
Falling Trees
Régime des FleursEau de Parfum2016
Side by side


Falling Trees peaks in fall, while Gucci pour Homme (2003) belongs to winter. The side by side below shows where they overlap.
The essentials
| Falling Trees | Gucci pour Homme (2003) | |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration | Eau de Parfum | Eau de Toilette |
| Launched | 2016 | 2003 |
| Gender | Unisex | Male |
| Perfumer | Mathieu Nardin | Michel Almairac |
| Best season | Fall | Winter |
Scent DNA
Falling Trees
Gucci pour Homme (2003)
Shared between both fragrances
The pyramid
Notes both fragrances share
Community taste
| Falling Trees | Gucci pour Homme (2003) | |
|---|---|---|
| Score | 4/5 | 4/5 |
| Longevity | 6-10 hours | 6-10 hours |
| Sillage | moderate | moderate |
No varnish
Falling Trees doesn't hedge. It commits. Smells exactly like what it says on the bottle, fresh-felled timber, damp forest floor, smoke from a fire miles away.Falling Trees
Gucci pour Homme does not try to impress, and that restraint is exactly why it works. The woody-amber drydown with frankincense and vetiver feels expensive without being loud.Gucci pour Homme (2003)