Tuscan Leather vs Sauvage Elixir
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a sharp, slightly tart raspberry cut through by metallic saffron — not sweet, more like blood and spice. Thyme adds a dry herbal edge before the heart pivots hard into leather: raw, almost animalic, the kind that smells like hide rather than a jacket. Jasmine softens without feminizing it. The dry-down settles into a warm amber-olibanum base that anchors the leather for hours. Projection is assertive but never screaming; sillage lingers close and dark — Built for cold weather and anyone who wants to smell expensive and slightly dangerous.
Opens with a sharp grapefruit that burns off fast, giving way almost immediately to a dense spice core — cinnamon and cardamom packed tightly together, slightly medicinal, unapologetically loud. The heart pushes amber and sandalwood into a thick, resinous warmth, while vetiver grounds everything with an earthy bite that keeps it from going full-sweet. Projection is aggressive early, settling into a heavy, close-skin sillage by hour three. The dry-down is long, dark, and persistent — this doesn't whisper. — Cold-weather evenings, confident wear, best when you're not trying to go unnoticed.
How they overlap
Tuscan Leather and Sauvage Elixir share exactly one note (amber). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Sauvage Elixir is the cheaper original at $185 compared to $435 for Tuscan Leather — about 57% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.
Recommendation
If you're price-sensitive, Sauvage Elixir delivers comparable territory at $250 less than Tuscan Leather. If you want the specific character of Tuscan Leather — the prose above is the better guide than the price — the premium is what you're paying for.