The Story
Why it exists.
Launched as the deeper, more intimate sibling in Jean Paul Gaultier's most iconic fragrance lineage. Working alongside Quentin Bisch, the composition builds around a tension: cool herbs against warm vanilla, sharp against soft. The result takes familiar aromatic and oriental elements and pushes them in a more assertive direction, maintaining the house's characteristic boldness while introducing a new layer of intimacy that feels both recognizable and distinctly refreshed. Nathalie Gracia-Cetto and Bisch created something that refuses to disappear into the background, with the kind of confidence that makes you notice it before you even get close enough to smell it.
If this were a song
Community picks
Enjoy the Silence
Depeche Mode
The Beginning
Launched as the deeper, more intimate sibling in Jean Paul Gaultier's most iconic fragrance lineage. Working alongside Quentin Bisch, the composition builds around a tension: cool herbs against warm vanilla, sharp against soft. The result takes familiar aromatic and oriental elements and pushes them in a more assertive direction, maintaining the house's characteristic boldness while introducing a new layer of intimacy that feels both recognizable and distinctly refreshed. Nathalie Gracia-Cetto and Bisch created something that refuses to disappear into the background, with the kind of confidence that makes you notice it before you even get close enough to smell it.
The combination of cardamom with lavender is not an obvious one. Cardamom is green, almost medicinal in its sharpness. Lavender is classic, soapy, and herbal. The bridge between them is the iris, powdery, violet-adjacent, slightly metallic, which softens the handshake and lets the two sides coexist without fighting. Then the vanilla doesn't compete. It settles underneath and holds everything together. Oriental woods give it weight without darkness. The structure is conservative executed boldly, familiar materials in an unfamiliar arrangement.
The Evolution
Cardamom arrives first, bright and cool, a little bit of a slap. Within minutes the lavender moves in and the whole thing pivots, soapy, aromatic, classic in a way that might remind you of something your grandfather wore, except that the cardamom hasn't fully left. It's still there underneath, keeping the lavender honest. The iris appears around the thirty-minute mark, dust-like and powdery, softening the sharp edges into something rounder. Then the vanilla begins to assert itself, not aggressively, but with patience. It wants to be the last thing you smell. Oriental woods round out the base, warm and slightly resinous, and the whole composition settles close to the skin. Six hours in, it's still present. Eight to ten on most people. The next morning there's a faint warmth left on fabric, not projection, but a memory.
Cultural Impact
The warm vanilla and aromatic lavender combination is recognizable, but the execution sets it apart: a sharp opening that grabs attention, a powdery heart that softens everything, and a persistent base that lingers. These qualities give the fragrance a distinct character that performs consistently in its accord categories. It's a fragrance that takes what came before and reframes it for those who want something bolder, more confident, and undeniably present.
The House
France · Est. 1976
Jean Paul Gaultier fragrances are a shot of pure rebellion in a bottle, celebrating sensuality and subverting convention with every spray. Famous for its iconic torso-shaped flacons, the house creates bold, memorable scents that are anything but shy. It's the perfume equivalent of a wink and a knowing smile.
If this were a song
Community picks
The opening cuts in sharp, cool, confident, immediate. Then the warmth builds. By the drydown it's close to skin, intimate, something that lingers after the music stops. These tracks match the arc: assertive beginnings, softening into something that stays.
Enjoy the Silence
Depeche Mode





















