Two Shower Moods
Pankaj Singh
| 16-06-2026

· Fashion team
Good Day, Friends! Body care often starts before anything else has time to form—before outfits are chosen, before plans feel real, even before the mind fully settles into being awake.
That first wash isn’t just about cleanliness. It sets a subtle direction for how the rest of the day will feel.
Lately, I’ve been alternating between two very different body washes: Kundal Honey & Macadamia Pure Body Wash and Elianto Perfumed Garden Shower Gel. Both clean the skin, but the experience they create sits on completely different emotional frequencies.
1. Kundal Honey & Macadamia Pure Body Wash — Soft Warmth in Everyday Form
Kundal’s body wash feels steady and comforting from the first use. The texture is smooth, slightly creamy, and it lathers in a way that feels gentle rather than intense. Nothing about it rushes the moment. The scent leans warm and lightly sweet.
Honey gives a soft, rounded sweetness, while macadamia adds a nutty depth that makes the fragrance feel grounded instead of sharp or overly perfumed. It stays close to the skin, almost blending into your natural scent rather than sitting on top of it.
2. Elianto Perfumed Rosey Shower Gel — A More Expressive Floral Moment
Elianto Perfumed Rosey Shower Gel moves in a different direction. The fragrance opens more noticeably, filling the space with a floral presence that feels brighter and more layered. It doesn’t stick to a single floral note. Instead, it gives the impression of mixed blooms in warm air—light, slightly airy, and more expressive as steam builds in the shower. The experience feels less muted and more atmospheric.
Freshness doesn’t always feel the same, and these two make that difference clear. Kundal delivers a quieter freshness—soft skin, minimal scent projection, and a sense of calm reset. Everything feels balanced and understated. Elianto offers a more expressive freshness—still clean, but with a floral lift that adds personality to the moment. It feels slightly more alive, more noticeable.
Neither approach replaces the other. They simply belong to different moods and different kinds of mornings.