Miss Dior EDP vs Poison Girl
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a bright bergamot-and-pink-pepper snap that feels clean rather than spicy, then softens quickly into a rosy, slightly powdery heart where peony and iris do most of the heavy lifting — the rose reads as polished and modern, not grandmotherly. Projection stays moderate; it announces itself without overreaching. The dry-down is predictable but pleasant: white musk pulls everything together into a skin-close finish with a faint iris creaminess. Sillage is light enough to be office-appropriate. — A reliable daytime floral for spring and early summer, best suited to someone who wants to smell unambiguously pretty without committing to anything bold.
Bitter orange opens things up with a sharp, almost candied edge before the rose moves in — not a fresh-cut rose, but something warmer and slightly powdered. The heart is where the almond takes over, pushing the rose into a sweet, marzipan-adjacent territory that could tip cloying if you're not into that lane. Vanilla and patchouli anchor the dry-down into a soft, skin-close warmth that lingers for hours with modest sillage. Projection is moderate — present without demanding attention — and what it leaves behind is a creamy, slightly earthy sweetness — Fall and winter evenings, for someone who leans into dessert-adjacent femininity without going full gourmand.
How they overlap
Miss Dior EDP and Poison Girl share exactly one note (rose). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Poison Girl is the cheaper original at $125 compared to $145 for Miss Dior EDP — about 14% less. Miss Dior EDP is built for spring/summer; Poison Girl for fall/winter. Pick by when you'd actually wear it.