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Comparison

Fleur de Peau vs Do Son

Side by side. Scored honestly.

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Notes overlap

Side by side

Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.

Original price
$245
Fleur de Peau
$155
Do Son
Season coverage
3/4
Fleur de Peau
2/4
Do Son
Note depth
8
Fleur de Peau
5
Do Son
What Fleur de Peau smells like

Opens with a bright snap of bergamot and pink pepper before softening quickly into a skin-close iris — powdery but never starchy, lifted by ambrette's soft muskiness. The heart reads as clean, warm flesh rather than a recognizable flower, with sandalwood and cistus adding a faint resinous haze. Dry-down is almost entirely musk and ambergris, intimate in projection and barely-there in sillage. It smells like someone's warm neck, not a bouquet — refined minimalism that rewards closeness over broadcast — Perfect for late spring and early fall wear, ideal for office or quiet social settings where subtlety reads as sophistication.

What Do Son smells like

Tuberose leads hard in the opening — creamy, slightly rubbery, unmistakably tropical — before iris pulls it back toward powder and cool earth. Jasmine and orange blossom weave in through the heart, keeping things lush without tipping into headshop territory. Pink pepper adds a dry, faintly spiced edge that prevents the florals from going full bridal. Projection is moderate and sillage stays close by the dry-down, leaving a soft, skin-level warmth. Transparent rather than dense, aquatic-adjacent without any marine notes doing the work — just clean florals with air around them — A warm-weather daywear pick for someone who wants presence without aggression.

How they overlap

Fleur de Peau and Do Son share 2 notes (iris, pink pepper). The same note name doesn't always mean the same scent — different houses use different vanillas, different woods, different musks — but a multi-note shared spine usually does indicate genuinely-comparable wear character. The remaining notes (6 unique to Fleur de Peau, 3 unique to Do Son) are where the divergence happens.

The buying decision

Do Son is the cheaper original at $155 compared to $245 for Fleur de Peau — about 37% less. Fleur de Peau covers 3 seasons (spring, summer, fall) — wider weather range than Do Son, which leans spring/summer-only.

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