Acqua di Gioia EDP vs Acqua di Gioia
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a bright, slightly tart lemon that dissolves quickly into a clean aquatic-floral heart where jasmine and peony read more like fresh air than actual flowers — airy and translucent rather than heady or indolic. Cedar grounds the mid-stage with a faint woodiness that keeps it from feeling too thin. The dry-down settles into warm labdanum and soft musk with modest sillage — close to skin, never loud. Projection is light from the start and fades to a barely-there skin scent within a few hours — a warm-weather office or daytime casual fragrance for anyone who wants to smell clean without announcing it.
Opens with a sharp lemon-mint burst that reads clean and slightly medicinal before settling into a cool aquatic heart. The incense is subtle — more textural than smoky — lending a faint mineral edge that keeps it from going purely soapy. The dry-down lands on soft cedar and warm amber with a skin-close musk that projects modestly and leaves quiet, clean sillage rather than a trail. It wears polished but unremarkable — competent rather than distinctive. — Best in spring and summer; office-safe, ideal for someone who wants inoffensive, crowd-pleasing clean.
How they overlap
Acqua di Gioia EDP and Acqua di Gioia share 2 notes (lemon, musk). The same note name doesn't always mean the same scent — different houses use different vanillas, different woods, different musks — but a multi-note shared spine usually does indicate genuinely-comparable wear character. The remaining notes (4 unique to Acqua di Gioia EDP, 4 unique to Acqua di Gioia) are where the divergence happens.
The buying decision
Acqua di Gioia is the cheaper original at $98 compared to $110 for Acqua di Gioia EDP — about 11% less.