Wind Wood

Mancera
Good priceWind Wood by Mancera ranks among the best perfumes for men .This top greens & herbs fragrance blends Amber, Cedar, Green Notes, Leather, Mandarin Orange, Musk, Oakmoss, Patchouli, Pink Pepper, Vetiver, Violet notes with greens & herbs, flowers, citrus, woods & mosses, musk, amber and animalic, spices accords, earning high praise in our perfume review community. Wind Wood excels as one of the best perfumes for spring or fall, shining during day wear. Our PerfumeRates community ranks Wind Wood as a leading greens & herbs fragrance for men, a must-try from Mancera's top perfume brands. Dive into the best perfume reviews, explore top men's fragrances, and discover cheap perfume deals on PerfumeRates!
Votes
spring311
summer210
fall282
winter95
day603
night294
Longevity(599)
enduringlongmoderateshortfaint
Sillage(706)
powerfulstrongsoftclose
Price value(393)
excellentgoodfaircostlynot worthy
female (11)
unisex (59)
male (370)
3%
13%
84%
Ocassions
Main accords
All ocassions
Notes











IMO this come accross with English Laundry's Tahitian Water, with steroid.
I love Dior Fahrenheit so was curious if this was similiar. At first blast I smell the similarity which is the violet leaf, but still very different. I really enjoy this and it is very versatile, unique, and signature scent worthy. The dry down is a vetiver sweet amber which is beautiful and makes me want to wear it more and keep sniffing. Might be my favorite from the house. Nothing like Fahrenheit and it’s own creation.
I didn't like this at first, but my FragranceNet travel spray leaking all over the others it came with might have soured that first impression. But after a few wearings in the summer, it makes me excited for the fall. It definitely compares with Fahrenheit EDT, but where Fahrenheit reminds me of summer, specifically mowing the lawn-- gasoline and freshly cut grass-- Wind Wood's vetiver is more of a dry hay on top of the gasoline. I initially thought it smelled like a barn with a leaky tractor. So Wind Wood and Fahrenheit both conjure tractors and are nostalgic, but Wind Wood is an autumn hayride-- a much more enjoyable memory than a sweaty summer lawn-mowing. I'm debating whether to buy the full bottle of WW or just layer Fahrenheit over some vetiveryl acetate for a similar effect. WW doesn't have Fahrenheit's projection, and it's rare that a Mancera doesn't blow the doors off a designer. I'll be debating this one until my decant runs out. Edit: It ran out, and I bought the FB. Loving it. Edit #2: I now have a backup bottle. Easily one of my favorites.
This smells exactly like a bodywash I used as a kid. I don't remember what it was, but that violet note is sticking out so badly that it ruins the rest for me. The cedar plays nicely into the violet but it can't save the final outcome.
@Mikiud Not so strange. Expensive fragrances are never considered as dupes. Only cheap ones are.