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Oscar by Oscar De La Renta Perfume Review

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Oscar by Oscar de la Renta

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Reviews of Oscar by Oscar de la Renta

At that place are 35 reviews of Oscar by Oscar de la Renta.


This, is for vintage Oscar...

A fragrant potpourri / kitchen sink of mixed flowers and a blend of spiced, oriental goodness. A classic - if you can discover it in vintage form. I've not smelled any newer / reformulations, and so I cannot compare.



As jtd pointed out in his perceptive article below, Jean-Louis Sieuzac straddled the 80's and 90's with Dune, but that wasn't the first fourth dimension he'd crossed the decades.
With a sweet debut of orangish blossom and tuberose, Oscar has the elements of an 80's honey monster - full and exciting; simply underneath that, in that location'south a dusty green base of operations that recalls the charming naiveté of Vacances (1936).
Oscar (1977) is both a flake advised - and lovely by turns, and this is i reason why information technology's overshadowed by its big sister Opium, as well 1977, and also composed past Sieuzac (et al).
Where Opium is a juggernaut, Oscar is made of two parts - and doesn't accept the same force. It's a liminal smell which spans the decades and pulls in two different directions, forrad to the brave new earth of Margaret Thatcher, and back to a romanticised flower meadow.

Review of a sample miniature EdT



This is for the new version - black cap every bit shown in the photo. I remember it as being a bit different back in the '80'southward, but I might be incorrect nearly that. I like it. It is a spicy floriental - very much like Coty'southward 50'Origan or Guerlain's Fifty'Heure Bleue, but non nearly equally circuitous or deep. Only, it tin can exist had for a fraction of the toll of Guerlain. Information technology has that singled-out 'airspun pulverisation' scent of L'Origan. I don't see violet anywhere in the pyramid, only I do go a strong violet notation in Oscar. Oddly, I don't go much tuberose, which many of the other reviewers mention. All in all, Oscar is a very dainty, somewhat derivative, safe blind buy for fans of florientals. While it is an fourscore's-blazon scent, information technology is not very 'dated' or a huge powerhouse like Opium or Diva. Oscar tin can be a safe office scent, a safe blind purchase, not at all gourmand (despite cinnamon/clove notes) or aquatic. If you like L'Heure Bleue, y'all volition similar Oscar.


Scarlett O'Hara sits alone.and her boudoir sits in smells of her old well -worn leather bag,a vase of not fresh carnations,her favorite lipstick,and the powdery odour of her body,soft Mozart piano. she is wearing a white and green printed silk-organza dress with green velvet trim,topped off with a straw hat. she waits for Ashley but he never comes. she watches the rain,and wonders why. Oscar is melancholy and gloomy, slightly gothic,but retains information technology's sensibility and elegance.the fragrance of a adult female'south cherished reminiscence of someone once loved.by the bluish light of evening, the remembrance of a treasured love, silken sheets,a clandestine longing,memories, and warmth of the center'due south flush.

Such a legendry odor.perfume of the solitude and romance.perfume of intimate spirituality. mysterious,powdery and soft.stiff but at the same fourth dimension subtle and dreamy.unforgettable, however light.like your softest velvet pillow with all the feathers coming out in a soft cakewalk of wind,while you are surrounded by violets,irises and other mysterious powdery florals.sweet floral opening with iris,a little soapiness and powder merely the dry out downwards is incredible with a hint of creamy vanilla and elegant musk makes it mysteriously lecherous and smells of desire and sends the wearer into another world.the absolute of femininity, inner beauty and richness.a fragrance for the person who loves the smell of vintage cosmetics.timeless,bewitching and intoxicating.



What nosotros have here is a beautiful, elegant archetype from the 70'due south! I go a bitter lemon opening with lavender & some floral arrangements, information technology is sweet, not sugary sweetness.

There are herbs to cutting out some of the sweet. It is for a classy individual more and then for an adult considering I do non see this blazon of fragrance appealing to the younger gals. I owned a vintage EDT that I caused but only kept for nostalgia reasons.

One twenty-four hours my granny came to visit me & I gave her my canteen of Oscar & she admittedly LOVED IT! She was happy to have it & I was happy she enjoys it! This is ideal for fall/wintertime clothing as that is where it shines. It projects nicely & it terminal at to the lowest degree 8 hours on me. This was created in the 70'south yet information technology does not aroma dated! Savour!



