Soft Spot vs Missing Person
Side by side. Scored honestly.
← Compare different fragrances

No shared notes — these two land in very different territory.
Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Everyone’s got one. Where’s yours?
Opens with a luminous neroli — bright, slightly bitter citrus-floral — that softens quickly as muguet pulls it toward a clean, dewy heart. The skin musk and ambrette do the heavy lifting through the dry-down, creating that barely-there warmth that reads as a better version of your own skin rather than a recognizable perfume. Sandalwood and white cedar ground everything without announcing themselves; projection stays intimate, sillage is a ghost trail at best. Transparent and addictive in its restraint — best worn close to the skin in warm weather or whenever you want to smell like yourself, only better.
How they overlap
Soft Spot and Missing Person share no notes in common — these two fragrances target very different olfactory territory, and the comparison is a question of which direction you want to go rather than which version of the same accord.
The buying decision
Missing Person is the cheaper original at $88 compared to $99 for Soft Spot — about 11% less.
Recommendation
These two land in genuinely different scent territory — there's no "better" answer, just which direction you want to go. Read the scent descriptions above and pick the one that sounds like you'd want to smell.