Find a perfume they’ll wear.
Three answers, then a short list. No quizzes, no email capture, no guessing what an “oriental fougère” is.
Vanilla-adjacent, soft, made for a quiet apartment.
Clean, awake, the kind of scent that doesn't enter a room before you do.
Roses, jasmine, peach — gorgeously, unapologetically pretty.
Cedar, oakmoss, vetiver. The kind of scent that lasts the whole day.
Incense, leather, cardamom. For the person who reads in the dark.
We don’t store live prices yet — budget steers concentration and bottle-size guidance, then you check the actual price at a retailer.
Sample-first recommendations
For a real gift, the safest move is a small decant set first (~$15) so the recipient can confirm it’s right before you buy a full bottle. Each perfume below links to its detail page with a Where-to-Buy section.
Lime and lemon open with a bright, almost abrupt citrus pop that settles quickly into a heart of jasmine and orange blossom — both white florals but distinct: jasmine carries indolic depth, orange blossom a cleaner, watery-solar quality.
Nawab of Oudh Intensivo opens with cardamom and bergamot, a pairing that sets the Indo-Persian register immediately — cardamom warm and spiced-floral, bergamot lending the citrus brightness that grounds it in wearability.
Burlington 1819 opens with a cool, metallic citrus sharpness—bergamot and neroli rendered almost transparent, like light through glass—before settling into a soft, powdered warmth.
Triumph of Bacchus opens with a heady pour of dark rum sharpened by saffron's metallic warmth, immediately louche and inviting.
**Sahara** opens with a luxurious sweep of saffron tempered by bright citrus, the orange rind cutting through what could otherwise feel overly opulent.