Miller Harris Mini Reviews

One of the stops on last month’s London perfume tour organised by Pia and Nick (of Love to Smell) was the Miller Harris store on Monmouth Street, Covent Garden.  Unfortunately I missed the talk but got a lovely bag of boxed samples. If you’d like to catch up on what went on that day, you can read all about it on Bonkers About PerfumeVolatile Fiction and I Scent You A Day. It was a great get-together of 20 or so perfume lovers/bloggers. Too bad I was feeling so poorly.

 

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Below are my mini-reviews of the five EdP samples we received –

Cassis en Feuille

Bergamot, galbanum, blackcurrant, geranium, tomato leaf, cedarwood

I always keep an eye out for perfumes showcasing blackcurrant because it’s a note I’m drawn to. However, they usually turn out to be sour and/or too green. Cassis en Feuille starts out very grassy, becoming a tangle of green stems accented with blackcurrant and then finally, a prominent blackcurrant scent with a green backdrop. Like a lot of the fragrances I’ve tried from this line, it doesn’t project very far. I still haven’t found my blackcurrant perfume.

Poirier d’un Soir

Bergamot, rum extract, rose, papyrus, birch tar oil, patchouli oil, white cedarwood

Why aren’t there more pear fragrances around, I wonder? “Pear Tree in the Evening” is a likeable honeyed pear scent. I’m not good with this level of sweetness but somehow I can deal with it better in the colder months. It manages to brighten up a dull autumnal day and fits the concept of sitting under a pear tree full of ripe fruit as the sun hangs low in the sky. It’s not a dupe by any means, but could be worth a try if you fell for the pear tart of La Belle Helene but couldn’t stomach MDCI prices.

La Pluie

Bergamot, tangerine, lavender, ylang ylang, cassis, jasmine, orange flower, vetiver , vanilla

The most surprising of  the five is La Pluie. Rather than being a straight-up aquatic, it’s a   tropical garden after a rain shower. It starts a little musty/powdery, slightly green and herbal. In the heart, it reveals a carpet of buttery ylang-ylang flowers interspersed with dewy jasmine.  The final twist is the soft ylang scented vanilla which comes through in the base. La Pluie stays subdued throughout its development and could be an easy, breezy choice for summer.

Tangerine Vert

Tangerine green, grapefruit, lemon, marjoram, geranium, orange flower, cedarwood, moss, sweet musk

No  surprises here. As advertised, we get a lovely tart, tangerine with green leaves in tact. For most of its development it’s a really great zingy citrus which isn’t too sour even though the notes include grapefruit and lemon. Tangerine Vert has the uplifting feeling of a bright spring day and tangerine/mandarin scents always seem to make me happy.  Sadly, the feel-good factor ends for me with the arrival of the base. The sweet muskiness is not to my taste however, if you like Kiehl’s Original Musk then you’ll probably be fine with it.

Fleur Oriental 

Bergamot, orange flower, spicy carnation, rose, heliotrope, vanilla bourbon, benzoin, amber, labdanum, musk

I have a soft spot for Fleur Oriental. It’s one of the first samples I got after falling down the rabbit hole. This was partly because I was interested in carnation perfumes at the time and partly because Katie Puckrik was a fan of it. Trying it again a number of years later, I still really admire it, despite the noticeable heliotrope. It has a silken powdery feel, the way an old-school carnation fragrance like Bellodgia might have had back in the day. This cloud of scented talcum powder is nicely spiked with citrus and orange flower, giving it a lift. The base even has a touch of the Shalimars about it. All in all, it makes for an easy to wear, floral oriental with somewhat of a retro feel and a pleasing mist of sillage.

 

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Do you like any of these or other fragrances by Miller Harris?

8 Comments

Filed under Perfume Reviews

8 responses to “Miller Harris Mini Reviews

  1. Miller Harris is a brand that I haven’t often on the radar, but I did like their newest, Etui….something
    Office friendly is a good way to describe them, but as I’m a working from home person, I can reach for the heavier scents without fear. 🙂

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    • Etui Noir is a nice soft leather, though a touch too sweet for me.
      They are definitely office friendly scents and probably a style most associate with British perfumery.
      Lucky you, not to have to worry about co-workers!

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  2. It was nice to be reminded of that great day by your post, and of the generous goody bag of samples. I need to try Poirier d’un Soir still, which I know my brother loves and has a full bottle of, ditto Tangerine Verte – he and my SIL are huge MH fans and often buy ‘his and hers’ bottles at the duty free in airports.

    The cassis one I felt much the same about as you – it was a bit grassy overall and not something I could ever love. Then historically I have had huge problems with Fleur Oriental’s mahoosive heliotrope note, which has been known to bring on a headache on the wrong day. I thought it was going there the last time I tried it, but then the heliotrope faded a bit towards the far drydown and it was rather lovely!.

    La Pluie was a surprise hit – a bit like AG Matin d’Orage but I liked it more on balance. Would be a nice inoffensive summer choice as you say.

    PS Thanks for the link to my write up!

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    • Hi V,
      Yes, I wouldn’t buy Fleur Oriental because of the heliotrope but I still think it’s a really good perfume.
      So La Pluie was a surprise hit for you too? I tried it before reading the notes list so the ylang was unexpected.
      I hope people check out your lovely write-up.

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  3. cookie queen

    Hi Tara – I gave all my samples to a non-perfumista friend. She loves them. We, as in us, are not the MH target market. They are actually all quite lovely scents. I love the packaging. And it was a great day huh?! xxxx

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  4. Miller Harris isn’t one of the brand, with which I’m too familiar. But I’m currently testing Cassis en Feuille (I like the opening but then it doesn’t live up to the promise – I’ll try to apply more the next time I test it) and Fleur Oriental (again, almost love in the opening but then it gets into some territory I do not care much – still will be testing more).

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