L'Ombre dans l'Eau vs Fleur de Peau
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a sharp, almost medicinal blackcurrant leaf bite — green, tangy, a little feral — before the Bulgarian rose rolls in and softens the whole thing into something dewy and garden-cool. The heart sits at that precise intersection where wet earth meets fresh-cut stems, never going powdery or sweet. Dry-down is light musk, clean and skin-close, with the rose lingering quietly rather than shouting. Projection stays modest throughout; sillage is a trailing whisper. — Spring and early summer, for anyone who wants florals with actual backbone.
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.
How they overlap
L'Ombre dans l'Eau and Fleur de Peau share exactly one note (musk). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
L'Ombre dans l'Eau is the cheaper original at $175 compared to $245 for Fleur de Peau — about 29% less. Fleur de Peau covers 3 seasons (spring, summer, fall) — wider weather range than L'Ombre dans l'Eau, which leans spring/summer-only.