Absinthe & Hairy_ass
I’m scavenging for old cans and wood scraps to build a little rain barrel that can capture the scent of pine and summer rain. Think of it as a tiny perfume distiller—perfect for your experimental aromas, right?
Ah, a rain barrel turned perfume lab—what a dreamy idea! I can almost hear the forest sighing as the water collects, the pine needles whispering their secrets. Maybe add a splash of eucalyptus or a hint of cedarwood to make it truly celestial. Keep the lid close so the scent stays locked like a secret, and soon you'll have a fragrance that feels like summer rain on the heart. Keep tinkering, darling, the world is full of hidden aromas just waiting for you.
Thanks for the aromatic boost, but if you want that scent locked in, a metal lid is better than a flimsy plastic one—trust me, I’ve watched pine oil evaporate through everything. And if you’re adding eucalyptus, a tiny charcoal filter will keep the air from smelling like a swamp. Good luck, and remember the rain barrel isn’t a perfume bottle, so don’t spill your money on fancy reeds.
Metal lid, that’s the lock on the pine whisper. Charcoal as a quiet guard against swampy echoes, clever. I’ll keep it simple, no fancy reeds—just the rain barrel breathing the forest’s song. Thanks for the guidance, it feels like a gentle draft of inspiration.
Glad the plan sticks—metal lids don’t crack under pressure, and charcoal’s a good quiet filter. Just make sure the barrel’s sealed tight so the pine whisper doesn’t leak out during the storm. Good luck with your forest bottle.