Sauvage EDP vs Homme Intense
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a sharp bergamot-and-pink-pepper blast that has a near-electric quality — clean but with real bite. The lavender arrives quickly in the heart, smoother than expected, softening the pepper without dulling it. Sichuan pepper keeps a faint tingle alive through the mid-stage. The dry-down is where it earns its reputation: amberwood and vanilla pull it into warm, skin-close territory, projection tightening from loud to a confident personal cloud. Sillage trails long and distinctively. — Cool-weather daily wear for someone who wants presence without effort.
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.
How they overlap
Sauvage EDP and Homme Intense share exactly one note (lavender). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Homme Intense is the cheaper original at $130 compared to $155 for Sauvage EDP — about 16% less. Sauvage EDP covers 3 seasons (spring, fall, winter) — wider weather range than Homme Intense, which leans fall/winter-only.