Men

Revolución

3.88 de 5
279 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Carner Barcelona's Revolución is a leather fragrance designed for men and women. Launched in 2023, this composition opens with an ozonic accord accompanied by thyme and orange blossom. The heart reveals saffron, violet leaves, and yerba mate, while the base settles on leather, Texas cedar, and frankincense.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 25%
  • Primavera 26%
  • Verano 13%
  • Otoño 36%
  • Día 68%
  • Noche 32%

Notas clave

Comunidad

279 votos

  • Positivo 71%
  • Neutral 16%
  • Negativo 13%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 3 notas
Corazón 3 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Revolución y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.

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Más opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.

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Características

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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7 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Tuscan Leather, Ombre Leather, Cuir Grenat, Mirsaal, Trust, Godolphin, Suede et Safran… Revolution. It has absolutely nothing to do with revolution; quite the opposite. It arrives very late since this DNA is already oversaturated. Does it smell good? Yes, and a lot. But I don’t understand the brand’s chess move. Carner?

  • When I tried this ‘Revolution’ (should be in quotes), an olfactory memory immediately came to mind that I have an absolute devotion to: Ganymede by Marc-Antoine Barrois. Only that where you find a unique olfactory personality in Ganymede that marries leather with ozonic/metallic notes and a citrus base with a unique character and up to 12-15 hours of longevity, here you get the sensation of a washed-out copy. While it can’t be the white-label version of Quentin Bisch, it’s close. It’s not a bad perfume, but it’s a copy that reaches at least 95%, proving zero imagination in this launch. For just a bit more, you find an abyss of quality in other brands. For me, a dispensable launch. There are better options in this price range and with these notes.

  • Something weird happened to me with this perfume; I don’t know if it happens to others. After months without using it, now at the opening, it smells like Ganymede applied on the skin of someone who works at a fish market. I don’t recall this happening at the start. Anyway, at first, it smelled like the Ganymede DNA without that marked metallic part and with less potency. Nothing original. Within the same style, I’d stick with Ganymede, Bois Imperial, or even Kenzo Homme Eau de Parfum.

  • andres zanira

    I feel compelled to comment because I see how conversations about a perfume often end up talking about something else. It has similarities with the super-hyped Ganymede, but there’s no resemblance in form. With Bois Imperial, it might seem similar at the opening due to certain touches, but they are different perfumes in their line; Bois is more linear, and in my opinion, this Revolution is better constructed. The opening takes me to an elegant store, orderly, classy, and distinguished, reminding me of great perfumes from years ago (I still don’t get the ‘revolution’ part). What I like most is the dry-down: that leather and familiar suede scent, a quality Russian leather, pleasant and not dirty. It lasts, the wrist invites you to smell it again; it’s an elegant, classy perfume for formal wear.

  • I won’t beat around the bush. I just tried Woody Leather, their TL, but it’s very different. This Revolution, as Vito says, has little revolution. It’s mostly the same thing: slightly more airy at the start with the violet highlighted, but nothing else. It smells good, but I’m already over this DNA. It’s ideal for less hot weather, versatile for leather lovers with decent performance. Nothing surprising; they could have taken a different turn.

  • It’s fundamentally leather, no surprise there. Saffron accompanies it almost throughout the evolution with a herbal-aromatic character. It does remind me of some Tom Ford leather fragrances, but I don’t see the similarity with Ganymede at least at the start; I don’t know how it develops. It’s not a difficult leather nor too animalic, but it’s the protagonist, dry, and on my skin, it’s not overly sweetened, so it’s not easy to wear at first. I also don’t think those who don’t love this note will adore it. On my skin, the performance is modest; maybe I expected more longevity and projection. Almost no perfume from this house has standout performance in my experience, so it could be personal chemistry. I liked it without being thrilled; I’d stay with Cuirs from the same house a thousand times over.

  • It’s strange that Carner, a house that prides itself on being groundbreaking with fragrances I actually like, would call this ‘Revolution.’ I haven’t tried Ganymede or the others, but I own Ombré Leather from Tom Ford, and it’s the same story. If you’re looking for something revolutionary from Carner, this isn’t it.