The Story
Why it exists.
Cruz del Sur II arrived in 2017, composed by Florence Fouillet for Xerjoff. The name, Cruz del Sur, the Southern Cross, points south, toward warmth, toward tropical light that doesn't quit. Fouillet built the fragrance around a simple provocation: what if tropical abundance didn't have to apologize for itself? The answer sits in the tension between the fruit and what's underneath it. Milk and dried fruits give it sweetness, but vetiver and cedar pull it back toward earth. Violet leaf adds the green counterweight that stops everything from tipping into the saccharine. The mango and guava feel lush and saturated, almost overripe, while the dried fruits in the base lend a jammy depth that lingers. There's a richness here that borders on decadent, but the woody undertones keep it grounded.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sun
Khruangbin
The Beginning
Cruz del Sur II arrived in 2017, composed by Florence Fouillet for Xerjoff. The name, Cruz del Sur, the Southern Cross, points south, toward warmth, toward tropical light that doesn't quit. Fouillet built the fragrance around a simple provocation: what if tropical abundance didn't have to apologize for itself? The answer sits in the tension between the fruit and what's underneath it. Milk and dried fruits give it sweetness, but vetiver and cedar pull it back toward earth. Violet leaf adds the green counterweight that stops everything from tipping into the saccharine. The mango and guava feel lush and saturated, almost overripe, while the dried fruits in the base lend a jammy depth that lingers. There's a richness here that borders on decadent, but the woody undertones keep it grounded.
The composition earns its complexity through contrast rather than volume. Mango, guava, and pineapple arrive in a rush, tropical fruit at its most insistent, but Fouillet doesn't let the sweetness win. Violet leaf introduces a green, almost bitter thread that runs beneath the fruit throughout the heart, keeping the experience from flattening into a one-note fruit bomb. The milk and dried fruits in the base add a lactonic creaminess, but vetiver and Sicilian cedar anchor the sweetness, pulling it downward and inward. Musk keeps the drydown close, intimate, close to the skin for hours. It's a careful balance: tropical abundance on top, grounded restraint underneath.
The Evolution
The opening arrives like a burst of tropical fruit at a market stall at noon. Mango, guava, pineapple, there's no pretense about it. The sweetness hits immediately, concentrated and bright, with apple blossom threading underneath to keep it clean rather than candied. As it develops over the next 2-4 hours, the blackcurrant emerges, bringing a tart berry brightness that cuts through the tropical sweetness. Violet leaf appears here, too, a green, slightly bitter counterpoint that prevents the sweetness from ever becoming overwhelming. By the time you reach the drydown, the dried fruits have softened into something warm and close. Vetiver and Sicilian cedar do the real work here, providing an earthy, woody anchor that keeps the tropical sweetness from floating away entirely. Musk extends the life of the drydown, keeping the fragrance intimate and close to the skin for 6-8 hours, a long, satisfied exhale.
Cultural Impact
Cruz del Sur II arrived in 2017 as Xerjoff's entry into tropical perfumery. The name references the Southern Cross constellation, a celestial marker that has guided explorers for centuries. Xerjoff, an Italian house known for opulent compositions, crafted a fragrance that takes tropical fruit beyond the expected, layering it with unexpected complexity. Where many tropical scents lean into sweetness as their primary virtue, Fouillet's composition treats the fruit as a starting point rather than a destination.
The House
Italy · Est. 2007
Xerjoff is an Italian luxury fragrance house that defines modern opulence through scent. It merges the rich heritage of Italian perfumery with artistic, almost sculptural, presentation. This is perfume for those who believe a fragrance should be a complete sensory statement.
If this were a song
Community picks
Curator note: Cruz del Sur II smells like a tropical afternoon, warm, sun-soaked, with unexpected green depth underneath the sweetness. The music should match that energy: lush warmth that doesn't apologize for itself.
Sun
Khruangbin





























