The Story
Why it exists.
Dolce & Gabbana launched The One for Men in 2008. Seven years later, in 2015, Olivier Polge revisited the composition. He kept the citrus-herb opening, grapefruit and tarocco orange sharpened by coriander and basil, and expanded everything that followed. The warm heart of cardamom, ginger, and orange blossom arrives slower and lingers longer. The amber-tobacco base provides a rich, textured foundation that evolves gracefully throughout the wear. The EDP version carries more presence and depth, offering a more layered experience that unfolds gradually rather than announcing itself all at once. The structure feels deliberate, with each phase connected by a golden amber thread that weaves through the opening, heart, and drydown.
If this were a song
Community picks
Blue in Green
Miles Davis
The Beginning
Dolce & Gabbana launched The One for Men in 2008. Seven years later, in 2015, Olivier Polge revisited the composition. He kept the citrus-herb opening, grapefruit and tarocco orange sharpened by coriander and basil, and expanded everything that followed. The warm heart of cardamom, ginger, and orange blossom arrives slower and lingers longer. The amber-tobacco base provides a rich, textured foundation that evolves gracefully throughout the wear. The EDP version carries more presence and depth, offering a more layered experience that unfolds gradually rather than announcing itself all at once. The structure feels deliberate, with each phase connected by a golden amber thread that weaves through the opening, heart, and drydown.
Amber and tobacco is not an unusual pairing. What makes it work here is the ratio. The amber arrives early and stays late, a warm golden thread that connects the opening to the drydown without ever becoming heavy. The tobacco doesn't dominate, it grounds, adds texture, a faint aromatic darkness that keeps the sweetness from reading as soft. Between the two, there's the dry cedar that D&G has used across its fragrance library, and the Australian sandalwood that gives the base a creaminess without the weight of Indian Mysore. The citrus-herb top is where the Italian character lives. It's not the cool aquatic bergamot of Light Blue or the锐利的芳香 of Pour Homme.
The Evolution
The opening is immediate and bright. Tarocco orange and grapefruit hit together, the tarocco sweet and almost jammy, the grapefruit sharp enough to wake everything up. Coriander adds a faint warmth underneath. Then the basil arrives, green, slightly bitter, a herbal anchor that prevents the citrus from floating away. Within 20 minutes, the heart takes over. The cardamom is clean heat, spice without fire. Ginger adds a little lift. Orange blossom smooths everything into something almost soapy, clean-floral, the kind of warmth that reads as polished rather than loud. This is the phase that makes the EDP worth choosing over the EDT, it lasts longer and feels more deliberate. By the third hour, the base arrives and doesn't let go. Amber wraps around the tobacco, adding a sweet resinous warmth that keeps the drydown from reading as dark or heavy. Cedar and sandalwood hold the whole thing together, adding a dry woody finish that lingers close to the skin. Four to six hours on most skin types. The drydown outlasts everything else.
Cultural Impact
The One for Men EDP features a warm amber-tobacco character that brings together aromatic and gourmand elements in a way that feels cohesive rather than disparate. The citrus-herb opening creates bright, green freshness before transitioning into a heart of warm spices and clean floral notes. The amber and tobacco provide a sweet, resinous quality that gives the drydown significant depth without becoming heavy or overwhelming. The base combines woody notes with creamy sandalwood, creating a finish that lingers close to the skin.
The House
Italy · Est. 1985
Dolce&Gabbana's fragrances are a full-throated celebration of Italian sensuality and glamour. They're not shy scents; they are bold, passionate statements that bottle the essence of 'la dolce vita'. Think sun-drenched Sicilian coasts, cinematic romance, and unapologetic luxury.
If this were a song
Community picks
Warm amber and tobacco with Mediterranean citrus and clean spice. The kind of evening that starts late and doesn't explain itself.
Blue in Green
Miles Davis


























