The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
White Gold takes its name seriously. Not as metaphor, but as material, the brand claims genuine white gold is part of the composition itself, lending the scent its prestige and positive energy. The horseshoe-shaped bottle is no accident either; it's designed to attract good luck to whoever wears it. Jacques Chabert built this as a modern chypre, a genre usually associated with mature, structured compositions, but stripped here of the heavy mossy heritage. What emerged instead is something cleaner, greener, more direct. The eucalyptus and mint give it an aromatic punch, while the woody base grounds it in something more classic. This is chypre reimagined for the man who wants tradition without the weight.
The real story is the eucalyptus-mint tension. It's not a combination you find often, mint usually plays a supporting role, but here it's a lead. The result is a fragrance that starts cold, almost clinical, like stepping into a forest in winter. Then cedar arrives, and with it, warmth. The patchouli and vetiver finish the job, creating a woody, earthy drydown that feels more grounded than the opening suggested. What makes this interesting is the transition itself. Most fragrances shift gradually; this one feels like two different scents having a conversation. The cold opening promises one thing, the warm finish delivers another.
The evolution
The opening is immediate: eucalyptus cuts through like cold air, lemon and lime brighten it, peppermint adds a mentholated bite. It's sharp, clean, almost medicinal, the kind of opening that clears your head. This phase lasts about 30 minutes before the mint softens and cedar begins to emerge. The heart is where things shift. Cedar takes over the woody territory, geranium adds a subtle floral nuance, and the mint that opened strong becomes more of a background hum. This is the longest phase, a couple of hours of aromatic, green complexity. The base is where White Gold settles into itself. Musk adds warmth and skin-like sensuality, patchouli brings earthiness and a hint of the exotic, vetiver grounds everything with its smoky, woody depth. This drydown can last another 3-4 hours, and on fabric, it lingers even longer. The next day, a faint trace remains, clean, woody, a ghost of what was.
Cultural impact
White Gold arrived in 2012 during a period when fresh aquatic and ozonic fragrances dominated the market. Its eucalyptus-mint opening and woody drydown offered an alternative to prevailing trends, appealing to those seeking something bolder. Jacques Chabert crafted the scent to balance aromatic freshness with chypre structure, a combination that proved enduring enough to keep White Gold in continuous production. The fragrance carved a niche for men wanting a cool, assertive scent that departed from both mainstream aquatics and traditional fougeres. This positioning has allowed it to maintain relevance among collectors of distinctive 2010s masculine releases.










