Déclaration vs Baiser Volé
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Cardamom hits first — bright, spiced, slightly medicinal — then steps aside quickly as cedar and citrus merge into a clean, dry heart that reads as quietly confident rather than loud. The vetiver grounds everything with an earthy, faintly smoky undertone, while oak moss adds just enough shadow to keep it from going generic. Projection is moderate and well-mannered; sillage stays close after the first hour. The dry-down is smooth musk over dry wood — nothing aggressive, nothing sweet — best worn by someone who'd rather be noticed leaving a room than entering one, in cool spring or fall air.
Opens on a cool, dewy lily that reads almost medicinal at first — green and slightly waxy — before lily of the valley softens the edge into something more classically feminine. Ylang-ylang adds a faint creaminess in the heart without turning tropical or heavy. The dry-down is quiet cedar grounding a white musk that stays close to skin, giving it a clean, powdery finish with barely-there sillage. Projection is modest throughout; this wears intimate, not loud — A spring office or daytime errand fragrance for someone who prefers clean florals over statement-making ones.
How they overlap
Déclaration and Baiser Volé share exactly one note (cedar). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Original-bottle pricing is essentially identical ($120 vs $120), so the choice rarely comes down to upfront cost. Déclaration is built for spring/fall; Baiser Volé for spring/summer. Pick by when you'd actually wear it. Heads up: Déclaration is marketed masculine, Baiser Volé is marketed feminine — they target different wearers, though plenty of buyers cross those lines.