I awoke this morning in fragrant bliss. Applying orange blossom-heliotrope baby powder to your face while eating marshmallows at Sissiâs bedchambers. It is sweet and romantic but freakily medicinal, too. Then when my head is down to resf I think: man aren't you cheesy!! This is soooo beautiful. However, my daughter compliments me every time I wear it. The true beauty of L'Heure Bleue is its quiet uncanniness. I completely agree with member below me, kI99. It has always defied description for me, and Iâve been wearing her for 12 years now. Given that this perfume was created 100 years ago and assuming that there were not many perfumes on the market at that time, this was probably to go perfume back then, I can hardly believe that they needed a special occasion to pull it off. To me this smells cloying and over-done, conjuring up a stiffly coiffed and carefully made up nouveau-riche, married woman of 1961. ð¤«. Instead, it became my bedtime fragrance, soothing and comforting in its powdery aniseed (aka slightly medicinal) opening; decadent, indulgent, and extremely personal in its sweet dessert-like (meringue, I would say) drydown. They are all gorgeous, but challenging. Guerlain really needs to do something about it, either fix it or discontinue if further reformulation seems pointless! Everyone else has described it so well. I don't know about it being a melancholic scent, but I do find it nostalgic, especially when I catch a whiff of it on a chiffon scarf. It's cold and dry. It's a little bit of everything; creamy, powdery, soft, soapy, warm, clean, romantic. Very strong like. If anyone associates it with an old lady scent, that's because most women retain their preferences throughout their lives. When unpacking last week after a house move, I came across a pack of (paper) tissues that had come with me on that trip and they still smelled of L'heure bleue - that was the longevity I needed in my life! It's so wonderful and definitely shows its age. It is evocative, contemplative, melancholy and simultaneously joyous. I am really trying with this guy...but all I am getting is baby wipes, honey and a bit of carnation. The eau de toilette version of l'Heure Bleue is ten times better than the edp. So it says guest but it is mine. This is my second sampling and it is winter right now. But where that one has a much brighter, aldehydic and sparkly opening this one is 'dustier' on opening, more soapy/spicy on skin but has that same beautifully gentle and feminine waxy iris trail. Dark blue night, you're somewhere in city near the river; moody, recolecting thoughts, rememberrings, or dreams of future. It is elegance in a bottle. But then popularity really isn't the point, is it? Surprisingly, LHB does not smell dated even though itâs over 100 years old. Top notes are Anise and Bergamot; middle notes are Carnation, Neroli, Tuberose and Rose; base notes are iris, Violet, Benzoin, Tonka Bean and Vanilla. I loved the bottle, loved the name, I was definitely going to love the juice inside especially after all those wonderful reviews I had read. Somehow unspeakably, irrevocably beautiful. The first thing I personally get hit with is the sandalwood, carnation, and heliotrope. Iris, violets, cloves and marzipan and powder are most prominent to me. It is an imprint of what we want the most, but can never have. L'Heure Bleue took some time for me to warm up to, just as Mitsouko did. Very sadâ¦. All of them hated it and thought it smelled weird and chemically. 596 votes. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for L'heure Bleue By Guerlain For Women. I put it on just to wait for it. Could my sample be bad? The current formula has nothing in common with the fragrance I have known as LâHeure Bleue! Therefore the âguerlinadeâ seems to consist of powderey vibes in a lot of their releases. The carnation remains true and wonderfully spicy. Eau De Parfum Spray 2.5 Ounces at Amazon.com. L'Heure Bleue Eau de Toilette by Guerlain is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. If anyone has a bottle for swap, hit me up. The new batches are too light (and this is already a light perfume). The Eau de Parfum is a contemporary version of the Extract and Eau de Toilette. Soft, spicy, and powdery "blue" flowers with a little citrus, benzoin, and the incomparable Guerlain vanilla. L'heure Bleue is for times when you want to feel sensual while still maintaining an air of mystery and snobbishness. I honestly never connected with it emotionally. You have to develop a palate for them. It is my bedtime perfume. Sure, there are other layers in this wonderfully complex fragrance, but the blue flowers absolutely dominate the composition. One day I hope to source a good sized sample of this without giving Guerlain my right arm for it just to understand it. I agree with other reviewers who have commented on the appropriateness of the name: the violet-neroli-rose heart has something of a faded blue