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Elizabeth Arden · Est. 2010

Green Tea Lavender

Green Tea Lavender opens with a bright, mentholated citrus that feels like cool air passing through an herb garden.

ConcentrationFragrance
Forunisex
Released2010
Perfumerunknown
Statusenriched
Green Tea Lavender — Elizabeth Arden
2010 · Fragrance
lem·lav·gra·mus
Rating
3.8
1.0k reviews
Fig. 01

The scent fingerprint

Visualization — constellation
basehearttopcitrusfloralfruitygourmandpowderyamberywoodysmokychyprearomaticgreenaquaticspicy

Weighted by intensity across 8 accords.

Every perfume in Sillage is represented as a distribution across canonical accord slugs — a lingua franca for scent. Two fragrances with overlapping fingerprints are scent-twins, even if they share no literal note.

  • Lemon
    75
  • Lavender
    65
  • Green
    35
  • Musk
    30
  • Ozonic
    25

By the editors · 2 min readGreen Tea Lavender opens with a bright, mentholated citrus that feels like cool air passing through an herb garden. The lemon is sharp and immediate, softened only slightly by mint that hovers at the edge of each breath. This isn't sweetness—it's clarity.

As it settles, lavender arrives in its truest form: aromatic, slightly camphoraceous, more field than sachet. Magnolia lends a pale floral shimmer without pulling the composition toward perfume-counter femininity. The interplay stays green and restrained.

The birch in the base adds a subtle woody dryness, while musk provides just enough skin-like warmth to keep everything tethered. This is a scent for someone who wants to smell clean and awake without announcing it, ideal for warm weather or environments where subtlety matters. It doesn't linger long, which seems intentional—a fragrance designed to refresh rather than seduce.

Filed: Elizabeth ArdenSillage · vol. I
Fig. 02

Scent twins

Computed via accord overlap