My husband bought this for me before we were married in the mid 80's, and I wore it everywhere. After many years I remembered it when I saw a bottle, so I bought information technology again. On me it is a soft floral - light and delicate - with a decent longevity to it. I am not sure why information technology reminds me of carnations, and fifty-fifty though I dislike fresh carnations, I like this scent very much and vesture information technology oft.

Interestingly my husband doesn't call back ownership information technology for me at all, ha ha.



Another Sieuzac dream. Mid 80'due south Vintage Eau de Parfum. Bergamot start with Effluvious Basil, Coriander Anise twist at first reminds me of Hiram Greenish Voyage and Shalimar.
Peach slightly sweetens and is countered by Clove/Cinnamon. Here, this nods to Youth Dew. A serenity Carnation Camphour cools, dries and mops up the sweetness of a drop of Nectar.

A Jasmin Indole, with it's gentle rot, draws me away from a mild Tuberose Heart.

The Rose drifts in and attaches to the existent Sandalwood as a hint of Castoreum rises through the middle with a light incense. Bister slightly Vanilla-ed anchors.

All in all a beautiful packet that tin exist worn by a human being as easily as Shalimar.

Drydown becomes a buttery Savon, I suspect a trivial Moss is to blame.



Beautifully soft & elegant floral...

This is a fragrance which has significance to me, equally it was my mother'south first signature scent and favourite perfume. This ane comes from an age where perfumes didn't need to exist cloying or sugary sweetness, but which emphasised nature and femininity.

Oscar by Oscar de la Renta is a wonderful perfume done in a very elegant style of perfumery. Similar a white floral boutonniere of jasmine, tuberose, lilly-of-the-valley & gardenia. At that place is as well a spicy base of operations of bister, myrrh and opoponax. I also get ylang-ylang and herbs and a few aromatic florals. What a mix!

This is a perfume for someone dressed up in my opinion, but it would also make a great signature scent and a spring/summertime favourite. It is quite floral just at no bespeak is this fragrance ever overwhelming. It is done with such mode and mastery that you tin tell it was not made today, but in a golden historic period of female marketed perfume. Incredible stuff! This is worth a try if you like floral bouquets and wedding/special occasion perfumes. Elegant and floral and never overwhelming. If you're interested in a classic yet youthful style, then try this one.



Perfumer Jean-Louis Sieuzac fabricated some of the most memorable and influential perfumes of the 1970s-1990s.

Yves Saint Laurent'south era-defining Opium (1977) smothered the oriental genre in spice, making the previous big-girls like Shalimar and Youth Dew seem quaint. In the 1980s Sieuzac skipped the match, but piled on the gasoline to redefine leather with the twin brutes Hermès Bel Ami (1986) and Christian Dior Fahrenheit (1988). As if to stuff the genie that he released with Opium back into the canteen, in 1991 he composed Christian Dior Dune, an eerie beauty that gives me a shiver every time I put information technology on. It has the jarring capacity to make opposing qualities fit together that renders it both off-putting and seductive. In retrospect, Dune is the the perfume that sat aloof and alone at the cusp of the 80s and 90s. Information technology managed simultaneously to refer to the disproportionate scale of 1980s perfumery still conductor in the sense of concession and amende of the perfumes of the early 1990s.

In 1977 Sieuzac also fabricated Oscar for Oscar de la Renta. Though it won the 1978 Women's Fragrance of the Yr Fifi Honour information technology was overshadowed by its its own sibling Opium, which crushed everything in its trajectory. Compared to Opium, whose name and scent advise the unquestioning pursuit of pleasure (ahhh…the 70s), Oscar's terse mixed floral tone might well have coined the phrase 'old lady perfume.' Oscar is a precipitous, starched white floriental perfume that leans more toward the dry sting of carnation and the remoteness of gardenia than the lushness of jasmine or tuberose. Opium's relationship to tradition was to pause from it by surpassing it. Oscar could non have been more different in its aspiration. It was in the lineage of Caron Bellodgia, Dior Dioressence and Guerlain 50'Heure Bleue–perfumes that might not have been intended to be afar, just came to be seen as remote standard-bearers. In fact Oscar shares l'Heure Bleue's classic bittersweetness with a like midpoint between glacé resinousness and acid powder. It is a strong, virtually forceful fragrance but its tone was so bourgeois compared to its contemporaries that wearing it gives the sensation of falling backward, stepping away from the accelerating dynamic of the tardily 1970s.

