
Royal Scottish Lavender
CreedEau de Parfum1856
Side by side


Royal Scottish Lavender rates higher with the community, while Lippizan wears longer on skin.
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
| Royal Scottish Lavender | Lippizan | |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration | Eau de Parfum | Eau de Parfum |
| Launched | 1856 | 2009 |
| Gender | Unisex | Male |
| Perfumer | James Henry Creed | Sidonie Lancesseur |
| Best season | Fall | — |
Scent DNA
Royal Scottish Lavender
Lippizan
Shared between both fragrances
The pyramid
Notes both fragrances share
Community taste
| Royal Scottish Lavender | Lippizan | |
|---|---|---|
| Score | 4/5 | 3.5/5 |
| Longevity | 2-4 hours | 6-10 hours |
| Sillage | strong | moderate |
No varnish
This is what lavender smells like when it isn't trying to be liked. No soapy softness here, just the honest, slightly bitter green of highland hillsides and a woody backbone that holds everything.Royal Scottish Lavender
Lippizan doesn't project loudly, it lingers close, which is exactly the point. Some wearers want to be heard across a room. This one rewards the person who doesn't need to be.Lippizan
Good to know