Men
Sticky Fingers
Acordes principales
Descripción
Sticky Fingers by Francesca Bianchi is a leather fragrance designed for men and women. Launched in 2020, the nose behind this composition is Francesca Bianchi.
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Comunidad
1,434 votos
- Positivo 77%
- Neutral 11%
- Negativo 11%
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17 reseñas
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Received a sample of Sticky Fingers excited to try Francesca’s new release; my favorite is Sex and the Sea Neroli, but there was no chemistry here. It’s quite masculine. The opening is tobacco with heavy patchouli and a touch of animalic; then it mellows, revealing leather, a bit of cinnamon, sandalwood, and more tobacco that lasts through the entire evolution. Ideal for those who love leather and patchouli with a very subtle sweet touch on my skin. Smells like a cool uncle, very sexy. This is my personal opinion; it might be different on other skin types. Update: After wearing it more, I see it’s more unisex and sweet when dry. Longevity is the same, projection is very low; it’s one of the lightest from Bianchi. Leather and patchouli dominate but subtly, nothing invasive, refined notes.
Tried Sticky Fingers today, and wow, it wasn’t my day. I’m usually a Bianchi fan because they’re so unique, but this one didn’t hit me. Patchouli and I just don’t get along: I love it in a base or as a nuance, but as a star, it overwhelms me. There’s so much patchouli paste here that it’s hard to distinguish it from Perris Montecarlo. Even though it doesn’t win me over, I recognize the quality of the ingredients, and as it dries, those floral iris notes come through that I do like, very Francesca. I wish I could smell it on someone else; maybe it would work better due to the concentration. Smells like night, intense and chocolatey, with good performance. If you like patchouli, give it a try; it will definitely shock you. Scent: 8, Longevity: 9, Projection: 7, Value: 5, Versatility: 6, Originality: 6, Overall: 8
Powerful, long-lasting, smells like oily honey, woody, and very refined. Ideal for rocking out.
Powerful and long-lasting. It smells like oily, woody honey to me. Very refined. Ideal for rocking out.
Bianchi creates intense, personality-driven scents. The titles tell stories, but Sticky Fingers surprises: it doesn’t match the ‘chewed tobacco’ idea of the band. It’s exquisite, elegant, and deep, smelling of tobacco leaves and fine pachuli in a clean, musky woodshop. It evolves beautifully and lasts forever. For tobacco lovers.
It took me some work to understand and enjoy it, but something compelled me to keep smelling it until I fell in love. It’s tough: the potent note of dirty tobacco with castoreum and patchouli makes it sexy, animalic, different, and unctuous, thick and oily due to the lily root that’s always there. It’s an ode to rock. I recommend testing it on your skin several times before buying. It’s unisex, with huge sillage, grandiose projection, and eternal longevity. I’m in love with this masterpiece by Francesca Bianchi.
It took me some time to understand it, but something compelled me to keep smelling it until I fell in love. It’s difficult: the dirty tobacco, castoreum, and pachuli make it sexy, animalic, and different, plus it’s creamy and oily thanks to the iris root. It’s an ode to rock. I recommend testing it on skin several times before buying. It’s unisex, with a huge trail, grand projection, and eternal longevity. I’m in love with this work of art.
I was about to buy it blind, but I’m happy I didn’t. I ordered a sample online, and unlike Tyger Tyger, this one doesn’t agree with me at all. Too heavy, smells like old cedarbox melted down in your grandparents’ house in the deal-making room. I didn’t feel anything gourmet. Maybe it would be more bearable in winter and those woods would develop better, but I couldn’t handle it: too oily, too resinous, too much tobacco… it threw me off horribly.
I was about to buy it blind, but thanks to the online sample, I saved myself. Unlike Tyger Tyger, this doesn’t appeal to me: it’s too heavy and smells like old cedarbox melted in the deal room. I felt nothing gourmet. Maybe it would be more bearable in winter, but for me, it was too oily, resinous, and heavy on tobacco. It threw me off horribly.
