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Sillage/Library/Gucci/Guilty Pour Homme
Gucci · Est. 2011

Guilty Pour Homme

Gucci Guilty Pour Homme opens with a sharp, almost medicinal lavender that feels more clinical than traditionally aromatic.

ConcentrationFragrance
Formasculine
Released2011
Statusenriched
2011 · Fragrance
lav·van·pat·ced
Rating
3.6
3.6k reviews
Fig. 01

The scent fingerprint

Visualization — constellation
basehearttopcitrusfloralfruitygourmandpowderyamberywoodysmokychyprearomaticgreenaquaticspicy

Weighted by intensity across 5 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.

  • Lavender
    85
  • Vanilla
    70
  • Patchouli
    55
  • Cedar
    50
  • Musk
    20

By the editors · 2 min readGucci Guilty Pour Homme opens with a sharp, almost medicinal lavender that feels more clinical than traditionally aromatic. There's an immediate modernity here—no soft herbal cushion, just bright purple clarity that lingers longer than expected.

As it settles, the vanilla arrives not as sweetness but as a creamy backdrop that rounds the lavender's edges without domesticating it. Patchouli and cedar provide a woody frame that keeps the composition from becoming too polite or too gourmand. The interplay feels deliberate: clean but not fresh, warm but not cozy.

This is streamlined masculinity for someone who wants presence without aggression. It works in close quarters—offices, dinners, late evenings—where projection matters less than persistence. The name promises transgression, but the fragrance itself is surprisingly wearable.

Filed: GucciSillage · vol. I
Fig. 02

Scent twins

Computed via accord overlap