I doubt that a lot of people in the late 70s wore both Opium and Oscar. They capture the 2 sides of what would very soon come to be called America's "civilization state of war." Sieuzac deserves great credit for straddling this nascent divide and creating two exceptional compositions in the process. Information technology cannot have happened inadvertently. Oscar suited the de la Renta brand'south goal of dressing the ladies-who-lunch, the women who aspired to the society-gear up. Opium captured the Yves Saint Laurent brand'south desire for a new chichi: the androgyny, the Studio 54 vibe, the coincidental affluence.

Perfume's linguistic communication is an openly debated question in 2015. Jean-Louis Sieuzac's perfumes from 1977 comment subtly just precisely on this issues of the solar day and are a record of how perfumery speaks and can be read. It'southward unfortunate that in 1977 the piece of work of the perfumer wasn't publicly attributed to him. Within the next two decades that closet door would starting time to open. Improve late than never, my hat is off to Jean-Louis Sieuzac.

(Based on an excellently preserved bottle of eau de toilette from the early 1980s.)

from scenthurdle.com



Oscar de la Renta's kickoff scent created a new category, the "floriental," according to Roja Dove. He relates its debt to Coty'south L'Origan and Guerlain's L'Heure Bleue and de la Renta's wish to replicate the latter as 1 of his favorite scents.

Despite its many ingredients, I found information technology to be an undistinguished floral medley with a cinnamon/vanilla dry downwards. For me information technology lacked residue and clarity, since most of the notes are indistinguishable from the combined effect.

Turin did not experience the original, but puts downwards the re-formation with two stars.

Tiptop notes: Neroli, Coriander, Cascarilla, Basil, Peach, Gardenia, Cilantro
Heart notes: Jasmine, Tuberose, Ylang, Rose de Mai, Lavender, Orchid, Broom, Muguet, Galbanum, Honey
Base notes: Clove, Sandalwood, Amber, Myrrh, Patchouli, Opopanox, Vetiver, Castoreum, Oakmoss, Cedarwood, Musk, Ambergris

The bottle is gorgeous and is the only collectible part of the ensemble in my apprehensive opinion.



I haven't used this in years just will get a bottle for fall. Nothing bad to say about information technology. I do similar it just I similar to experiment with different fragrances.


Bought my get-go grown upwardly bottle of eau de parfum over 20 years ago. It was Oscar. I was told back then it was 'his signature scent' and I loved it! I all the same accept information technology. I don't wear scents daily, and I have tried other scents, but this one makes me feel sophisticated and a flake exotic. That's why I save it for special times. One solar day I'll effort Ruffles, simply I'll e'er come back to Oscar. :)


Oh the memories...

I wore the eau de parfume Oscar de la Renta in the belatedly 80s, early 90s, and to me it is an erotic olfactory property. Oasis't smelled the newer version, and I doubt I will. I don't want to ruin it for me.

It definitely was a woodsy-floral, my favorite type of fragrance, very soft and clean and wore close to the torso.

Might effort to score a vintage eau de parfume on Ebay. I didn't like the eau de toilette as much. Still, I remember I bought nearly five bottles of this, and for me that is a miracle, every bit I usually buy something new every fourth dimension.



This is for women? Wow!

Oscar (EDP version) opens with a wallop of bitter lemon and lavander, lightly spiced by basil, and nuanced with a touch of tuberose. The lavender is frigid, herbal, probably Castilian. The drydown rapidly brings forth the warmth and creaminess of opoponax and sandalwood. The base is a masculine take on cloves and ambergris, all haloed in a rugged smell of rosemary and myrrh. This smells very expensive, very well synthetic, and surprisingly unisex. I don't know how the EDT dispenses with those forenoon-slap superlative notes, simply I can say that the perfume is stunning all effectually. A real winner from Oscar de la Renta.



I expected Oscar to be quite rich and exciting however this fragrance is refreshing and somewhat soapy.

