A Man's Cologne by Gravel
We may earn a commission when you buy from links on our site, including the eBay Partner Network and Amazon.
7.8 / 10 138 Ratings
A popular perfume by Gravel for men, released in 1957. The scent is woody-spicy. It is still in production.
We may earn a commission when you buy from links on our site, including the eBay Partner Network and Amazon.

Main accords

Woody
Spicy
Resinous
Fresh
Citrus

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
OrangeOrange BergamotBergamot
Heart Notes Heart Notes
PatchouliPatchouli BenzoinBenzoin Tonka beanTonka bean
Base Notes Base Notes
FrankincenseFrankincense MuskMusk VetiverVetiver
Ratings
Scent
7.8138 Ratings
Longevity
7.5116 Ratings
Sillage
6.6119 Ratings
Bottle
7.6112 Ratings
Value for money
6.735 Ratings
Submitted by Apicius, last update on 06/10/2025.
Interesting Facts
The fragrance is part of the Signature Collection collection.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Zeitgeist by J.F. Schwarzlose Berlin
Zeitgeist
Burlington 1819 by Roja Parfums
Burlington 1819
Tonka 25 (Eau de Parfum) by Le Labo
Tonka 25 Eau de Parfum
Knize Ten (Toilet Water) by Knize
Knize Ten Toilet Water

Reviews

8 in-depth fragrance descriptions
3
Pricing
8
Bottle
6
Sillage
7
Longevity
7.5
Scent
ChetDavis

15 Reviews
ChetDavis
ChetDavis
2  
Split personality
I find two natures coexisting in this fragrance. Simultaneously. These are not a phases coming one after another.

One is a dense, smooth, intriguing woody-resinouus facet. The second is a commonly known men's cologne vibe.

Overall effect is quite interesting and unique according to my nose and knowledge. But...

Despite good quality, it brings to mind something like €20 offerings from e.g. Aramis. Which is not a bad thing... But the price tag gives me a second thought.

It has this cheap smelling harshness, not much of it, but it is there. It also stays close to the skin.

I think you can find much, much better frags for this kind of money.
0 Comments
Myrtillajus

530 Reviews
Myrtillajus
Myrtillajus
1  
Classic But stilish
A bit of "olfactory" history.
In the 1950s perfume was not very widespread in the United States. For men it was very unusual, only aftershave was used.
The perfumer Knudson then, after exhausting research to bring something that would revolutionize the concept of perfume overseas and with great sacrifices and perseverance, created this fragrance which would be very successful in the 70s and revolutionize the concept of perfume.
A classic, masculine, timeless fragrance, with citrus, patchouli and woody scents.
Pleasant on a man, absolutely worth wearing without being afraid of being out of fashion: it always has its reason.
0 Comments
5
Sillage
5
Longevity
8
Scent
FvSpee

249 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
FvSpee
FvSpee
Top Review 42  
Colonial goods XII: Pebbles. A man cologne.
Yeah, cool or: "Pebbles. A man cologne." What a cool name for a perfume! And with real pebbles in it, once plucked from the Hudson River bed by the perfumer himself in the state of New York and hand stuffed into the bottles. No, not anymore, the bottles are probably delivered from India with stones ready in them and the cologne is poured over them. Looks like "On the Rocks", and is - exactly that
Pebble is not a fragrance that suits me. I won't get it. Whatever the reason, it doesn't spark right. But it's a great, absolutely original scent, just like the previous one I covered in this series. And Kiesel is almost archetypal or prototypical, what I was thinking of when I opened this series: A "brown cologne".

On the one hand, it is very strongly rooted in the classic Cologne tradition: Not too long lasting, discreet sillage, strong accent on citrus freshness. On the other hand, however, it has this delicate, light-brown tinge, which does not kill the colognique, but leaves it its place and only complements it. This light brown here is less spicy (clove etc.) or woody, but earthy, almost loamy. From the olfactory tonality, pebble reminds me of Eau de Memo, although the Memo water smells quite different (the light brown dialogue partner of the orange is soft leather there) and although I have fallen in love with Memo and not with this one.

Pebble opens with a slightly creamy and spicy, very special light citric, then shifts relatively quickly (I'm anticipating here) into the mild orange. This is never sour and never superficially fruity, but always elegantly smooth. A certain sweetness belongs to this citric pole from the beginning. If you spray yourself normally, you won't smell it; if you press your nose to your arm, it penetrates strongly (in the beginning it smells more like "A Boy's Cologne", but in the wild you don't run around immediately after spraying with your nose on your arm). With the time the whole thing settles down and the citric pole is, until the end then, most likely to address as mild orange and very tender honey-sweet.

Now to the light brown counterpart. Here, something mineral is already present in the pre-orange, very bright opening (I had a tetsprout, not a bottle, so I wasn't visually influenced by stones, but the imagination can achieve a lot, of course). This soon sorts itself into a very exciting earthy-clayey direction, for which I would blame patchouli, the pebbles and the beginnings of incense and vetiver. This loamy clay always remains pleasantly warm, flatteringly balsamic and a little bit spicy.

Interestingly, it does not become sweetish in the finish, as is often the case in men's fragrances. Michael B. Knudsen, the inventor, has actually somehow managed to nail the tonka bean down rather at the beginning and in the middle. The end (after about three hours) impresses rather dry and tart, the incense should be able to penetrate fully here.

Even though Kiesel is a cologne for gentle men (and doesn't give the wearer and the environment a hard time), I fortunately don't perceive it as fluffy and soft. This is the all-clear, because musk is capitalized here in the pyramid.

