Red Tobacco vs Instant Crush
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a punchy, slightly sweet tobacco that smells dry and slightly smoky rather than pipe-pipe creamy. Vanilla and tonka bean arrive quickly in the heart, pulling it gourmand without going candy — the amber keeps things warm and resinous underneath. The leather is present but quiet, more texture than statement. Cedar and sandalwood anchor the dry-down into something genuinely woody and long-lasting, with moderate-to-strong sillage that softens into a close, skin-warming haze by hour four — A cold-weather crowd-pleaser for someone who wants depth without difficulty.
Opens with a bright bergamot cut through ripe, sun-warmed peach — juicy without veering into candy territory. Jasmine surfaces in the heart, soft and slightly creamy rather than sharp or indolic, binding the fruit to what's underneath. The dry-down is where it earns its appeal: warm amber and sandalwood settle into skin with a clean musk that reads close and intimate, projecting moderately before pulling into a whisper-soft sillage that lingers for hours — Made for warm-weather evenings and skin-to-skin proximity; best on someone who wants to smell effortlessly kissable rather than loud.
How they overlap
Red Tobacco and Instant Crush share 2 notes (amber, sandalwood). 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 (5 unique to Red Tobacco, 4 unique to Instant Crush) are where the divergence happens.
The buying decision
Instant Crush is the cheaper original at $145 compared to $165 for Red Tobacco — about 12% less. Red Tobacco is built for fall/winter; Instant Crush for spring/summer/fall. Pick by when you'd actually wear it. Heads up: Red Tobacco is marketed masculine, Instant Crush is marketed feminine — they target different wearers, though plenty of buyers cross those lines.