Renaissance vs Naxos
Side by side. Scored honestly.
← Compare different fragrancesNo shared notes — these two land in very different territory.

No community-scored dupes yet for Renaissance. We're tracking it; dupes get added as community evidence accumulates.
The Scent File Method →
Verdicts
Renaissance
A fresh floral woody gourmand fragrance built around bergamot, lemon, iris, violet leaf, oud. Scent profile not yet written in our editorial pass — the listed notes are the most reliable summary of the wear character until that's filled in.
Naxos
Opens with a clean, almost herbal lavender that dissolves quickly into a rich honey-tobacco heart — warm, slightly smoky, with the tonka bean rounding off any harshness. As it settles, vanilla and cedarwood anchor the dry-down into a dense, skin-close sweetness that reads more sophisticated than candy. Projection is generous in the first few hours before pulling into a soft, clinging sillage that lasts well into the next day. Nothing sharp or abrasive; it moves like something expensive — Autumn and winter evenings, for someone who wants gourmand warmth without smelling like a bakery.
How they overlap
Renaissance and Naxos 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
Renaissance is the cheaper original at $285 compared to $440 for Naxos — about 35% less. Naxos has 2 scored dupes; the best is Lattafa Maahir Legacy at 8/10 accuracy. Renaissance has no community-scored dupes yet.
Recommendation
If you want the most-accurate dupe in this comparison at the lowest price, Lattafa Maahir Legacy for Naxos is the clear pick — accuracy 8/10, $25–$40.