I can't say whether I like it or not, its complexity and overwhelming freshness has me a fiddling confused.

I call up it may exist the blend of white florals (which I admire), mixed in with the herbaceous notes of coriander, basil, rosemary, lavendar and patchouli that appears to be shocking to my nose. However, don't go me wrong, this is a pleasant odour, just something that I'yard not particularly used to.

Later the rather green and potent opening, Oscar develops into something quite powdery and soft, which is certainly appealing. I tin now encounter why Oscar is hailed as a classic.

I must make it known that this fragrance has amazing lasting force, and I hateful amazing. I could smell this on me even after a shower at the cease of the day when I had get-go applied information technology in the morning.

Despite the fact that this fragrance isn't my cup of tea, I certainly recommend this olfactory property. Very lady-like in my opinion.



Oscar is warm and inviting, richly sweet and a wonder in that information technology doesn't seem to me like a product of its time. The downside is I discover it far also powdery, to the point of nuisance. Other than that, no problem. Performance here is very good, and I would readily recommend this (peculiarly for evening or formal wear) to those who aren't thrown by powder or potency.


WOW!! I had worn this years ago, and recently gave information technology some other try, as I was looking for a new scent. I cannot believe I went so long without this stuff It is astonishing!!!!! At first blast, it is way, way stiff, do not let the EDT fool ya. It packs a dial. One or 2 sprays is enough. I also find a slight bit of a leather smell, but information technology may be the patchouli I am smelling. It next settles into a sweeter, more than floral aroma.I am decaring this my fall fragrance, since fall is my favorite flavor. Wearing this somehow reminds me of leaves crunching under my feet, along with a cool stiff breeze.This scent is in no fashion, shape or form a "girlie" odor. More of a "I'll smile politely and and then rip you to shreds" kind of corporate scent. I LOVE Information technology!


Really, I have never smelled this scent. I wrote a review for the wrong one. Please remove this.


Dearest this fragrance. Is warm enough for winter and light enough for summer. Smells soft, but not powdery - feminine just not frilly - alluring without being over-stated. Great for the office because it is not overpowering in close quarters.


I have the vintage version of this and would probably sniff the new bottles before I repurchased to brand sure that information technology was at least along the same lines. This is a very squeamish deep floriental which never fails to brand me feel warm and sexy. I recently tried Oscar Reddish Satin at TJ Maxx and it is the aforementioned fragrance with spicy orange florals and aldehydes. I besides tried the Summertime 2008 version which I institute to accept very bitter citrus and lite flowers on a non existent base of operations.The original Oscar's notes via perfume.com :Top: basil, coriander, orangish blossomMiddle: jasmine, rose, tuberose, clove and myrrhBase: sandalwood, patchouli


A woman could be a witch or 500 years old and I'd yet jump on her if she had this stuff on. I always, always, notice a adult female wearing Oscar de La Renta.Classy, commanding; as inviting equally it is cold.This i'south for the women who know what they desire and exactly how they're going to go it.Equally for the odor: starts out heavy, softens considerably, and takes you dorsum generations when course was a adult female'due south greatest adornment. (Woody-powdery-floral, but leagues above Estee Lauder'southward "Knowing," which, while wonderful in it's ain right, cannot compete with Oscar.)


I must accept a bottle of the new juice. My sister had a bottle back in the seventies, and it was glorious. How disappointing that something so delicious could exist gone.The new stuff is not ugly, simply information technology is heavier, sweeter, colder. A totally dissimilar feel.


Way also soft and girlie for me. I mean, I even forgot I had it on! Hell, I could barely sniff it! Likewise floral for me as I like something with a bit more than depth and intrigue nigh it. There's no interest hither. Deadening. And inexpensive smelling. Just homo! Does this stuff come in huge bottles! I've seen it at Dazzler Boutique in huge ounces! Yes, because they're trying to get rid of it! Information technology's so bland, obviously, blah, blah, blah. If you don't like potent stuff, this may be it for you, because it's one of the softest I've sniffed.


Soft powdery floral, slightly dated and unmistakably feminine. Definitely demure -- not a frag for the vamp.A nifty buy, also -- this is what happens when old designer frags stick effectually xxx years. Ugly bottle, though.

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