Fragrances
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Ylang in Gold
M. Micallef
Release year:
2012
Ylang in Gold is one of the house’s standout tropical florals, blending ylang-ylang, sandalwood, coconut, and vanilla into a creamy solar composition. It feels opulent, sunlit, and distinctly luxurious without becoming oppressive.
Ylang in Gold Nectar
M. Micallef
Release year:
2020
Ylang in Gold Nectar deepens the original Ylang in Gold into a more floral-oriental and softly textured version with tropical fruits, ylang-ylang, sandalwood, vanilla, coconut, and musk. It feels richer and more enveloping than the original.
Ylang Lyang
Marc de la Morandière
Release year:
2018
A tropical ylang-ylang fragrance with bergamot, maracuja, lysilang heart extract, guaiac wood, vanilla absolute, and natural tolu balsam. It is sunny and creamy, but the guaiac and balsam give the flower a warm woody-resinous base. It feels like a polished island escape: bright fruit, golden flowers, and soft balsamic warmth.
Ylang Ylang
Grossmith
Release year:
1897
A discontinued late nineteenth-century floral centered on ylang-ylang’s creamy, yellow-floral warmth. It likely had a rich, slightly exotic floral softness, bridging Victorian floral elegance with a more sensual tropical tone.
Ylang Ylang
Franck Boclet
Release year:
2017
A tropical floral fragrance built around creamy ylang-ylang, soft warmth, and polished sweetness. It feels sunny and sensual, with a yellow floral glow that stays smooth rather than oily or overwhelming.
Ylang Ylang Nosy Be
Perris Monte Carlo
Release year:
2014
A tropical floral centered on ylang-ylang from Nosy Be, brightened with grapefruit and softened by vanilla and warm musks. It feels sunny, creamy, and exotic, emphasizing the flower's banana-like richness without becoming heavy.
Ylang Ylang Nosy Be Extrait
Perris Monte Carlo
Release year:
2015
The extrait version deepens Ylang Ylang Nosy Be into a richer tropical floral, with more creaminess, warmth, and lingering vanilla-musk depth. It feels denser and more luxurious than the eau de parfum.
Ylang Ylang / Vintage Collection Ylang Ylang
Lorenzo Villoresi
Release year:
2014
A radiant tropical floral centered on ylang-ylang and surrounded by frangipani, jasmine, orange blossom, and tiare, with vanilla and tonka giving the base a creamy golden finish. It feels lush and unmistakable, but the composition stays light on its feet.
Y L'Elixir
Yves Saint Laurent
Release year:
2024
Y L’Elixir is a newer richer expansion of the Y line, pushing the fragrance into a denser aromatic-woody style with a more luxurious and concentrated feel. It feels darker and more statement-oriented than Y EDP.
Y Le Parfum
Yves Saint Laurent
Release year:
2021
Y Le Parfum deepens the Y structure into a richer woody-aromatic masculine with grapefruit, aldehydes, apple, ginger, sage, lavender, geranium, cedar, olibanum, tonka, and patchouli. It feels denser, smoother, and more premium than the earlier Y editions.
Y Live
Yves Saint Laurent
Release year:
2019
Y Live gives the Y line a fresher and more energetic aromatic profile with a brighter opening and a cleaner streamlined body than Y Eau de Parfum. It feels youthful, easy to wear, and especially suited to casual daytime use.
Yohji
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
A 2013 reworking of the Yohji idea, centered on cypress, nutmeg, bergamot, freesia, jasmine, sandalwood, and musk. It feels cleaner and more transparent than the 1996 original, with a soft floral-chypre character that reads elegant, fresh, and quietly sensual.
Yohji 1996
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
1996
A green-fruity chypre that opens sharp and leafy, then softens into berry notes wrapped in creamy vanilla, sandalwood, and musk. It feels unconventional and sensual at the same time, with a cool green edge that keeps the sweeter parts from ever becoming syrupy.
Yohji Essential
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
This version of Yohji Essential keeps the green floral tension of the older scent but presents it in a smoother, clearer modern style. Chamomile, galbanum, clove, gardenia, rose, jasmine, patchouli, moss, musk, and labdanum give it an herbal-floral body with earthy depth and a gently shadowed finish.
Yohji Essential 1998
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
1998
A floral chypre with chamomile, galbanum, grapefruit, rose, ylang-ylang, and a mossy patchouli-amber base. It wears with a slightly herbal, luminous tension, moving from green bitterness to a soft warm finish that feels elegant, nuanced, and unmistakably late-1990s Yohji.
Yohji Homme
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
A cool spicy-woody masculine built around licorice, juniper, sage, cardamom, and bergamot, with rum and coffee giving the heart a dark polished twist. The drydown settles into cedar, leather, patchouli, and musk, so it feels urban, slightly bohemian, and much more textured than a standard fresh men’s scent.
Yohji Homme 1999
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
1999
The original Yohji Homme pairs aromatic freshness with licorice, sage, cardamom, rum, coffee, leather, and dry woods. It smells relaxed but intellectual, balancing spice, bitterness, and worn leather in a way that feels more artistic and individual than most mainstream masculine releases of its era.
Yohji Senses
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
A bright floral-fruity perfume with lemon, neroli, bergamot, linden blossom, pear, ylang-ylang, musk, and sandalwood. It opens with citrus sparkle and a juicy softness, then settles into a clean floral glow that feels easy, cheerful, and more transparent than the darker Yohji signatures.
Yohji Yamamoto Femme
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
A smooth floral-fruity scent with pear, bergamot, black currant, iris, jasmine, lily-of-the-valley, heliotrope, sandalwood, musk, and cedar. It feels softly polished and feminine, moving from juicy brightness into a powdery woody-musky finish with a calm upscale feel.
Yohji Yamamoto Her Love Story
Yohji Yamamoto
Release year:
2013
A floral woody musk fragrance that opens with bergamot, green notes, grapes, and lemon before moving into pink pepper, jasmine, and rose over vanilla, musk, patchouli, and vetiver. It feels breezy and luminous at first, then warmer and more softly romantic as it settles.