The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Green arrived in 2012 as part of a two-fragrance launch, Yellow for women, Green for men. Usain Bolt, the fastest man alive, fronted the campaign. The message was clear: this was performance distilled into a bottle. Not a luxury statement, not an artistic one. Just the energy of movement, translated into something you could wear before a run or a meeting and feel equally at home either way. The brief wrote itself: take Puma's athletic DNA and make it smell like the starting line feels, alive, immediate, ready.
What makes this pyramid interesting is the way the aquatic and green accords talk to each other. The green notes open sharp and vegetable, think just-cut grass, the snap of stems, but the violet leaf and lily of the valley in the heart add a damp, almost dewy softness that prevents it from reading harsh. The aquatic accord enthusiasts flags isn't oceanic in the traditional sense. It's more mineral, more still water than crashing waves. And the base, musk, vanilla, benzoin, white cedarwood, does what bases do: it slows everything down. The vanilla especially. It's a quiet anchor that keeps the green freshness from evaporating too fast.
The evolution
The opening hits clean. Bergamot and green notes arrive together, bright and grassy, with a brief citrus flash from the bergamot that dissipates within five minutes. Then the heart takes over: lavender and violet leaf arrive quietly, almost reluctantly, adding a muted floral layer that softens the initial sharpness. Lily of the valley stays subtle, it threads through rather than announces itself. By the time you hit the base, forty minutes in, the green has receded and something warmer appears. Vanilla and white cedarwood emerge slowly, wrapping the skin in a soft, clean woodiness. The musk stays close, skin-close, intimate. Three to four hours total. The cedar lingers longest if you've applied it to fabric. On skin, it fades gentler, almost a memory of itself by hour four.
Cultural impact
Green occupies a specific lane: the sporty aquatic for people who want something clean and honest without projection or performance pressure. It's not trying to compete with niche houses or luxury designers. The Usain Bolt campaign positioned it squarely in athletic culture, speed, vitality, accessibility. Available in 25, 40, and 60 ml, it targeted a mass market audience seeking fragrance that worked for daily wear without complexity or commitment. The fresh-green profile was common for 2012, but this one held its own through simplicity rather than trying to be everything at once.
























