Habit Rouge Dress Code 2015

Habit Rouge Dress Code by Guerlain
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8.3 / 10 191 Ratings
A popular perfume by Guerlain for men, released in 2015. The scent is spicy-woody. The longevity is above-average. It was last marketed by LVMH.
Pronunciation
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Main accords

Spicy
Woody
Sweet
Gourmand
Leathery

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
NeroliNeroli RoseRose BergamotBergamot
Heart Notes Heart Notes
Spicy notesSpicy notes
Base Notes Base Notes
PralinéPraliné VanillaVanilla LeatherLeather Tonka beanTonka bean Woody notesWoody notes

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
8.3191 Ratings
Longevity
8.5149 Ratings
Sillage
7.9161 Ratings
Bottle
8.2156 Ratings
Value for money
7.915 Ratings
Submitted by Rivegauche, last update on 04.04.2024.
Interesting Facts
Until 2018, both bottle and box were redesigned every year with new decorative motifs.

Reviews

4 in-depth fragrance descriptions
8
Pricing
9
Bottle
8
Sillage
9
Longevity
9
Scent
MrMoustache

9 Reviews
MrMoustache
MrMoustache
Helpful Review 9  
This is dress code!
Guerlain’s Habit Rouge Dress Code is on a league of its own! I personally never fell in love with the original Habit Rouge. It surely earns my respect as you can feel it’s heritage/class of an earlier time and I can easily imagine that this must have crossed all bounderies in the sixties. However to me it felt a little dated...

Until I met Dress Code! Thierry Wasser is a daredevil! He perfectly linked the Habit Rouge DNA with the modern Guerlain powerhouses such as L’Homme Ideal and LIDGE.

What you get?
An opening that reminds me of the original Habit Rouge because of the bergamot/neroli quickly evolving into a leathery-spicy base amped up with lots of sweetness making it very gourmandish. I love it! Wearing this makes me feel special. It’s classy, but intimate at the same time.

Is this a flanker?
To me it is not. This is a complete new fragrance that should be marketed on its own. Habit Rouge lovers could be dissappointed and others might be put off because they never fell for Habit Rouge. This is dress code! A must try for every perfume lover, a real treat for the nose!
0 Comments
8
Bottle
8
Sillage
8
Longevity
8
Scent
Smellavision

205 Reviews
Smellavision
Smellavision
1  
Habit Rouge Gourmand ?
Opening with the very distintive rather harsh and masculine character of the original Habit Rouge, this scent could confuse most people as being "just another Habit Rouge in a different bottle" - but be warned, it's not.

Pretty soon the sweeter praline and vanilla-like background (which seems to have somehow replaced the leathery agarwood of former versions, incredibly well executed) comes a-sneaking, leaving you with a wonderful gourmand-ish scent that still has the powdery citrus rosy barbershop dryness of the original lingering, but is much more contemporary and generally acceptable in the perfume scene of today.

Quite frankly - and I could be very far from the truth here - to me this smells like msr. Wasser took some notes from the original, some notes from L'homme Ideal, a hint of LIDGE, shook them up and out came this wonderful creamy sweetish leathery delight.

A word of advice though, not for everyone so try before you buy.
1 Comment
5
Bottle
10
Sillage
10
Longevity
5
Scent
Drseid

819 Reviews
Drseid
Drseid
2  
Strong Ties To The Glorious Past, But A Failure To Move Forward...
Habit Rouge Dress Code opens with a strong blast of slightly sharp orange citrus bergamot with a hint of underlying dulled soapy rose. As the composition moves to its early heart a slightly spiced woody accord takes control with a co-starring moderately sweet tonka bean and vanilla tandem with moderately rough leather joining the remaining dulled soapy rose in support. During the late dry-down the composition remains highly linear, as the vanilla and tonka sweetened mild spiced woods remain, with the leather gradually receding, revealing a slightly creamy praline supporting note hanging around through the finish. Projection is deceptively outstanding, as is longevity at over 20 hours on skin.

Habit Rouge is one of the most historically significant perfumes targeted to men in fragrance history. As such, any new release that uses its name in the title like Habit Rouge Dress Code does is bound to be heavily scrutinized. In the case of this reviewer, the original Habit Rouge didn't wow on first or even second impressions, taking quite a considerable time to win me over, but while I never *loved* it, win me over to at least a largely positive opinion it did, enough for me to buy and keep a bottle in my collection. In the case of Dress Code, perfumer Thierry Wasser definitely recognizes and honors the original Habit Rouge's roots by keeping many of the classic's characteristics within, but Dress Code definitely goes much further than just rehashing the past. In this case, the lemon open of the original is swapped for a more orange-like bergamot, with an almost gauze-like soapy rose undertone. The result is surely interesting, but a big step backwards, as the lemon open was my favorite part of classic Habit Rouge. Things in the heart then turn to a moderately sweet, near-gourmand aspect in Dress Code, with its heavy reliance on a tonka bean, vanilla and creamy praline trio melding with smooth woods and supporting dulled soapy rose. In my mind, this creamy sweetness is a major step back from the more aromatic dry classic, but there is no denying that Wasser takes some risks here while not tarnishing the original's distinct identity within. On the plus side is very nice leather that is used to balance some of the more gourmand aspects of Dress Code, and in this case it is handled extremely well, mixing with the rest of the ingredients perfectly. All-in-all Dress Code is an intriguing and relatively innovative flanker of a well-regarded classic, but one has to wonder if sweetening the composition was the best way to go. In the mind of this sweetness averse reviewer the answer is a resounding "no," but to those that love the classic and can tolerate moderate sweetness in their compositions, Dress Code could be a great fit. The bottom line is the $100 per 100ml bottle Habit Rouge Dress Code keeps strong ties and reverence to its classic parent, but veers off in an unconventional and potentially polarizing way, earning it an "average" 2.5 stars out of 5 rating and a "neutral" recommendation. If you love the original I suspect you will enjoy Dress Code too, but if the original wasn't your cup of tea and/or you dislike relative sweetness in your compositions like me, I dare say Dress Code may disappoint.
0 Comments
ColinM

