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Comparison

Jasmin Rouge vs Tobacco Vanille

Side by side. Scored honestly.

← Compare different fragrances
Notes overlap
Shared

No shared notes — these two land in very different territory.

Side by side

Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.

Original price
$365
Jasmin Rouge
$395
Tobacco Vanille
Season coveragetied
2/4
Jasmin Rouge
2/4
Tobacco Vanille
Note depth
7
Jasmin Rouge
6
Tobacco Vanille
What Jasmin Rouge smells like

Jasmine leads hard from the first spray — dense, almost animalic, edged with ylang ylang's creamy banana-floral weight and a bright neroli-mandarin citrus that softens the opening without lightening it. The heart is uncompromising: this is jasmine as a statement, not a suggestion. As it settles, amber and immortelle pull things warm and slightly herbal-honeyed, while leather adds a dry, skin-close rasp to the dry-down. Projection is assertive without being nuclear; sillage lingers richly for hours. — Cold-weather evenings, worn by someone who wants to be noticed before they enter the room.

What Tobacco Vanille smells like

Opens with a burst of warm, slightly bitter tobacco leaf cut through with baking spices, then settles quickly into its real identity: a dense, almost edible heart of vanilla and tonka bean wrapped around sweet tobacco blossom and a whisper of cocoa. The dry-down is smooth and relentless, staying close to the skin but leaving a heavy, honeyed sillage that reads in any room. Projection is generous without being aggressive — this wears like an expensive dessert you're not sharing — Deep fall and winter evenings, anyone who wants to smell unmistakably present.

How they overlap

Jasmin Rouge and Tobacco Vanille 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

Jasmin Rouge is the cheaper original at $365 compared to $395 for Tobacco Vanille — about 8% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.

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.

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