
Bond No. 9 Chelsea Flowers
Bond No 9Eau de Parfum2003
Side by side


Two distinct takes on a related mood. The side by side below shows where they overlap and where they part ways.
This match is a verified relationship from our fragrance graph. The score weighs each fragrance's notes, accords, mood, occasion, weather fit, gender, and performance — the same scale as the badges on every “reminds of” rail.
The essentials
| Bond No. 9 Chelsea Flowers | Skin Petals | |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration | Eau de Parfum | Eau de Parfum |
| Launched | 2003 | 2011 |
| Gender | Female | Unisex |
| Perfumer | Laurent Le Guernec | Michael Boadi |
| Best season | Summer | Summer |
Scent DNA
Bond No. 9 Chelsea Flowers
Skin Petals
Shared between both fragrances
The pyramid
Notes both fragrances share
Community taste
| Bond No. 9 Chelsea Flowers | Skin Petals | |
|---|---|---|
| Score | 3.5/5 | 3.5/5 |
| Longevity | 6-10 hours | 6-10 hours |
| Sillage | moderate | moderate |
No varnish
This is the ingenue of the Bond No. 9 collection, bright, fresh-faced, and slightly green. It doesn't try to be complicated. Some will find that refreshing; others will wish it had more to say.Bond No. 9 Chelsea Flowers
This is skin scent done right. The moderate sillage isn't a compromise, it's the point. The kind of fragrance someone leans in to catch, not one that beats them down at the door.Skin Petals
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