Clint fragrance notes

  • Head

    • bergamot, lemon, aldehydes
  • Heart

    • fir balsam, clary sage, patchouli, woods, geranium
  • Base

    • leather, vetiver, oakmoss

Latest Reviews of Clint

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Clint is a light and lively Chant-esque (it may even be Bernard, we don't know for sure!) quinoline-chypre that opens much like Aramis in its piercing aldehydes and bergamot, but no sooner than this fanfare are we met with the body of Clint (chicka-bow). It's a body of musky clary sage on a bed of vetiver and labdanum, with the IBQ the enduring current from splash-on to skin-scent.

It feels more Wrangler-rugged outdoorsy than genteel and clean, and while some may find it redundant if Aramis already tickles their fancy, others may very well appreciate the somewhat greener, herbal earthiness of Clint as a welcome variation. Plus, who could resist a bottle like this? The cap alone is worth the price of admission.
29th February 2024
278607
Avon Clint After Shave (Paul Revere Bell Decanter) -

"Aramis Lite" is by far the best description here so I will echo the previous reviewers comments.

I still want this one in my collection though as the 70's era Avon decanters are just awesome. Busts, globes, cars, screwdrivers, broad swords...come on lighten up, this is fun!

2.5 stars (fragrance)
+
1.5 stars (decanter)
=
4 stars
20th January 2021
238337

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First of all,this, is a Big hit for me.
That said the opening Adelehydes may please those who remember the Brutal opening of Aramis Vintage. It quickly dies down to Heart of Clary Sage (a fave of mine) and a Floral Woody Dry Patched Leather reminscent to the Aigner No.1 and even whispers of the sweeter, Vaunted Bel Ami et greener, Cabochard. Another joy is the Mossy, Vetiver and Do I feel a touch Labdanum? base , which carries the gently into about four hours of gentlemanly leathered, skin scent. Bliss.
I am one of those who have respect for Aramis and will reach for the Vintage Cabochard, Clint, first.
17th March 2019
214351
Stardate 20180930:

I had to wear it two days in a row to understand. It is similar to various classic leathers and yet different from them.
The leather used is same as k10 type. I think they used the one from their 1966 Leather. But it has been blended so well into woody (vetiver perhaps) moss that you get an animalic character (which I do not get from K10 and likes).
Sometimes I feel it is a missing link joining traditional EDC and leather. Aramis perhaps was influenced by this.
1st October 2018
207450
Avon had a moderate amount of success with the very unique Avon Leather (1966), so a decade later, I can see them wanting to release another leather-themed cologne for men. However, Avon was busy bebopping between fairly original masculine scents and pretty derivative ones as the 70's stretched on, with the previous year's Everest (1975) being original, so they made another "me too" fragrance with this one, just like they had done with "Spicy" from a few years before, but that copied the main accord of Aramis instead of Old Spice, respectively. "Clint!" was no exact clone on a drugstore budget however, and actually mixed in some other things that softened, broadened, and warmed the mix enough to make it more approachable to casual interest guys. I'm definitely not going to try snowing any of you into thinking this is superior to the trend-setting and unique Aramis (which is often called the "Chanel No 5 of men's fragrance" for a reason), but as a respectable homage to it that could very well serve in it's place as an interesting alternative, this one serves fantastically. It's quite literally an Aramis for outdoorsmen, shedding the city boy finery and replacing it with jeans, boots, and flannel. American guys from the segment Avon catered to lapped this kind of advertising up like dogs, so it was bound to work, and it did.

Clint opens much the same way as Aramis, and it almost makes one think that it's a clone until the distinct decrease of sparkling aldehydes makes it clear that it's taking a different path to the drydown. Lemon and bergamot open, with that toned-down aldehyde display display sharing space with a resinous balasam fir note and sage. Patchouli and some woodsy notes like cedar find their way in the heart, but the same leathers and slight dry florals like geranium form the core of this as they do Aramis. The base is obviously the big carbon copy leather note, but is saddled with oakmoss and vetiver as backup. For those who found Aramis a little too burning on the nostrils, a little too sheer, this seems a smoother, milder, less chemical treatment of the same general theme, to the point of almost being a flanker to it. I also detect some more airy qualities in this, so I feel like it has a more outdoorsy vibe too. I like Clint, and despite it's clear riffing along well-worn lines, it does have enough uniqueness unto itself to qualify it as a distinctive fragrance. It wears closer to the skin like most Avon, and that only helps make this a milder and more friendly fragrance than what it mainly draws inspiration from, which causes this to be friendlier for work as a consequence. Clint was likely constructed under the idea that most loyal Avon customers only bought Avon, and that guys in their camp had never smelled anything outside of their catalog, so it makes sense to create such a parable since nobody would likely fact-check them to discover it borrows most of it's structure from a designer leather scent released over a decade before.

What's more interesting perhaps than the smell of this (also read: Aramis Lite), is the fact that it was supposedly named after Clint Eastwood, making it an unofficial progenitor to all the celebrity-branded scents of the 80's, 90's, and beyond. Avon wasn't the inventor of this precedent, but they would become one of it's greatest abusers in time, and here in this earliest example, whether they were going after Mr. Eastwood's first name or not, it would coincidentally become associated as his fragrance to those who saw it, and that probably helped move units. Ultimately, this is an old, very long-discontinued take on Aramis (and maybe a drop of Pino Silvestri) with a bit more of a rugged feel replacing the urbane sophisticate aesthetic of the original. I feel it's a quality niche scent these days for those who love leather fragrances, but otherwise can be passed on by most for a bottle of something still being made. I simply love Aramis myself, and having a softer and fresher alternative to it is a godsend for me, so I couldn't help but give this five stars, (with a second bottle in reserve) but otherwise wouldn't rate it so kindly for mainstream fragrance fans. Clint ultimately ends up being the leather scent for the weekend warrior in the back yard on an early spring day, and has better warmer weather performance than one might expect due to it's more-restrained vibe. I wouldn't use it in summer or under romantic pretenses, but if you decide to hunt a bottle, keep in mind that if you already own Aramis, this might come across as the Mounds to it's Almond Joy.
3rd October 2017
199038
Take the leather aspects of Aramis but remove most of the florals and aldehydes. Now make it more of a citrus scent, and add a touch of patchouli and a hint of woods. That's what I get from this, and it's quite pleasant. This could be a niche version of Aramis. It's funny how some "experts" are saying things like there should be a niche version of Old Spice, when you can just get some old Avon scents for little more than a song and you've got better than "niche-quality ingredients" as well!
11th June 2016
173070
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