melancholy to it. Gorgeous lemon-soapy iris and violet confection, with sandalwoody amber drydown. I have fallen deeply in love with yet another Guerlain classic. You realise you are a Guerlain enthusiast when a woman in the supermarket stands on tippy toes with arm outstretched to grab an item almost out of reach and the unmistakable scent of Mitsouko enters your senses. By the bluish light of evening, the remembrance of a treasured love, silken sheets, a secret longing, memories, and the ebbing warmth of the heart's flush. Twilight. It opens with beautiful iris and heliotrope notes. Some may call it melancholic, but I disagree. LâHeure Bleue is my new favourite scent for night and bedtime. I had wanted to get my hands on one for a while. Sweet floral opening with iris, a little soapiness and powder. Mood is a bit sad, a bit recollecting or nostalgic. A floral embrace of rose, carnation, tuberose, violet and neroli on a warm, blue, romantic base of vanilla, tonka bean, iris and benzoin. Both night rain and L'Heure Bleue suggest hidden transformation to me, liquidity, secrecy. I love this. i received my first bottle of the EDP today and i was floored! There is so much powder here. I couldn't get past what I thought at the time as a play dough beginning. There is something of historical importance in the fragrance - like it is a message to us from the past about optimism, subtlety. I'm afraid I don't smell what everyone else seems to be smelling here. Nothing fire-y, just some lovely gentle spice-y accords - the anise and perhaps the sandalwood and resin, all sitting comfortably amongst the floral powder. The opening it's my ideal scent of violets but then it fades quickly and leather covers that beautiful note. A last look onward as things come to their end. A beautiful sunset on horizon, the sky painted in warm colors, the wind blowing between their open arms. Easily a signature scent. If you want the powdery anise and doughy almond then douse yourself in the Extrait and succumb to it's historical beauty. I feel like itâs full of contradictions. l'Heure Bleue EDT (vintage 8/2016) is complicated. LâHuere Bleue means âThe Bluish Hourâ. So thankful it survived. It would be an amazing signature scent for all year round. Fragrance Reviews: 1040465 violettecriminelleII. There are a few identifiable notes, but mostly its the main accords which are responsible for its extreme beauty. L'heure bleue, the big mystery of my life. Definitely a keeper. and no projection. My reflective night time friend, accompanying me through the bad times and the good. If I am extremely lucky.If LâHeure Bleue was released today as it is currently I think we would love it and it would probably come out in the Guerlain exclusives line, especially with DIORâs Milly-la-Foret and CHANELâs 28 La Pausa being popular powdery releases by the big guns. This gives me a minor headache at the beginning, but I am admittedly a chronic oversprayer due to frequent anosmia and perfume eating skin. A dressing table scent from a bygone era. Lovely article Birgit! :(, I donât wear this one very often, but there are just some times that call out for this. One day I just started craving it; that spicy powdery cloud! LHB was my first non commercial love and it started my perfume love and beginnings as a perfumista. This is their original powder bomb. I normally cannot take Guerlain's powdery sweet vanilla accord, but in here it works surprisingly well with the anise and carnation. At time of writing itâs a slightly frosty Christmas in England, I wonder how this scent will change in hot summer. Blend 1/3rd L'heure Bleue edp with 1/3rd Jicky edp and 1/3rd Mitsouko edp in equal parts. I hate the start - way too powdery and something else my inexperienced nose can't quite identify, probably iris. But that was day one. 5 with You can see where it fits in the social history of perfume, and there is something lovely about the way that both Apres L'Ondee and Insolence made more sense to me after I'd tried this one - I now fully appreciate the lineage of all three perfumes, each generation punching a greater weight of violet. It does not smell old or dated, it smells of timeless feminine beauty! I don't see myself wearing it often, but I was imagining that if the violet was stronger, for example, I might enjoy it quite a bit more. I bought this blind, and I"m sure glad I own it now. A wonderland of emotions. Guerlain L'Heure Bleue (168) Rouge Automatique Lipstick ($35.00 for 0.12 oz.) Soft, luxurious fabrics wrapped in sachets. My bottle is at least roughly five years old. First I sprayed it on a piece of paper to make sure that it was ok. It is a work of art indeed, and perhaps I have not the nose to fully appreciate it. Surely it's become one of mine. LOVE all Guerlains so far...maybe Chant d'Aromes not so much...but all the rest I have, I love. It makes me feel human. i should have known as a Guerlain fan, that I would fall in