Costa Azzurra vs Vanille Fatale
Side by side. Scored honestly.
← Compare different fragrances

Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a bright, slightly bitter bergamot cut through by neroli's clean, faintly soapy citrus — together they read as sunlit Mediterranean air rather than fruit bowl. The heart is where ambroxan takes over, delivering that warm, skin-close, slightly mineral depth that's become a signature of modern woody aquatics. Cedar grounds it without going sharp or dry. Sillage is moderate; it sits close to the skin by mid-wear, projecting softly rather than announcing itself. The dry-down is smooth, musky, and genuinely pleasant for hours — Easy, warm-weather skin scent for someone who wants effortless rather than complex.
Opens with a sharp, almost medicinal vanilla that softens quickly into a thick caramel-benzoin accord — sweet but not sugary, more resinous than edible. The tonka bean deepens the heart, lending a slightly smoky, almond-adjacent warmth that keeps it from reading as purely gourmand. Amber and sandalwood anchor the dry-down into something skin-close and almost animalic. Projection is intimate rather than loud; sillage lingers as a warm, resinous trail rather than broadcasting. Dense and deliberate throughout — for cold-weather evenings when you want something that feels like a second skin rather than a statement.
How they overlap
Costa Azzurra and Vanille Fatale 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
Original-bottle pricing is essentially identical ($365 vs $365), so the choice rarely comes down to upfront cost. Costa Azzurra is built for spring/summer/fall; Vanille Fatale for fall/winter. Pick by when you'd actually wear it.
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.