Homme Intense vs Sauvage EDT
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Lavender opens things cleanly but steps back fast, making room for a powdery iris that's the clear center of gravity here — cool, rooty, slightly metallic. Ambrette adds a soft skin-musk warmth that keeps it from going full barbershop, while cedar and vetiver in the dry-down lay down a quiet woody base. Projection is moderate and intimate rather than room-filling; sillage stays close, which suits the overall mood. The whole thing reads as polished skin rather than loud statement — FA cool-weather date fragrance for someone who wants to smell expensive without announcing it.
Bergamot hits first — bright, slightly sweet, almost citrus-soda — then pepper (both kinds) sharpens the opening into something dry and almost electric. Lavender and geranium soften the heart without going floral, keeping it clean and slightly herbal. The real engine here is ambroxan, a skin-musk molecule that drives the dry-down into warm, mineral skin territory that reads as distinctly male without being heavy. Projection is loud for the first two hours, then settles into a tight, persistent sillage that stays close all day — Never disappears, just quiets. — Best in warm weather or transitional seasons; the office, the date, the errand run where you want to smell effortlessly put-together without trying too hard.
How they overlap
Homme Intense and Sauvage EDT share exactly one note (lavender). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Sauvage EDT is the cheaper original at $115 compared to $130 for Homme Intense — about 12% less. Homme Intense is built for fall/winter; Sauvage EDT for spring/summer/fall. Pick by when you'd actually wear it.