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Comparison

Rose Prick vs Mandarino di Amalfi

Side by side. Scored honestly.

← Compare different fragrances
Notes overlap
Shared

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

Unique to Mandarino di Amalfi

Side by side

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

Original price
$395
Rose Prick
$325
Mandarino di Amalfi
Season coveragetied
2/4
Rose Prick
2/4
Mandarino di Amalfi
Note depth
8
Rose Prick
6
Mandarino di Amalfi
What Rose Prick smells like

Damask and Turkish rose hit immediately in the opening — full, saturated, almost brutally floral, sharpened by pink and Sichuan pepper that add a genuine bite rather than decorative spice. The heart keeps that rose in focus while jasmine deepens it without going powdery. Dry-down is where it earns the oriental tag: tonka bean and vanilla warm the base into something almost edible, with patchouli grounding it just enough to prevent sweetness from going cloying. Projection is bold for the first two hours, then settles into close, skin-level sillage — intimate but persistent — Fall and winter evenings; wears best on someone who wants a rose that refuses to be polite.

What Mandarino di Amalfi smells like

Mandarin leads the opening with a juicy, sun-warmed burst that leans closer to the actual fruit than to candy, layered immediately with the sharper lift of lemon and bergamot. Neroli bridges the citrus heart into something slightly floral and green — cooling it down rather than sweetening it. The dry-down is where ambroxan and musk do quiet structural work, giving the whole thing soft skin-warmth and a low, clean sillage that reads expensive without announcing itself. Projection stays polite and intimate throughout — warm-weather wear for someone who wants to smell like a coastal afternoon without trying.

How they overlap

Rose Prick and Mandarino di Amalfi 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

Mandarino di Amalfi is the cheaper original at $325 compared to $395 for Rose Prick — about 18% less. Rose Prick is built for fall/winter; Mandarino di Amalfi for spring/summer. Pick by when you'd actually wear it. They sit in different families — Rose Prick is floral+oriental+gourmand, Mandarino di Amalfi is fresh. Comparison is more about preference than tradeoff.

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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