The Story
Why it exists.
A Midnight Stroll comes from Gucci's The Alchemist's Garden collection, a line built on the idea of turning natural materials into olfactory gold. Alberto Morillas, who also created Gucci Bloom, designed this one with a quiet confidence that lets the materials speak without announcement. The three notes, incense, cadé oil, cypress, aren't meant to parade themselves. They're meant to be with you, not for you. The interplay between them is deliberate, each note supporting the others so the fragrance reads as a continuous experience rather than a sequence of isolated impressions.
If this were a song
Community picks
Nightcall
Kavinsky
The Beginning
A Midnight Stroll comes from Gucci's The Alchemist's Garden collection, a line built on the idea of turning natural materials into olfactory gold. Alberto Morillas, who also created Gucci Bloom, designed this one with a quiet confidence that lets the materials speak without announcement. The three notes, incense, cadé oil, cypress, aren't meant to parade themselves. They're meant to be with you, not for you. The interplay between them is deliberate, each note supporting the others so the fragrance reads as a continuous experience rather than a sequence of isolated impressions.
Cadé oil brings a smoky, almost medicinal depth to the composition. Distilled from juniper wood, it carries a quality that many perfumers might consider too heavy, yet here it sits at the center and the other notes build outward from it. Incense rises above, cypress anchors below, and the whole thing reads as one dark, cohesive breath rather than a list of notes. The effect is that three materials create the impression of something more layered, more complex. That's the alchemy at work, turning something raw into something that feels entirely considered.
The Evolution
The opening is incense first, clean, slightly sweet smoke that announces itself without shouting. Thirty minutes in, the cadé oil takes over. The smoke deepens, gets resinous, almost waxy on the skin. This is the phase that separates A Midnight Stroll from lighter incense fragrances. It doesn't fade so much as settle. The cypress arrives last, dry and woody, pulling everything toward the skin rather than out into the room. On most skin, the development continues for several hours, the smoke lingering and the woody base slowly emerging as the sweeter top notes soften. On fabric, a scarf, a coat collar, it persists as a quiet warmth, smoke without fire, a reminder of presence without demand.
Cultural Impact
Comparisons to By Kilian Incense Oud and Profumum Roma Olibanum are inevitable, but the Gucci version makes a different choice: it prioritizes smooth over dramatic. Wearers describe it as the scent of someone who walks into a room and doesn't need to announce themselves. Dark enough for winter evenings, quiet enough for daily wear. Smoky fragrances have had a significant moment in recent years, and this one positioned itself as an entry point for those curious about the category but not ready to commit to something with sharper edges.
The House
Italy · Est. 1921
Since 1921, Gucci has woven Italian craftsmanship into every facet of its creative identity. The House's venture into perfumery began in 1974, extending its Florentine heritage into olfactory form. Gucci fragrances capture the House's bold spirit: a collision of opulence and edge, tradition and provocation. From Gucci Envy's 1994 debut to the 2017 launch of Gucci Bloom under Alberto Morillas, each scent carries the House's signature audacity. Gucci Guilty Absolute (2025) continues this lineage, marrying intensity with unmistakable elegance.
If this were a song
Community picks
Night air, the smell of smoke on cold stone, the particular quiet that happens after 11pm. A Midnight Stroll sounds like late-night jazz, not the obvious kind, but something with texture and weight. Incense chords, low frequencies, a bass line that doesn't try to be heard.
Nightcall
Kavinsky




















