, it becomes sweet and creamy, with jasmine and neroli. I think it’s ideal for hot days because it’s so cool at the start. Although it ends sweet, it’s not cloying; it’s a delight (I confess I love white flowers). The dry-down reminds me a lot of Live in Love by Oscar de la Renta. While Live in Love is more linear and leaves more of a trail, L’amour projects for about two hours and then stays close to the skin.
A friend gifted me a bottle and I tried it today. It opens very citrusy with neroli, then turns sweet and creamy with jasmine and neroli. Ideal for warm days since it’s fresh at the start. It’s not cloying and is a delight (I love white flowers). The dry down reminds me of Live in Love by Oscar de la Renta, though this leaves less of a trail. It projects for about 2 hours before settling close to the skin.
I find it delicious, ideal for summer. It’s elegant, refined, typical but not overly original, so versatile it doesn’t bother anyone and everyone likes it. You look good in any occasion; it can be gifted and you still look great. It’s all-terrain but classy. Citrus and floral, leaving a creamy trail of white flowers dominated by neroli. Anyway, buy blind; I loved it and the price is great. Another wonderful Lalique.
I don’t like it; I don’t know how I bought it. It has an overly sweet orange scent that’s hard to bear.
I didn’t like it; I don’t know how I bought it. It smells like cloying orange, hard to endure.
An aroma few women will wear. Why? Although it has simple accords, it has its own stamp and is very different from what’s popular now. At first, it smells citrusy, then the white flowers (jasmine, gardenia, neroli) emerge with a woody dry-down. To me, it’s an enigma: it lists notes people like, but on my skin, the flowers don’t stand out; the citrus does. I wish the whites were the stars, but the musk prevented that.
I fell in love on a summer night. White flowers like jasmine, gardenia, neroli, and orange blossom open up with musk, accented by subtle citrus, rose, iris, and peony. It projects quite well. A wonderful floral, far from today’s sweet trends. Top quality.
Fallen in love on a summer night. White flowers like jasmine, gardenia, neroli, and orange blossom with musk, subtly accompanied by citrus, rose, iris, and peony. It’s quite long-lasting and a wonderful floral far from current sweet trends. Excellent quality.