love! Creamy, soft, blue flowers that caress your nose in a soft breeze. This fit the bill perfectly. DalÅ¡í generaci pÅedstavoval Aimého synovec Jacques Guerlain, jehož nesmrtelné kreace si můžeme koupit i dnes: Shalimar, Mitsouko, Vol de Nuit, L'Heure Bleue⦠Jean-Paul Guerlain, dalÅ¡í a poslední parfumér ze slavné rodiny, vymyslel Chamade, Nahému Äi Samsaru. I know Mitsouko had a 2015 bad batch. I'll wear it around my other 15 boyfriends. But this one predates them. Tender fingerprints left on empty wine glasses. Oh my my my long awaited little bottle of deliciousness finally arrived after 4 false starts on a reputable site, so now I can savour the gorgeous floating scent . totally captivated by the amazing opening and the evolution of the notes thereafter! A world past -- despite the reformulation. Perhaps if I had smelled this before my fragrance collecting began I may have had a different reaction, but as I have been moving back in time slowly rather than making giant leaps, Iâve been able to trace the ancestral lines backwards so to speak, and am able to see the resemblances in many fragrances that have grown from these classics; just like looking at old family photos and seeing resemblance in faces. I had it for about 2 years from a fellow fragrantica user and decided to finally open it. Itâs interestingly lovely. I find it is just powdery/aldehydic in the very beginning, when it dries down it is spice and sweet flowers in blended perfection. I thought it would take at least another decade before I'd be ready to wear this. I wanted to have that elusive nostalgic moment with it but it never came. It is by far not my favorite fragrance, or even my favorite Guerlain, but nothing better captures the duality of sultry warmth and cool remove than the late stages of L'Heure Bleue. It will never be my regular daytime perfume but I will never not have a bottle of it on my shelf. Great unisex scent. Sure it smells like a vintage powder. The dry-down in this is pure magic. The unknown component makes this anxiety-inducing and claustrophobic. This is one that needs to be sampled on the skin - your own skin. It's impossible to stop at one. No. ❀ L' Heure Bleue ❤ Such a dainty, sophisticated scent. This is the quintessence of abstract modern perfumery. It is a masterpiece. It inspired him in 1912 to create L'Heure Bleue. Truly there is something for everyone in Guerlain.. multiple somethings.. in our case a few really lovely. But the current incarnation smells static, and is more of a sad museum piece. Wow, what an incredible fragrance! My mother hates this perfume, to the point of wanting to leave the room even in small doses. I swear, denying these notes to perfumers is like telling a carpenter he may never again build with knotty pine. The more I wear it the more I love this perfume. Women, who has deep retrospective thoughts, feelings. I'm helplessly in love with this fragrance and I'm so happy to have finally gotten around to buying myself a bottle. LâHeure Bleue was created by Jacques Guerlain and released in 1912.My friend, the Guerlain expert and blogger, Monsieur Guerlain, has a wonderful article on the fragranceâs background and development that I recommend reading. I like to read them after I submit my own because I do not want to be influenced by them. At 16, I started yearning for it, and asked for a bottle for Christmas. Which is nice, but it already exists. So pleased to find this! I believe that L'Heure Bleue inspired few legendary perfumes like Poeme, Vanderbilt, Oscar, or even maybe A Sweet Pastry In Paris by Zara today. Not a boudoir scent by any means but a scent from the dressing table. I am wearing LHB edt on a gloriously hot summer day, with high humidity, and it is perfect! I have been missing out. Will they come true? At first spray I thought 'oh this is pretty' but in less than half an hour I hated it and tried to wash it off without much success. So aptly named, L'Heure Bleue is particularly appropriate & a safe wear when my mood dips, when I can't sleep, when I can't face the world or answer the phone, when solitude is the only answer; I wear this & listen to 'Please, please, let me get what I want' by The Smith's & shed a tear or two. I got a sample of the vintage perfume and it breaks my heart that full bottles of the perfume are no longer for sale. My favorite Guerlain. It's pretty hilarious that I never knew the name of the perfume. It was created in 1912. This is such an enchanting symphony of blue and violet flowers - iris, heliotrope, carnation, violet and orchid. You know Guerlain did something right for this to still be in production after 100+ years. While wearing it, I kept noticing a weird thing that was happening - I was getting fleeting glimpses of the notes that should be in place of the huge gaps that seem to now exist...It is as if something has been taken out and not really replaced with anything. Once the sharp citrus has evaporated you