Red Truffle 21 vs Green Orange & Coriander
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with an earthy, almost fungal richness from the red truffle — raw and unusual, not sweet. Patchouli grounds it quickly, adding dark soil and a faint herbal edge that keeps the opening from tipping sugary. In the heart, vanilla softens the whole composition without taking over; it reads as warmth rather than dessert. The dry-down is where the wood and musk do their work, pulling everything close to skin with moderate projection and a long, intimate sillage. — Best suited for cool evenings, candlelit settings, and anyone who finds conventional orientals too sweet.
Opens with a sharp, almost bitter green orange — less sweet fruit, more peel and pith — lifted immediately by coriander's dry, slightly spicy edge that keeps it from reading as a simple citrus. The heart softens into faint white flowers without going floral in any obvious way; they mostly add a clean, airy roundness. Dry-down is quiet sandalwood and musk, warm but understated. Projection is moderate at best, sillage stays close to skin — this is a personal fragrance, not a room-filler — Warm-weather days, office environments, people who want fresh without smelling like soap or cologne.
How they overlap
Red Truffle 21 and Green Orange & Coriander share exactly one note (musk). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Green Orange & Coriander is the cheaper original at $145 compared to $185 for Red Truffle 21 — about 22% less. Red Truffle 21 is built for fall/winter; Green Orange & Coriander for spring/summer. Pick by when you'd actually wear it.