The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
John Stephen designed Intense in 2008 as the boldest statement in the debut collection. The name says it all, this wasn't a fragrance built to whisper. Sweet florals, honey warmth, and a richness that held nothing back. It was made for the kind of presence that fills a room without trying, for someone who wanted their scent to arrive before they did.
The white florals form a classic pyramid, but pushed harder than expected. Lily at the top is unusual, most fragrances lead with citrus here. The honey accord does something unexpected too: it's not a supporting note but a structural one, weaving through the florals like warm amber. The base creates a genuine tension, patchouli's earthy, slightly controversial character against vanilla's sweetness. Vanilla wins. The drydown is less animalic and more warm, a sweet sensuality that lingers close to the skin for hours.
The evolution
The opening hits with citrus and lily, bright, tart, with the lily softening the edges. Within twenty minutes, the white florals take over as the heart develops. Jasmine, rose, and tuberose layer in, but the white honey is the surprise here, a warm ambered sweetness that makes the florals feel richer than they should. By the time the drydown arrives, the patchouli and vanilla have settled into something that stays with you. The vanilla doesn't fade, it lingers, warm and present, for hours. Patchouli keeps it grounded. The whole thing lasts well into the next day on fabric.
Cultural impact
Intense arrived in 2008 as part of a ten-fragrance debut that set the brand's tone, bold, unapologetic, unafraid to announce itself. That positioning still resonates with collectors drawn to the fragrance's particular kind of presence, and the honeyed white floral approach became a signature for the house.



























