ScentArt
Which Should You Buy?
A quietly opulent salted caramel and cardamom gourmand, plush and comforting without veering into sticky sweetness. Changing Constance is plush, intimate, and grown-up-delicious for those who crave a refined, skin-close treat but demand subtlety over bombast.
This takes the popular boozy vanilla DNA and slaps on a rich, sweet tobacco note. Some reckon it's a stroke of genius, making a previously unisex scent decidedly masculine, while others find the sweetness just too much. It's a divisive one, you'll either love it or hate it.
Scent Profile
How They Wear
Mood
Notes
Top Notes
Top Notes
Heart Notes
Heart Notes
Base Notes
Base Notes
Accords
Performance
Season and Occasion Fit
Seasons
The deep caramel, warm spices, vanilla and powdery facets make this best for chilly autumn and winter, but the airy, non-cloying sweetness and soft sillage let it work well for transitional spring days too. It is too rich for most summer wear.
Occasions
Its intimate projection and cozy sweetness make it ideal for dates and close encounters, and for casual wear when you want a plush, comforting aura. It is not formal or sporty, and its low sillage makes it less suited to office settings where longevity is necessary.
Seasons
A cold-weather scent - best worn in autumn and winter.
Occasions
Its strong projection and enduring longevity, combined with a rich, sweet tobacco and vanilla profile, make it too dominant for an office setting. However, it's perfect for date nights and cooler weather social events, and can even carry its weight at formal occasions where a bold statement is desired.
Similarity Breakdown
How alike these two fragrances smell, scored from their full scent profiles.
Both lean warm spicy, vanilla, powdery
Subtle differences in overall composition
Where to buy
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