* *

Apicius has already said a lot about the company in his commentary below. For those who will not scroll down: Olle Knudsen emigrates from Europe to the United States, where he finds himself in the haze of Broadway and its stars. In 1957, he founds a fragrance house with exactly one fragrance in its portfolio. This one. And that's where he stuffs the stones from the Hudson River. Then the company goes under, Knudsen dies and the fragrance is discontinued
The sequel, which is not available at Apicius, can be read on gravelcologne.com. If what it says is true, a father and his son (Georg and Christian Blessing) both love the fragrance, are sad that it no longer exists and set out to find the rights to the name, the fragrance recipes and the stuff, eventually founding the company anew. The fragrance celebrates resurrection. And because you can't live on a fragrance nowadays, four other fragrances are thrown on the market, in the same design (two in 2019, two more this year).

Where the new company is based is not said, the names of the new owners sound German and the price is given in Euro, also on the English version of the site.

What Knudsen demanded at the time, I don't know, Blessing sen. and jun. want 149 euros for the bottle, both in the company's own online shop and, identically, at ALZD, Bräuninger and parfumdreams, which speaks for a tight sales organization.

* *

As I said at the beginning: No fragrance for me, but for those who want to spend 150 euros on a cologne, find the stones and the company history funny and fall in love with the design of the bottle, at least one sure test candidate.
30 Comments
7
Bottle
6
Sillage
7
Longevity
8.5
Scent
Leimbacher

503 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
Leimbacher
Leimbacher
Top Review 17  
Schlieren stones
Call me crazy or (psychologically) easily influenced, but: the little stones in the gravel have not only attracted me magically, I also mean to be able to smell them formally in the scent... ¶

"Gravel - A Mans Cologne" is a great remake of a once somewhat forgotten classic. This update is a dream, no question. Classic, elegant, manly. But at the same time incredibly creamy, slightly sunny (like heated marble stone!) and never exaggeratedly sweet/"clayey". In the heart almost a thick lavender, but somehow much more. And more than worth its price. So must facelifts! The stones fit perfectly to the mineral, very texture-rich, slightly granular smell, are quasi fused with the liquid and result in a concentrated unity, an ideal overall picture. A surface of scent that you almost feel in your nose. Noble and homogeneous, innocent and smooth. The original was certainly rawer, more powerful, more fringy and richer - but this one comes very close to the perfect modern men's perfume according to my taste. And it's based on classical music. Pah. Great, great, great! :)

Flacon: these little stones have taken a liking to me. The rest is unspectacular.
Shelf life: 6, rather 7 hours
Sillage: you can smell it... if you want.

Conclusion: "Gravel - A Mans Cologne" is one of the finest blends of barbershop, cream scent and masculine lavender you can imagine. Classic almost perfectly updated!
2 Comments
7
Bottle
6
Sillage
8
Longevity
7
Scent
ErhanSaceros

20 Reviews
Translated Show original Show translation
ErhanSaceros
ErhanSaceros
Top Review 9  
Most Beautiful Soap Musk
If this fragrance smelled like today's version back then, then I am speechless. Because as soon as the first two digits of the year of publication are a one and a nine, then I actually want to avoid such fragrances. But the little stones in the bottle aroused my curiosity. And fortunately they did. Even if I don't know if this fragrance smelled as it does today, I was once again taught that clearly older fragrances smell timeless and not always rotten and golden
In the last few months I have repeatedly encountered soapy or clean musk notes. I was tired of that dry, woody, soapy note. She also ruined some scents for me.

My thoughts were rather negative after spraying: Oooh, another oldschool soap and musk scent. After all very smooth and not woody-rough and reduced to the essentials, without the usual, exaggeratedly complex oldschool drone bomb, where you don't know in which direction the fragrance actually wants to go.

But after 20 minutes the tide turns: the oldschool feeling is significantly minimized and a certain, discreet sweetness is added. The soapy musk note is not as woody-dry or pungent as usual, but well dosed, smooth and delicately soapy.

It doesn't take long before you notice something mineral (not aquatic). I don't know if it's actually from those little stones or if I'm just making it up. :)

In addition to the mineral note, there is also a pleasant, resinous note, without really having to think of incense. I am thinking here of the cellar of my deceased grandparents who lived in a village on high mountains. It smelled stony resinous. :)

So here we have a fragrance that has best solved the theme of "soapy musk". Perfectly and harmoniously placed minerals and resins with a subtle sweetness, decorate here the soapy musk pretty well.

In the end it becomes admittedly a little rougher/pungent and the sweet notes have disappeared. And I don't feel that scent smoky. Maybe just a little in the background.

The Sillage is rather in the middle range (5-6 points), while the fragrance loosely lasts 7-8 hours
So I'm positively surprised. By and large it is quite simple and not necessarily the most spectacular fragrance, but if you pay attention to some details, you can really appreciate this fragrance.
4 Comments
More reviews

Statements

2 short views on the fragrance
TeoshannonTeoshannon 2 months ago
classic cologne: wood, spice, resin, citrus. nothing unique, but endlessly wearable
0 Comments
ChicoRoch1ChicoRoch1 4 months ago
Masculine inside and out
0 Comments

Charts

This is how the community classifies the fragrance.
Pie Chart Radar Chart

Images

3 fragrance photos of the community

Popular by Gravel

Across the Ocean by Gravel American Dream by Gravel Hudson River NY by Gravel 46th Street by Gravel Hazel by Gravel Evolution by Gravel Eau d'Esire by Gravel Eau d'Aspiration by Gravel Eau d'Evolution by Gravel Eau d'Ominance by Gravel