The Story
Why it exists.
London for Men arrived in 2006 with a clear mandate: capture the city not as a postcard, but as a feeling. Perfumer Antoine Maisondieu understood that London's real character lives in the contrast, the fog and the fire, the reserved and the rebellious. The fragrance needed to work for the kind of man who walks into a dim bar and doesn't need the room to know it. Rather than default to clichés about rain or black cabs, Maisondieu built upward from tobacco leaf, leather, and the warm spice of cinnamon, materials that have always lived in the city's literary pubs and members' clubs. Mimosa and bergamot gave it the brightness that kept it from feeling like a relic. The name tied it directly to the city that made the brand's trench coat famous.
If this were a song
Community picks
The Needle and the Knife
Cee Lo Green
The Beginning
London for Men arrived in 2006 with a clear mandate: capture the city not as a postcard, but as a feeling. Perfumer Antoine Maisondieu understood that London's real character lives in the contrast, the fog and the fire, the reserved and the rebellious. The fragrance needed to work for the kind of man who walks into a dim bar and doesn't need the room to know it. Rather than default to clichés about rain or black cabs, Maisondieu built upward from tobacco leaf, leather, and the warm spice of cinnamon, materials that have always lived in the city's literary pubs and members' clubs. Mimosa and bergamot gave it the brightness that kept it from feeling like a relic. The name tied it directly to the city that made the brand's trench coat famous.
What makes London for Men work is the way its structure resists the usual masculine fragrance playbook. The opening triple of cinnamon, lavender, and bergamot is warm and citrusy at once, a contradiction baked into the first spray. The heart of leather and mimosa is where most designers would simply land on leather and call it done. Mimosa adds a soft, powdery floral note that keeps the leather from becoming a hammer. It creates a middle ground that reads as sophisticated rather than aggressive. In the base, the opoponax is the unsung material. A resinous gum with a sweet, slightly balsamic character, it gives the drydown a honeyed warmth that prevents the whole composition from going too dark or bitter.
The Evolution
The opening doesn't whisper. Bergamot and lavender arrive with immediate clarity, the citrus cutting bright, the lavender adding that clean, almost medicinal calm that makes the whole thing feel like the first sip of something strong. Cinnamon is there from the start, lending warmth without aggression. For the first thirty minutes, this is surprisingly fresh. Then the leather comes in. Not harsh, more like the smell of a leather jacket warming on skin. The mimosa threads through it, softening what could have been too assertive into something with actual grace. The transition from opening to heart is smooth, almost seamless. There's no harsh edge, no moment where the fragrance resets. By the second hour, the leather-mimosa heart is fully present, with a moderate, intimate projection that stays close to the skin rather than filling the room. The base takes its time.
Cultural Impact
London for Men found its audience among men who wanted sophistication without ostentation, the kind of fragrance that works because it earns respect rather than demands it. The tobacco-leather combination has always been polarizing in the best way, generating strong opinions and loyal wearers.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1856
Burberry fragrances are the olfactory equivalent of their iconic trench coat: quintessentially British, effortlessly elegant, and unexpectedly rebellious. The house translates its rich fashion heritage into scents that feel both timeless and perfectly modern. It's the smell of London—a city of classic architecture and defiant street style.
If this were a song
Community picks
The opening has the energy of a match struck in a dim room, bergamot clarity cutting through lavender calm, cinnamon warmth underneath. The heart settles into something quieter, like late-night conversation in a leather-boothed bar. The drydown is the real soundtrack: tobacco smoke curling, oakmoss earth, the slow amber of something aged in wood. A playlist for the hours after the crowd thins out.
The Needle and the Knife
Cee Lo Green






