516 Reviews
ColinM
ColinM
Top Review 10  
2015's finest!
By far the best novelty of 2015 for me, even if the year hasn’t ended yet. I must start by saying that I am not crazy for classic Habit Rouge; I really respect and appreciate it, but I like it really mildly – for no specific reasons, it just never completely “clicked” for me. Dress Code instead, I fell in love with it from the very first sniff, and I wouldn’t know where to start with to motivate why. It smells at once really complex, really quality, completely new for me yet robustly rooted into the classic heritage at the same time (starting from Habit Rouge itself), and just tremendously good. Basically, I think Dress Code may basically and inaccurately be described as a sort of remarkably inspired blend which brilliantly mixes Habit Rouge, the Guerlain Homme line (notably Intense), several classic French masterworks like Mouchoir de Monsieur or Monsieur de Givenchy, an apparently unrelated contemporary designer vein (mostly for a subtle and sharp smoky-woody base layer) and a tiny bit of vintage Hermès Bel Ami too, especially the way leather gets a floral-sweet treatment there. There’s some echoes of Tom Ford Noir too for me, which was however a clear tribute to Guerlain’s classics, so here we are again. There’s a lot going on here, and yet it is all so well blended it’s really hard (and eventually pointless) to “read” it.

Anyway, shortly Dress Code opens with a fresh and soapy bergamot-rose-barbershop accord with some quality vanilla, a sprinkle of mild brownish spices (cloves and nutmeg above all, as a distant whiff of a classic Bay Rum) and a dry, sort of incense-infused leather woody base, all tinged with a really peculiar and quite prominent sort of really sophisticated dusty powdery-gourmand feel of what I think Guerlain calls “praline” here – which is basically a gentle cascade of delightful vanillic powder with a truly clever sort of spicy and “toasted” aftertaste, perfectly keeping the “autumnal” feel of Habit Rouge and balancing the sweetness. I expected something more cloying, while this sweet accord is really subtle and mannered, and yet decidedly there.

At first, Dress Code is quite uplifting, even fresh and well more Oriental than classic Habit Rouge, also pleasantly “barbershop-clean”, showing some slight boozy nuances as well – hence my reference to Guerlain Homme Intense; that same sort of distinguished woody-herbal booziness is partially here too (and actually, with a hint of 2003 Gucci pour Homme’s incense woodiness as well) just evolving then under a completely different light. A darker, more luscious, dirtier and, say, “ambiguously sweeter” light – where the ambiguity lies in the Frenchies’ tradermark fondness for sweetness and dirtiness . The evolution is truly dynamic and shimmering, and is in fact all about a descent into a dandy’s closet; powder, nondescript sweet dust, dead flowers, a whiff of salty antique woods (maybe vetiver), luxury leather (true luxury: tanned, rich, comforting, really smooth but sharp – paired with spices, floral notes and a hint of sweetness, here’s why I mentioned vintage Bel Ami). The freshness goes almost entirely away soon except for a hint of citrus, leather becomes earthier and saltier, a gust of warm wind spreads the dirty, spicy, sweet powder all over. And still, Dress Code remains inexplicably gentle, distinguished and almost weightless. This scent is quite all about that - sweet but dark, innocently powdery and dirty at once, mature and really sophisticated yet sort of light and youthful, comprising a whole timelapse over Guerlain’s history in a whiff. It’s quite hard for me to describe this fragrance and its evolution properly, as lots of nuances and notes smell really new to me (better say, the way they are presented and how they evolve); but well, you can just expect a brilliant, refined, cozy combination of classic and contemporary bearing a lot of echoes of stuff you know (more or less the names I mentioned so far), and yet smelling like nothing else. The evolution is really great, and the performance is really fine – this scent is quite more discreet than it may seem from the composition, but it’s not ephemeral at all.

I think Wasser did a truly remarkable job in bringing Guerlain’s DNA and specifically Habit Rouge autumnal formal and “dirty” elegance under a completely new light – not a “designer” light, not a “niche” light, just really new and out of boundaries and definitions, as if he almost tried to get rid of any formal training and just compose “out of the box” to create something quality and new yet solidly rooted into the past, avoiding any cliché. And he surely succeeded for me. Superb.

9/10
1 Comment

Statements

2 short views on the fragrance
JManDaveJManDave 9 years ago
7.5
Bottle
5
Sillage
7.5
Longevity
8.5
Scent
Modernized semi-gourmand flanker that retains the best parts of the classic DNA.
0 Comments
OPomoneOPomone 9 years ago
7.5
Bottle
5
Sillage
7.5
Longevity
3
Scent
Once again, the pastry cook Thierry Wasser took Guerlinade for a cake recipe.
He has baked an orange & praline pudding this time. Cloying!
0 Comments

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