I was gifted several perfumes on my birthday, including this Sticky Fingers. I already owned Sex on the Sea, Neroli, Etruscan Water, and Dark Night. Based on the name and logo, I expected something like Secretions Magnifiques, but it’s woody, liquoraceous, and sweet. The projection and longevity remind me of Dark Rebel Rider by John Varvatos. After the opening settles, a salty note emerges that could be female secretion or sweat. Curiously, when I wore it after the gym, the receptionist said I smelled peculiar with a mischievous smile. I think my wife won’t let me go back to the gym with this. 7/10.
At first, I thought it was cloying, with too much makeup and an animal chocolate that didn’t fit. Now I enjoy it as a chocolateed pachuli with a sweet tobacco base (not vanilla-based), which is very pleasant. I like the balance and the originality of the finish. It would shine in cold weather, at night, on a smoking woman, and a ‘femme fatale’. Although it’s unisex and long-lasting, it’s ideal for dates or special occasions. Rating: 8.5/10.
My first impression of Sticky Fingers wasn’t good: I found it cloying, with heavy makeup and an ‘animal’ chocolate that didn’t fit. Today I enjoy it more; I understand it as chocolatey patchouli with a sweet tobacco base (not vanilla-based) that’s pleasant. I smell the cinnamon, tonka bean, and leather; I like the balance and the originality of the drydown. I like it quite a bit and would put it in my favorites for the brand, but it would shine more in cold weather, at night, worn by a female smoker with no fear of success, a ‘femme fatale’ type (that’s what I imagine). It doesn’t mean I won’t wear it; I see it as unisex with excellent performance, like almost everything from Bianchi. Other scenarios: dates and special occasions, it can get you compliments (depending on your attitude). Recommended to try. Rating: 8.5/10. Thanks to Tony.
Reminds me of Dior Homme Intense and Bentley for Men Intense: liquor, pachuli, leather, and a touch of civet from Francesca. Longevity and projection are not an issue. It’s more masculine, a sexual and seductive perfume.
I was surprised for several reasons: the initial projection wasn’t the explosive burst I expected from the house, perhaps due to that peculiar opening of Stinky Fingers that can be off-putting. But the development is amazing; it invites you to get closer and ‘taste’ it. It smells like creamy cocoa butter, with a suggestive and sensual animalic imprint. Later, tobacco, cinnamon, and tonka bean create an addictive blend that makes you want to stick to the skin. The finish is a creamy pachuli in wafts that maintain its humanity. I doubted it at first, but now I highly recommend it.
A bit surprised for several reasons: first, the fragrance didn’t project like other scents from the house. It’s not bad; I just imagined an impact like Etruscan Water or Sex and the Sea. Maybe it has its reason, as the opening has elements that can be off-putting. In development, it’s good, not intrusive, projecting a halo that invites people to get closer and ‘taste’ the wearer. The opening is peculiar; the name fits perfectly. Creamy, unctuous impression, not chocolatey, reminiscent of cocoa butter with a strong animalic imprint (though not potent), suggestively sexual, delicately imprinting the most sensual feeling of the anatomy those fingers touched. Then the development becomes less ‘intimate’ but maintains originality. I’ve never felt anything fresh or floral. It keeps that creamy sensation with tobacco, cinnamon, and tonka bean, a blend that becomes addictive over time and makes you want to stay close to the wearer (their skin). The drydown, after many hours (I still feel it at 12), is a creamy patchouli in short puffs that maintain the ‘humanity’ until its death. At first, I thought I wouldn’t buy more from Bianchi, but while writing, I’m convinced the opposite will be true. Highly recommended.
For pachuli lovers. It starts earthy, almost medicinal, then sweetens with cinnamon, tobacco, and a resinous note. The longevity is brutal, reaching 9 hours, though the projection on my skin is more contained than on Neroli. It has a vibe close to Marquis de Sade from Perfume Stories. A masterpiece by Bianchi.
It’s my second Francesca purchase after Tyger Tyger. They aren’t the ‘beast mode’ everyone claims, but as extracts, I expected more. The opening is earthy, herbal, and woody, with a very marked animalic touch from the castoreum that gives it that ‘dirty’ vibe shared with Tyger. After 5 minutes, the cinnamon takes over: sweet, talc-like, and seductive, like vintage talc. It’s a great unisex for the second hour. The drydown is strong, but not enough to scare anyone.