Mojave Ghost vs Blanche Absolu
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a soft, almost edible muskiness from ambrette layered over the faintly jammy, tropical sweetness of nesberry — unusual and immediately distinctive. The heart settles into a sheer floral blur of violet and magnolia that reads more like clean skin than cut flowers. Sandalwood and ambergris anchor the dry-down with a warm, powdery creaminess that lingers close to skin for hours. Projection is modest; sillage is intimate, a personal-space fragrance rather than a room-filler — ideal for warm-weather days when you want to smell effortlessly clean without trying too hard.
The 2025 'absolu' sibling to Byredo's 2009 Blanche. Same clean-white-musk DNA but reframed: aldehydes get a peppery lift from black pepper and neroli at the opening, jasmine and rose add discreet floral depth where the original was almost transparent, and the base is meaningfully longer-wearing — cashmeran and cashmere wood push the dry-down past Blanche's signature few-hours fade. Reads more confident than the original, less ethereal, but still recognizably the same clean-skin idea.
How they overlap
Mojave Ghost and Blanche Absolu share exactly one note (violet). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Mojave Ghost is the cheaper original at $230 compared to $240 for Blanche Absolu — about 4% less. Both wear best across the same spring/summer/fall — they're interchangeable on weather fit.