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Giorgio

Giorgio announces itself before you enter the room—a strident floral proclamation that defined eighties excess.

ConcentrationFragrance
Forunisex
Released1981
Perfumerbob aliano
Statusenriched
1981 · Fragrance
pea·tub·jas·ora
Rating
3.6
2.9k reviews
Fig. 01

The scent fingerprint

Visualization — constellation
basehearttopcitrusfloralfruitygourmandpowderyamberywoodysmokychyprearomaticgreenaquaticspicy

Weighted by intensity across 14 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.

  • Peach
    100
  • Tuberose
    85
  • Jasmine
    75
  • Orange
    55
  • Vanilla
    50

By the editors · 2 min readGiorgio announces itself before you enter the room—a strident floral proclamation that defined eighties excess. Orange blossom and peach crash together in an opening so sweet and loud it borders on confrontational, the fruit notes burnished rather than fresh. This isn't subtlety; it's a gardenia-tuberose wall built at full volume, jasmine and ylang-ylang piled on without apology.

The base eventually reveals its architecture: sandalwood and oakmoss provide ballast, vanilla and amber add warmth, but the white flowers never quite relinquish center stage. What develops is less evolution than persistence, a creamy, musky floral that wears you as much as you wear it.

This is fragrance as statement—unapologetic, expansive, designed for those who consider discretion overrated. It remains a monument to an era when more was the entire point.

Filed: Giorgio Beverly HillsSillage · vol. I
Fig. 02

Scent twins

Computed via accord overlap