are left with soft baby powder. It lasts twelve hours and is beautiful for all of them. What is that pins and needles scent that runs throughout this fragrance? This perfume feels like a stormy summer night. It is a floral oriental fragrance with the dusky scent of candies and almond cake (by the strong heliotrope) bought in an old world apothecary (due to its powdery accord). Unfortunately it was none of those things, it was just an everyday soft, flowery scent very nondescript. Oh Guerlain, how you beguile me so. I am sure it is not the scent itself, but what my skin does with it. Perfume lovers: 617947 Not much more to add. It is making me a fragrance snob as many of today's celeb and designer scents are so mundane and boring compared to this well-crafted, timeless gem, I love the snobs like Tania Sanchez, Luca Turin, and the like, who keep saying that they've "killed L'heure Bleue," or that "The fragrance we're smelling today is a ghost of the original.". At least most of them. Finally got to experience the classic, The Blue Hour, from Guerlain. I am a fan of carnation in perfumery but only when it is done with artful restraint. The top notes are almost too much for me. Love it! One problem I have had with perfumes in the past is my chemistry causing a 'stale' (I'm sorry but I call it an 'old lady smell' (I AM an old lady, now - LOL) but this remains fresh and lovely. I was looking for something unique, feminine and soft. I always wear this when I read or watch anything set in the 1900âs. it's a promise with slight trepidation which is comforted and assured by the wonderful fragrance. Would you call a work by DaVinci dated? i want to bathe in it! Didn't catch a glimpse of the bottle but it was nice to have it mentioned. What happened? I was sure I would love this based on the notes, the reviews and my knowledge of what I used to love in a fragrance. It is a "chilly heat," a hat tipped over one eye, a velvet cape, and matching silk undergarments. out of Itâs has dark purple flowers and a menthol, essential oil quality, similar effect to biting into a cardamom or a clove, a sweet, chilling and relieving scent. A garden of magic. I love it very much. Thank you Fragrantica for revealing the hidden yet complex notes. Not only was the stuff giving me a serious case of the olâ swoons, but it played just fine with my tatty jammies. I've never experienced such longevity. Definitely to be tested before purchasing. It's perfect for the office, as most perfumes are too obvious / too inappropriate for business women (if they want to be taken seriously). It is soft and comforting, the sweetness can wake up a little bit your stomach. Today, the EDT version is available in 50 ml bottles. I've been around her while she's wearing this and it's such a lovely fragrance. It hit me so hard. Guerlain LâHeure Bleue is a classic vintage perfume created in 1912, which remains in production to this day. It does have a vintage, powdery character but it isnât offensive in any way. In a way, it reminds me of No.5 due to it's superb blending. Chanel no. ONE: LâHEURE BLEUE DE GUERLAIN (I9I2) Nina is an old friend from university who is currently staying with us in Kamakura and has brought along an interesting and very eclectic selection of perfumes. I have read many excellent reviews on this 106-year-old masterpiece and I will definitely not repeat others' critiques. Youâve summed it beautifully! In general as far as I know customers who bought Guerlain L'heure Bleue By Guerlain For Women. i obtained my new bottle of EDP from walmart.com. Oppression, insanity, death and decay. I purchased a decant of this to test. I wore a sample of the eau de parfum recently, and it hit me just how similar this smells to certain versions of Tabac Blond that I have smelled. LOL. Unfortunately, on the drydown all I could smell were aldehydyes and ylang-ylang, which I associate with the notorious sour "old lady" smell. This is more a story than a review, because I have nothing to add to what has already been said about the notes and composition of this classic. I ADORE all the varations of L'heure bleue: the parfum and edp are sharper with spicy carnation and stronger Guerlainade base, while the edt is softer, more vanillic, like a caress. From reading the reviews I had pictured myself wondering round the grounds of a large mansion in British India wearing a tea dress waiting to be called for afternoon tea. I have a small decant of it that I purchased recently, and I'm still trying to decide if I like it. I will be curious to see if subsequent wearings reveal new perceptions. In addition to the incense, I get anise, almond and iris. upon dry down, the iris remains with a touch of sweetness and tonka and becomes a skin scent after 15 mins on me.. it is somewhat an old fashioned scent but still completely wearable. A standard that you will hold all other lovers to. I do get an old vibe from it, but you don't have to be 