West Loop
Cinnamon opens hot and candied, immediately sweetening the lavender that follows, turning the herb softer and more pastry-like than usual.
The scent fingerprint
Weighted by intensity across 11 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.
- Aromatic50
- Cinnamon50
- Warm Spicy50
- Tobacco
The note pyramid
- Cinnamon
- Lavender
- Myrrh
- Tobacco
- Tonka Bean
- Amberwood
By the editors · 2 min readCinnamon opens hot and candied, immediately sweetening the lavender that follows, turning the herb softer and more pastry-like than usual. Myrrh adds a resinous thickness that lets the tobacco leaf feel moist and pliable rather than dry, while patchouli in the base gives earth and gentle camphor to keep the accord from becoming syrupy. Over an hour the cinnamon quiets and the tobacco darkens, letting the amberwood’s clean, slightly salty wood rise so the scent smells like cured leaves stacked on fresh-cut boards. Tonka bean folds everything into a mellow, faintly cocoa-toned skin haze that stays close but persists past midnight. Projection sits at arm’s length for three hours then settles to intimate; cool fall evenings and casual nights out fit best.
Scent twins
Factual metadata (name, house, year, notes) is seeded from public datasets. The editorial reading and scent fingerprint are written by Claude against our house style — none of it is scraped prose. Read our methodology.




