Amyris Homme vs Baccarat Rouge 540
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Mandarin and rosemary open with a clean, citrus-herbal brightness that reads more composed than lively — functional rather than exuberant. Saffron surfaces quickly, pulling warmth into the heart alongside amyris's soft, slightly milky woodiness and a quiet iris that adds powdery depth without going full cosmetic. The cedar-tonka dry-down is smooth and unhurried, grounding everything in a warm, lightly sweet base with good skin-level sillage that holds for hours without demanding attention. Projection stays moderate — present, never loud. — Ideal for office wear or cool-weather evenings when understated warmth is the goal.
Saffron opens sharp and slightly medicinal, then almost immediately dissolves into a warm, luminous blur of jasmine and amberwood — the signature move that made this famous. The heart is less floral than it sounds; the jasmine reads more as a sweetened airiness than a recognizable bloom. Dry-down is where it lives: cedar and fir resin ground a soft, skin-close amber that radiates rather than announces itself, with sillage that lingers in a room long after you've left — Fall and winter wearing, for anyone who wants to smell expensive without being loud about it.
How they overlap
Amyris Homme and Baccarat Rouge 540 share exactly one note (saffron). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Amyris Homme is the cheaper original at $235 compared to $325 for Baccarat Rouge 540 — about 28% less. Amyris Homme covers 3 seasons (spring, fall, winter) — wider weather range than Baccarat Rouge 540, which leans fall/winter-only.