




Paco Rabanne 1 Million Edt Spray
Paco Rabanne 1 Million is a captivating cologne for men that features the use of graperfruit, rose, blood orange, cinnamon, leather, peppermint,white musk, white woods, spice, amberketal and patchouli in its composition. It is so well blended that you don't so much get a logical progression from phase to phase as you get all notes coexisting at the same time throughout. Spicy notes are brought together with fresh notes, lavish florals, rich lavender over a base of light musk, pale woods and amber. It is a very strange and unique scent, reminiscent of Jean Paul Gaultier's Fleur du Male but louder and busier. A heady blend of notes that create a lively rich olfactory experience. Launched in: 2008 Paco Rabanne 1 Million Eau de Toilette Spray 100ML
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Released in the summer of 2008 in Europe 1Million by Paco Rabanne was developed by the perfumers Christophe Raynaud, Olivier Pescheux and Michel Girard. The following are a list of notes that go into this captivating fragrance for men: blood orange, rose, grapefruit, peppermint, leather, cinnamon, spice, white woods, amberketal and patchouli. 1 Million by Paco Rabanne doesn’t so much have distinct notes that emerge from the overall mix and then recede back again. This is one of those thoroughly well blended fragrances where no individual note seems to shine through on its own. In an attempt to isolate some notes or at least describe how this scent works I have come up with the following: 1Million by Paco Rabanne unites sweets and hints of spice, the center is light and fresh with a scent of indistinct blossoms folded into lavender and the whole fragrance rests on a base that is composed of light musk, amber and vanilla. Comparisons between this fragrance and Jean Paul Gaultier’s Le Male are not entirely fruitless however this one is not as complex or as nuanced as that fragrance. This is due to the fact that the notes have been power blended to oblivion. This isn’t a bad thing either, it lends a certain charm to this scent that I must admit I like, I just wish there was a little separation between notes and phases of development, just to keep me a little more interested