Perfume
Dark Ginger Spicecake
Gingerbread, Woodsy Musk, Patchouli EO and Vetiver EO
Snowmint Mallow
Peppermint, Vanilla Cake, Flaked Coconut, Sugar Cookies & Marshmallow CremeAG: Bakery scents can be tricky, but this smells incredibly realistic on me. I tested it without reading the description and immediately pictured buttery yellow cookies with shredded coconut baked into them. The other major player is a big hit of fresh mint; there's enough there to give me that cold sensation straight up to my sinuses. After maybe 15-20 minutes the mint settles down to a background role and lets the cake come join the cookies. The coconut has mostly gone by this point as well. Unfortunately this scent fades pretty quickly on me, but it's fun while it lasts.
Whipped Soap
Dark Ginger Spicecake
Gingerbread, Woodsy Musk, Patchouli EO and Vetiver EO

This is a complicated and intriguing scent. It says on the website that it has a “mysterious depth.” You would not think food smells mixed with incense would be such a delightful smell and yet somehow it works. The patchouli creates a spice, while the vetiver brings the scent from cake to something earthier. I used a massive amount on only my hands to see what would happen and only a faint full-body scent remained. It's fantastic and subtle afterwards, with a much stronger aromatherapy in the shower while in use. And after its first use, I couldn't help but have a delicious late night snack of iced gingerbread and chai tea.
Kristin adds: I dramatically increased the size of my soap collection with this order.
Lemon Ginger Creams
Gingersnap Sandwich Cookies Filled With Vanilla-Lemon CreamKristin: Mmmmmmm. I was worried that the ginger would be overwhelming in this but nope, the lemon stands out strongly and the ginger is only hinted at in a sweet gingerbread note. But the lemon isn't a tart, fruity lemon. It's definitely the cream filling of a sandwich cookie kind of sweet lemon. Since this is a soap, the lemon never faded away while I was using it though the owner noted that in perfume form, the lemon fades away after the initial application. This was my surprise favorite of the order.
Snowshoe Pass
White Amber, White Musk, Vanilla Accord, Peppermint Cream, Cold WindsKristin: I honestly can't decide if I like this one or not. It's one of those scents that's just very interesting and I keep smelling it because I think it's neat but I don't know if I'm actually enjoying it. For me, the musk note is very distracting in this scent and gives it all a weird kind of "undertone" - for lack of better descriptor. The peppermint cream isn't the sharp hard candy kind of peppermint but it's a soft milky version that sits lightly on top. It's complicated from the beginning and in soap form, stays complicated.
Outpost
Sugar Crystals, Spruce, Fir, Soft Woods, Bayberry, Mistletoe, AmberKristin: You'll get to hear more about this scent further down when Jessye talks about her Burnishing Glace. She tried her Glace before I tried this soap and she was excited about how good it was. She and I have very different tastes so I was a little cautious when I opened this one up. It was awesome to find out that I loved it too! It reminds me of pine trees with a hint of smokiness in the background.
Sugarvale
Candied Pecans, Butterscotch, Buttered Rum, Brown Sugar, Maple Syrup, Hot Pralines & Milk Chocolate CocoaKristin: This one smells exactly like Private Selection (the Kroger Brand) English Toffee Ice Cream. I kid you not. I had the ice cream out and the soap out at the same time and smelled both in rapid succession. Granted, one will probably make you sticky when you try to clean with it but other than that, they're probably the same thing. In case you don't have a freezer comically stuffed with varieties of ice cream to do smell testing with, imagine a thick caramel over pecans.
Dead Sea Salt Milk Bath
Spiced Cranberry & Spruce
Sugared Cranberries & Spruce Essential Oil
Burnishing Glacé
Outpost
Sugar Crystals, Spruce, Fir, Soft Woods, Bayberry, Mistletoe, AmberWe're going to do this one backwards and discuss the scent first. This is just a yummy woodsy, Solstice Scents smell, which is nothing just if you love woodsy smells as much as I, and Solstice does them so very well. The woods are sweetened just a bit by the bayberry and sugar crystals and then the whole thing is mellowed with amber. It's delicious.

The Glacé has a multitude of uses from under a perfume to bath oil to hair oil. When I chose to buy Outpost as the Burnishing Glacé, it was because the scent of Outpost seemed to fantastic and intricate for a whipped soap; I am now wishing I had bought it as a soap as well.
The first thing I tried it as was a bath oil. Oh. My. Bath Oil. Most oil-based bath products are greasy to the touch on my skin, and I absolutely must wash them off after I use them. I still chose to wash this one off after use, but that's because I was distracted by how beautiful it smelled and used almost half the bottle in the one bath. You could easily get 4 to 5 baths out of this one bottle if you have more control than I. And in this bath, my goodness, it is like bathing in liquid silk. This oil is rich and luxurious and just felt amazing on my skin. I love the feel of it. If you have dry skin, this would be a fantastic oil to bathe in and then rub into your skin afterwards. I have never felt a bath oil so soft and smooth.
I've reviewed a hair oil previously, and used it on another person because I have such fine, naturally oily hair. Since that review, I put a bleached blonde panel in my hair, which just means I have a chunk of blonde in my hair. Bleach is awful for your hair, very awful, as anyone can tell you. After feeling how beautiful the oil in this glacé is, I decided I would very carefully try it in the panel. Very, very carefully, I spritzed just one spray into my hair and then used my fingers to work it through the whole panel. My hair loved it. The ends had begun to feel a little brittle from the bleach, like it wasn't getting enough moisture from my conditioner. If it weren't so obviously not my natural hair color, you would have no idea just by feel anymore.
I would perhaps not suggest this as a hair oil for someone who has a lot of hair and regularly needs to a fair amount of it on your hair. I could see that becoming cost preventative at around $15 a bottle, but if you just occasionally need a little extra moisture, it's a perfect option. That one spritz and half a spritz into just the bottom dried with the water with no residue, and my hair feels just as soft and wonderful as it always does. There is no product residue of any kind, and to make it even better, it has a lovely scent. I will be keeping the rest of the bottle for weekly moisture for my hair instead of using it out as bath oil. I have fallen in love with this product.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.