The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Thierry Wasser created Teazzurra in 2015 as part of Guerlain's Aqua Allegoria collection. The name combines 'tea' with 'azzurra,' the Italian word for azure, pointing to the prominent green tea that anchors this fragrance. The opening delivers bright citrus, yuzu, bergamot, and grapefruit, at full intensity, a sharp and immediate freshness that announces itself clearly. As the top notes begin to settle, the green tea emerges as the true heart of the composition, bringing with it a slightly bitter, herbal quality that adds real depth. The transition feels natural rather than abrupt, with the citrus and tea notes weaving together in a way that creates texture and interest.
What makes Teazzurra distinctive is the gap between its opening and its base. The citrus, yuzu, bergamot, grapefruit, arrives with clarity and focus, bright and piercing. Then the green tea settles in, not as a supporting player but as the actual heart of the composition, bringing a slightly astringent, herbal quality that keeps the fragrance grounded. Jasmine is present but understated, adding a soft floral dimension that prevents the blend from becoming too sharp or one-dimensional.
The evolution
The opening hits hard and fast, yuzu and grapefruit at full intensity, cold and sharp enough to make you blink. As the composition develops, the green tea arrives and the whole character shifts: still bright, but now textured, with chamomile's herbal edge cutting through the citrus and lending depth. The jasmine doesn't announce itself; it softens everything around it, adding a quiet floral dimension that prevents the fragrance from becoming too austere. The ozonic quality that follows evokes air that's been moving over water for miles, that moment before rain when everything feels charged and alive. Vanilla and musk arrive quietly, close and intimate without being heavy.
Cultural impact
Teazzurra sits in a specific corner of the fragrance world: the tea fragrance that isn't trying to be matcha or jasmine. It's been compared to Maison Margiela's Tea Escape and L'Artisan's Thé pour un Été, other tea-forward compositions from the same period. The difference is Calone: where those fragrances lean on the herbal, Teazzurra leans on the ozonic. It's the fragrance people reach for when they want something that smells clean without smelling like cleaning product.

















