The Story
Why it exists.
YSL has always been about contrasts. The 2017 masculine takes that DNA and strips it down to two icons: the white t-shirt and the black jacket. Not just as inspiration. As a structural argument. The freshness of a white tee. The authority of a tailored black jacket. YSL launched their first fragrance, Y for women, in 1964. Perfumers Dominique Ropion and Claire Liégent built the entire composition around that tension. The opening hits with a cold, bright aldehydic sparkle that catches the air like metal catching light. Bergamot brings a citrus chill that cuts through the space, while lemon adds sharp zest. Ginger arrives within seconds, a clean heat that feels like the warmth of cold air.
If this were a song
Community picks
Superposition
Jordan Rakei
The Beginning
YSL has always been about contrasts. The 2017 masculine takes that DNA and strips it down to two icons: the white t-shirt and the black jacket. Not just as inspiration. As a structural argument. The freshness of a white tee. The authority of a tailored black jacket. YSL launched their first fragrance, Y for women, in 1964. Perfumers Dominique Ropion and Claire Liégent built the entire composition around that tension. The opening hits with a cold, bright aldehydic sparkle that catches the air like metal catching light. Bergamot brings a citrus chill that cuts through the space, while lemon adds sharp zest. Ginger arrives within seconds, a clean heat that feels like the warmth of cold air.
The opening is brief and metallic. Aldehydes give that cold, immediate lift, a sparkle that shoots straight up before anything else arrives. Bergamot and citrus follow, bright and sharp. Ginger adds clean heat, like the warmth of cold air. Mint cuts through, a flash of ice water. All of this happens in minutes. Then the heart shifts everything. Sage arrives with its cool, camphorated green, that slightly bitter, herbal quality that cuts through sweetness without overwhelming. Geranium brings complexity, a warm rose-like nuance. Apple appears quietly in the background, adding crunch and texture. Violet leaf lends that cool, dewy, cucumber-like freshness.
The Evolution
The opening of YSL Y is cold and bright. Aldehydes give that instant metallic sparkle, immediately lifted by bergamot's citrus chill. Lemon adds sharp zest. The ginger arrives within seconds, clean heat, like the warmth of cold air. Mint flashes like a spark of ice water before disappearing within the first minute. Within minutes the mint fades and sage takes over, shifting trajectory from citrus brightness to green aromatic. That herbal, slightly bitter quality cuts through the remaining sweetness. Geranium joins with its complex, rose-like warmth. The heart settles into sage and geranium, cool and camphorated, with apple adding texture and violet leaf lending dewy coolness. Pineapple rounds the edges of an otherwise sharp, precise heart. The drydown arrives quietly. The top notes soften but don't disappear, the citrus and herbs fade to a background warmth while cedar, vetiver, ambergris, and fir balsam come forward. Musk and incense create an intimate warmth, close rather than projecting. The entire evolution spans 4 to 6 hours on skin.
Cultural Impact
The campaign for Y featured Loyle Carner, sculptor David Alexander Flin, and AI researcher Alexandre Robicquet, three figures building things on their own terms. The white tee and black jacket concept anchors the fragrance to the house's fashion legacy while giving it a standalone identity. The aldehydic lift in the opening creates an immediate brightness that feels cold and metallic, like light catching metal. Lemon and bergamot amplify this effect, creating an opening that demands attention without apology. As the fragrance moves into its heart, sage and geranium introduce a cooler, more aromatic quality that shifts the character entirely.
The House
France · Est. 1961
Yves Saint Laurent fragrances are the olfactory equivalent of its founder's revolutionary fashion: audacious, empowering, and unapologetically Parisian. The house creates scents that are not just accessories but statements of identity, blurring the lines between art, scandal, and pure elegance. YSL doesn't follow trends; it creates them with bold compositions that feel both timeless and thrillingly modern.
If this were a song
Community picks
YSL Y opens cold and bright, then shifts into warm herbal territory, like stepping from a morning chill into a sun-warmed room. That contrast between immediate freshness and earned warmth maps to tracks that snap into focus quickly but settle into something more textured. The sage and geranium heart brings a quiet complexity, the kind that reveals itself slowly rather than announcing itself. Think: songs that start sharp and end close.
Superposition
Jordan Rakei



































