ScentArt
Which Should You Buy?
A warm vanilla-tonka cocoon lifted by bergamot and neroli, with a powdery heliotrope-jasmine heart. A soft, classic feminine for cool-weather casual and date wear, intimate by design rather than statement-making.
Tom Ford's Fleur de Portofino is a polarising Mediterranean dream: some find it a gorgeous, uplifting floral with impressive longevity, while others dismiss it as an overpriced, generic scrubber with awful performance. Definitely one to try before you buy.
Scent Profile
| Citrus | 23% | 19% |
| Floral | 32% | 37% |
| Fruity | 3% | 3% |
| Green | 5% | 8% |
| Sweet | 41% | 38% |
| Warm | 8% | 7% |
| Woody | 0% | 1% |
| Earthy | 2% | 0% |
| Animalic | 2% | 6% |
| Fresh | 12% | 16% |
Mood
Notes
Top Notes
Heart Notes
Base Notes
Base Notes
Accords
Performance
Season and Occasion Fit
Seasons
Vanilla, tonka, and the powdery white floral heart give a warm, cocooning profile that lands best in fall and winter. The bergamot-neroli top adds enough lift for spring; summer is too heavy.
Occasions
Soft projection and a creamy floral-vanilla base make this a comfortable date and casual choice. Works for office in cooler months and evenings out, less suited to formal events that need stronger presence or sport.
Seasons
A warm-weather pick - at its best in summer and spring.
Occasions
Its fresh, white floral character makes it perfect for casual daytime wear and romantic dates, evoking a 'luxury vacation' feel. However, its significant sillage for some wearers, alongside criticisms of poor longevity for others, makes it less ideal for office settings where subtlety is preferred.
Similarity Breakdown
Both share White Floral, Citrus, Floral accords and Jasmine, Bergamot notes
Subtle differences in overall composition
Where to buy
ScentVerdict earns a commission from purchases - this doesn't affect our verdicts.