L'Immensité vs Sun Song
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Grapefruit and bergamot open bright and clean, sharpened by ginger with just enough bite to keep it from reading as generic citrus. Rosemary and sage push through the heart — herbal, slightly dry, giving it backbone without going medicinal. Geranium adds a green floral bridge before ambroxan takes over the dry-down, laying down that familiar skin-close warmth with labdanum deepening the amber base. Projection is moderate; sillage is a personal cloud rather than a room-filler, with solid longevity — A polished, effortless warm-weather companion for the guy who wants something clean but never boring.
Bright and sun-warmed from the first spray, the opening leans hard into bergamot and lemon — clean, sparkling, slightly tart — before mandarin softens the edges. The heart is where it earns its keep: orange blossom and jasmine read as luminous rather than heady, more warm skin than floral arrangement. Cedar and musk anchor the dry-down to something grounded and skin-close, with modest sillage and a gentle, intimate finish. Projection is polite throughout, fading to a barely-there musky warmth. — Ideal for warm-weather days when you want to smell effortlessly clean and sun-kissed without announcing yourself.
How they overlap
L'Immensité and Sun Song share exactly one note (bergamot). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
L'Immensité is the cheaper original at $270 compared to $280 for Sun Song — about 4% less. L'Immensité covers 3 seasons (spring, summer, fall) — wider weather range than Sun Song, which leans spring/summer-only.