ScentArt
Which Should You Buy?
A divisive sweet treat. Some find this a delicious, versatile gourmand with a creamy lactonic heart, others find it a generic floral with disappointing longevity. The main selling point, if you buy into it, is the dulce de leche.
French Name follows Franck Boclet's Cocaine - that sweet, tropical tuberose-and-caramel signature over creamy vanilla. The flirtatious, candy-floral mood lands, but it renders the lush florals more simply and projects softer, missing the rich, high-concentration depth of the original.
Scent Profile
How They Wear
Mood
Notes
Heart Notes
Heart Notes
Base Notes
Base Notes
Accords
Performance
Season and Occasion Fit
Seasons
Versatile across every season - no clear seasonal preference from wearers.
Occasions
Its sweet and gourmand nature makes it great for dates and casual wear, especially in cooler weather. Reviewers suggest its moderate sillage and often criticised longevity make it suitable for an office environment, but it lacks the gravitas for formal events or the freshness for sport.
Seasons
The sweet caramel and creamy florals feel cosiest in cooler months but stay wearable through spring, with summer risking too much sweetness.
Occasions
Flirtatious and sweet, it leans into evening and date wear rather than restrained office settings.
Similarity Breakdown
How alike these two fragrances smell, scored from their full scent profiles.
Both share Patchouli notes
Subtle differences in overall composition
Where to buy
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