Tuberose Nue vs Tobacco Vanille
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.
Tuberose takes the lead immediately — full, creamy, and almost edible — softened just enough by orange blossom so it never tips into funeral-flower territory. The gardenia lifts the heart with a slight green coolness, keeping the white floral blend from feeling heavy. Projection is moderate: present without demanding the room. The dry-down is where it earns its price, settling into a warm sandalwood and musk base that lets the tuberose linger in a quieter, skin-close register for hours — Warm-weather evenings and bare skin, for anyone who wants white florals done with restraint rather than spectacle.
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
Tuberose Nue 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
Tuberose Nue is the cheaper original at $375 compared to $395 for Tobacco Vanille — about 5% less. Tuberose Nue is built for spring/summer; Tobacco Vanille for fall/winter. Pick by when you'd actually wear it. They sit in different families — Tuberose Nue is floral+woody, Tobacco Vanille is oriental+gourmand. 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.