80 to pull this off, I am a guy in my late 30s and suits me well. Just powder after the first 30 min. L'Heure Bleue is a fusion between the Parisian night and the rest of the world. I donât have much to add here, except that this smells exactly like the crystal/New age shop in my town. She was young, gorgeous and very sexy. Not a single flower. love love love it!! The powder in this is not baby powder (I hate the smell of baby powder) but rather a powdery violet similar to the kind found in Gloria Vanderbilt. I have just bought it, blind buy. It reminds me of the floral water my mother used to put in my bath when I was a child. It is to tell the truth as you see it and, hopefully, to do so with tact. I have many Guerlain perfumes and this is another I have recently added to my collection. (PLEASE tell me that is a reputable site for perfumes.) When I read that Catherine Deneuve wore it for many years as her signature fragrance, I was not at all surprised. It was my signature for years and I wore it through a steamy summer on the American East coast two years ago - it blooms beautifully in the heat and I highly recommend it. LHB has some medicinal kind of smell at the first spray and blast of powder, it took me a while to get used to it (it was a blind buy), when it settles I can smell something classic (in this point it's different from Esprit d'Oscar), a little sweet but not gourmand, very fluffy and creamy, soft, powdery and last forever. When you are old, Petite Robe Noire (if it survives that long) will be considered an old lady scent. I am ordering a 50 ml refill EDP because I already have the gold canister, but that and my small EDT will see me out. Vero profumo does it so why Guerlain cant? On a warm August afternoon strolling down the Champs Elysees I walked into 68 and sprayed L'heure Bleue the favourite fragrance of many Parisian women including Catherine Deneuve. The recent formulation is miserable. I ordered a sample of this and a full bottle at a good price just in case I liked it. I know this- that It is a dreamy composition that always bewitches me with a certain power of magic and electricity I can always depend on. Such a legendary scent - and after watching an episode of Call the Midwife in which Trixie mentions L'Heure Bleue, I remembered I had a sample, and determined to try it. This scent has survived two World Wars and remains available to generations today. I have gathered that loving this fragrance is some sort of rite-of-passage in the fragrance community, but it's just not for me. I believe that Guerlain classic perfumes should be in my collection and an index/reference point. I am so looking forward to discovering this Guerlain masterpiece! Just received this in the mail after purchasing it as a blind buy. I was shocked when I compared it at home with the 2002 version of EDP I still have, and the perfume I got about 4 years ago. Truly a masterpiece! Guerlain's L'Heure Bleue has been around for a very long time for a good reason -- it's a classic. Timeless. Comforting and nostalgic. Such a strange phenomenon. Intoxicating. That all changed this week, as I received a bottle of L'Heure Bleue EDT as a gift. My second day wearing L'Heure Bleue: I have been thinking about the strangeness of this perfume being a favorite of Elizabeth II, Jean Rhys (a writer whom I have admired since adolescence), and myself, three women who would not appear to have much in common besides a steadfast devotion to Guerlain fragrances. 5 and L'heure Bleue are absolutely nothing alike in the least. I was reading through the reviews, and much to my surprise, it seems that I have not written one about this gorgeous creature! Itâs the OG of this genre. Powdery, floral, sweet, woody. You travel through this blue hour, the leather and smoke, the grandma floral, the baby powder (or what i call baby butt) but fortunately not too similar to diapers, the pharmacy in Chinatown. 2003 (batch code 3L01), EdT spray, color looks fine (not super dark/rusted). I have very mixed feelings about this fragrance, which, like a few other Guerlain classics, is only cursed by its age and originality. She had not been around older folks very much and even her grandparents don't wear strong perfumes but, her association is such. Gorgeous timeless perfume, upon initial spray I get the spiciness, probably coming from Anise, but after few minutes it all becomes so well blended and rounded, I cannot pick up a single note, all you get is a delicate spicy floral woody aroma. For those who already have LâHeure Bleue and want something brighter and more playful for a change, it would be an interesting alternative. Very classy and beautifully crafted. To me it smells like band aids, dentist gauze, and Gold Bond foot powder. I can't smell any iris and i believe it's the powdery effect that makes the iris visible to the sniffers. Haha, unpopular opinion here, but I'm young and tend to gravitate towards sweeter