Roger&Gallet Fleur de Figuier Eau de Parfum 50ml in our organic pharmacy, Comment on advice for use and dosage with our partner Avis checked after your purchase.
Intense , sensual and gourmand , this perfume transports your senses through a floral , fruity and woody journey.
Roger&Gallet Fleur de Figuier Eau de Parfum 50ml, intense perfumed universe inspired by a late summer afternoon in the heart of Esterel, in the Mediterranean, has in its heart an extract of fig tree bud and precious essences distilled from
It reveals all the sensuality and intensity of a fig heart heated in the sun. Its gourmet trail contrasted with sparkling notes of mandarin enhances an accord of candied fig, white musks and patchouli for an intensely relaxing benefit scientifically proven*.
*Study carried out by Professor Arnaud Aubert, doctor in neurosciences and psychophysiology at the University of Tours, France.
Spray Eau de Parfum on pulse points, i.e. behind the ears, inside the wrists and on the neck.
Comment on the recommendations for use and dosage of Roger&Gallet Fleur de Figuier Eau de Parfum 50ml with our partner Avis checked after your purchase.
Alcohol, aqua/water, parfum/fragrance, linalool, butyl methodibenzoylmethane, ethylhexyl methoxycinnamate, hydroxycitronellal, benzyl salicylate, limonene, benzyl alcohol, citronellol, glycerin, alpha-isomethyl ionone, coumarin, bht, isoeugenol, geraniol, ficus carica bud extract, fig bud extract, tris (tetramethylhydroxypiperidinol), citrate, citral, ci 17200/red 33, ci 19140/yellow 5.
External use only.
Roger&Gallet comes in the form of a 50 ml bottle.
Fig accords in perfumery are not as obvious as one might imagine! Indeed the fig, this delicate soft and sweet fruit typically Mediterranean, produces neither essential oil nor essence by its flower or its fruit. Thus some perfumers will use its leaves or its wood where others will try to reproduce this smell so typical of the fig tree in flower thanks to synthetic molecules.
Anyway, fig notes took over our perfumes in the 90s to give them the natural and so intoxicating touch of the summer gardens of the South.