The Story
Why it exists.
François Demachy created Sauvage EDP in 2018 as a richer, more sensual reading of the original 2015 fragrance. Where Sauvage EDT announced itself as radically fresh and sharp, the EDP variant adds papua vanilla alongside deeper spice, a deliberate move toward warmth without sacrificing the signature blue-hour twilight character. The brief was simple: same house, same inspiration, different hour. The composition keeps the bergamot and Sichuan pepper that define Sauvage's identity, but enriches them with star anise and nutmeg while grounding everything in that warm vanilla-ambroxan base. The result is a fragrance that feels like the desert cooling after dark, still intense, but softer, more enveloping.
If this were a song
Community picks
Angel
Massive Attack
The Beginning
François Demachy created Sauvage EDP in 2018 as a richer, more sensual reading of the original 2015 fragrance. Where Sauvage EDT announced itself as radically fresh and sharp, the EDP variant adds papua vanilla alongside deeper spice, a deliberate move toward warmth without sacrificing the signature blue-hour twilight character. The brief was simple: same house, same inspiration, different hour. The composition keeps the bergamot and Sichuan pepper that define Sauvage's identity, but enriches them with star anise and nutmeg while grounding everything in that warm vanilla-ambroxan base. The result is a fragrance that feels like the desert cooling after dark, still intense, but softer, more enveloping.
The interesting tension in Sauvage EDP is that the vanilla and star anise work against each other in a way that keeps you guessing. Vanilla is comfort. Star anise is sharp, almost metallic, with that licorice bite that people either love or can't get past. Demachy put them in the same sentence and let them fight. What you end up with is a fragrance that has mass appeal but a specific character. You smell it on someone and you either want to get closer or step back. There's no polite middle ground. That's what makes it interesting beyond the Johnny Depp campaign and the brand power, underneath all of it, there's a real polarizing note keeping things honest.
The Evolution
The opening hits like cold water. Bergamot first, bright and clean, with Sichuan pepper arriving just behind it, that clean, sharp heat that makes the nostrils flare. For the first thirty minutes, it's almost medicinal in its precision. Then the star anise announces itself. That's the test. That sharp, licorice-like note cuts through the lavender and pepper and makes itself known. Some people stop here. Others lean in. Once the anise settles, the vanilla and ambroxan take over. The Papua New Guinean vanilla adds sweetness and warmth, while ambroxan, the synthetic ambergris that mimics that mineral, slightly saline marine quality, gives depth without sweetness. The drydown is what people fall in love with. It lasts for hours. On some people, it lasts until the next morning.
Cultural Impact
Dior Sauvage EDP has built genuine cultural weight since 2018. It's a widely recognized masculine fragrance, the kind of scent people stop and notice, the one that gets the comment oh, that's a good one. The Johnny Depp campaign brought significant visibility to the fragrance. What makes it work is the balance Dior strikes: accessible yet layered, popular yet distinctive. The ambroxan-vanilla drydown is warm and inviting, lingering through the evening without overpowering a space.
The House
France · Est. 1946
Christian Dior launched his first fragrance, Miss Dior, the same year he showed the revolutionary New Look in 1947. The house has since built one of the most comprehensive luxury fragrance portfolios in existence, from the masculine reinvention of Sauvage to the couture exclusivity of La Collection Privée. Under perfumer François Demachy, Dior balances mainstream appeal with genuine artistry.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sauvage EDP is the desert at twilight, that thick blue hour before dark when the heat starts to release from the sand and the world holds its breath. The sonic equivalent is cinematic and nocturnal. Bergamot's cold opening is a tension that builds, star anise's sharpness is the moment of release, and the vanilla-ambroxan drydown is what settles when everything else has gone quiet.
Angel
Massive Attack