smells. This is quite vintage and complex. and love it is! I will freely admit to being a Guerlain junkie, both classical and modern creations. Let me be with L'Heure Bleue...and nothing else.. Beautiful perfume. Oh no! Hence it is only fitting that my jubilee review should be about the timeless beauty that is L'Heure Bleue. Floral, kind of spicy, slightly sweet, very powdery. It's magic in a bottle! What a great review! Guerlain LâHeure Bleue is the embodiment of refinement. This and insolence actually smelled the best, Mitsouku the worst. Since then, I invested into a full EDP bottle, but because it evokes a certain era and style for me, I just don't see it as something that could be worn to work, on weekend or for going out. i've always read that it's a sad perfume and that Mitsouko (which i have and loveed for years) is joyous so i wasn't sure if i would like it. To me it even feels nostalgic and forward looking. It smelled truly ancient, like something I had smelled very long ago on old clothes stored in an attic. My father and daughter were in Paris last week and were kind enough to bring me back a bottle of this. Nothing will ever break me and my first love up - Insolence EDT. This is such a classic: Ethereal and timeless. De geur LâHeure Bleue van Guerlain is een bloemig oriëntaalse geur met topnoten van anijs, koriander, neroli, bergamot en citroen. L\'Heure Bleue or \'the bluish hour\' was created by Jacques Guerlain in 1912. It's a breath of fresh air to smell something so lovely that I can actually experience all the notes in their entirety. I feel like I've finally "grown into" vintage Guerlain as I previously felt too young to appreciate this. is the very best product in ⦠It makes me feel as though I've lost something important to me, but despite the loss my life was made better from it. ($42.94 per ounce). Living a modest and secluded life, she is still beautiful and good at heart, very nostalgic and the only luxury she still affords is wearing one drop of this perfume that she still has on her vanity table. The dry down, I do get some sandalwood, which I love. I like it, don't get me wrong, but I don't love it. I can say that this perfume is my favorite of all time. So well blended it's hard to pick out just one note - all a soft blue haze that makes me smile. "The sun has set, but night has not yet fallen. It's sunset. Is that the anise? I thought Iâd never get on with it but it opened out to a very interesting violet/floral note with some spicy background from the cloves. I was just reading the other reviews and comments. This wears so beautifully and is probably one of the most sophisticated perfumes one can wear. I got very excited the first time I read about this perfume, couldnât wait to try itt, well what a disappointing experience that turned out to be. The benzoin is not enough to give this any warmth or richness on my skin, which I desperately wish it had. I don't love it. I am truely blown away. I imagine a formerly wealthy mistress having led a luxurious life and now, having reached her middle 30's, not as courted and visited anymore. I have worn LHB for a week and I continue to hope that it grows on me. Like, I dang near astral project there when I smell this. To others the scent is divine. I love it in all it's iterations, however the Extrait just transports me. it's so beautiful and i understand what people meant by the sadness about it. Dear reviewer "nhledger", L'heure bleue can't possibly be a dupe of Chanel 5 simply because LHB comes from 1912 and Chanel No. The era was pre-war, the impressionist age, the crazy years, and the industrial revolution with its bourgeoisie starting the revelry in the blue hour... the dusk. Such a beautiful classic that I really enjoy owning and wearing. So romantic. I am not sure which one was developed first. L'Heure Bleu is not a modern fragrance. The dominant notes are florals, and the perfume is recommended especially for daytime and springtime wear. Oversprayed, the mothballs will overwhelm, but like a typical fairytale spell, only the most modest wearer will get to experience her true beauty. Timeless, kind, relaxing, free.. . For me it's the drydown that I love and I couldn't wear it every day unless I was paid to do so. I have several bottles of L'Origan in EdT, EdP, and Parfum. I adore the clove-anise combo that comes through but it's softened by just the right amount of powdery lemon and purple flowers. This is going to sound very dramatic but I can't help it! It does not smell good on me. It was a blind purchase as I had never had the chance tofind a store that sampled it. I received this fragrance in a swap from a generous fragrantica member. I wanted it for a long time, and for a month or so I had the chance to grab it and call it mine. Sometimes I wonder if I could get away with wearing this. People today may not understand this beautiful thing.
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