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7.4 / 10 79 Ratings
A perfume by Jardins d'Écrivains for men, released in 2013. The scent is green-spicy. It is still in production.
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Main accords

Green
Spicy
Fresh
Fruity
Floral

Fragrance Pyramid

Top Notes Top Notes
BergamotBergamot GrapeGrape
Heart Notes Heart Notes
FigFig CarnationCarnation TeaTea
Base Notes Base Notes
VetiverVetiver OakmossOakmoss

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
7.479 Ratings
Longevity
7.365 Ratings
Sillage
6.666 Ratings
Bottle
6.762 Ratings
Submitted by DonVanVliet, last update on 11/16/2025.
Interesting Facts
The scent is named after the Irish author Oscar Wilde.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
L'Arbre de la Connaissance by Jovoy
L'Arbre de la Connaissance
Wūlóng Chá (Extrait de Parfum) by Nishane
Wūlóng Chá Extrait de Parfum
Osmanthe Yunnan by Hermès
Osmanthe Yunnan

Reviews

7 in-depth fragrance descriptions
Ebichuunee

98 Reviews
Ebichuunee
Ebichuunee
1  
A dandy’s shirt
A crisp, green-soap opening that immediately evokes freshly pressed shirts and old-school grooming rituals. There’s a sharp tingle at the back of the nose, like the bite of a classic cologne.

I enjoy the composition, but it leans distinctly gentlemanly, more dandy drawing room than daily wear for me. Elegant, but not quite mine.
0 Comments
BrianBuchanan

363 Reviews
BrianBuchanan
BrianBuchanan
1  
The Perfume of Dorian Gray
A most glamorous marzipan top note but it fades before your very eyes to leave a staid bitter fig and grape.
I'm not going to try this on skin because it contains the banned molecule Lyral.

3*-

Carded vial
0 Comments
Miapea

6 Reviews
Miapea
Miapea
0  
An uncommon combination
This smells like three distinct things to me:
First, the cleanest nicest soap.
Second, the sweaty sandalwood.
Third, the creamy and plump fig.

If you are a fan of any of them, it is a must-try.
0 Comments
Seelanne

20 Reviews
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Seelanne
Seelanne
Top Review 39  
Kisses for the Poet
In 2011, something truly unique happened in the 20th arrondissement of Paris: local politicians from Ménilmontant and the administration of the cemetery "Le Cimetière du Père-Lachaise" discussed a problem that had never before arisen: kisses for a dead man. A solution had to be found for the fact that too many kisses were being placed at the grave of "this Irishman," specifically, that over the years, his grave had been so "kissed" that the gravestone, covered in countless lipstick marks, was now almost entirely red.

Now, Paris is known for its inviting cemeteries: few parks on this earth can compete with the melancholic-morbid beauty of the Parisian cemeteries. Whether it's the "Montmartre" cemetery in the north, the southern "Montparnasse," the central "Passy," or the "Père-Lachaise" in the east: they all possess a cheerful melancholy that almost leads one to suspect they want to convince someone that dying is beautiful, or at least not as terrible as commonly believed.

Every year, hordes of international visitors pilgrimage to these cemeteries, not least to honor all the artists who have beautified the face of the world with their work: Proust, Molière, Bizet, Truffaut, Piaf, Sartre, Balzac, and so on.

The French and Parisians themselves, of course, also love their cemeteries, and their reverence has always included artists from other countries who, through their love for Paris-or some other coincidence-have somehow become French in the eyes of the French: Beckett, Heine, Ionesco, Jim Morrison, Chopin, and indeed "this Irishman" with his grave full of kisses: Oscar Wilde.

Given this French reverence for artists in general and for Oscar Wilde in particular, it is perhaps not surprising that the founder of the house Jardins d'Écrivains, Anaïs Biguine, not only bases her entire fragrance portfolio on writers but also dedicated one of her five perfume creations to Wilde in 2012.

Biguine founded Jardins d'Écrivains years ago as a newcomer: she worked in advertising, as an agent for actors, and as a photographer before deciding one day to create fragrances. Due to her long-standing love for literature, the thought or feeling of a literary work or a writer serves as the starting point for a creation. Similar to Diptyque, Biguine initially began designing scented candles and bath products before launching her first perfume in 2012, acting as the idea generator and collaborating with a lab in Grasse for the formulation.

But how does the perfume of O. Wilde, this prototype of the dandy, master of the polished aphorism and creator of Dorian Gray, smell?

The opening is surprising: herbaceous-sour fresh green, a herbal but by no means citrusy bergamot surrounds a dreamily bitter grape scent, already initially flanked by a delicate hint of fig; like a freshly crushed leaf surrounded by grape skins and seeds with a hint of rhubarb; everything so fresh, as if after a rain shower. This is fabulous, simply one of the most beautiful green top notes ever.

After a while, bergamot and grape gradually become short-winded and make way for an almost meditative milky-bright tea, on which the fig rests, naturally somewhat sweet, but never cloying, rather clear and cool, floating, perhaps also stemming from the clove, which, however, does not otherwise make a notable appearance. The base note is then characterized by the gradually darkening tea, dry vetiver, and smoky oak moss in the sense of a rather classic chypre base, yet still green and never dark-heavy.

Wow, this is not what I expected: This is not an English salon where the pillars of the British Empire engage in witty, pretentious conversations while smoking cigar tips; this is not the late Victorian self-satisfied England; this is indeed much more the sharp tongue, this is the homeland of Oscar Wilde: this is Ireland, albeit tamed.

This scent is not complicated but rather accessible and simply structured, which is not a flaw but simply corresponds to its clarity. The comparison to other fig scents is not easy, as this soothing cool grape is so impressive. The scent is most similar to Heeley’s Figuier, which shares the herb-fresh light naturalness, although Heeley features airy melon instead of grape. Memories of Grey Flannel also occasionally come to mind.

This creation from Jardins d'Écrivains is simply beautiful; anyone who loves green should be thrilled.

And Oscar Wilde's grave? The politicians of Ménilmontant and the cemetery administration felt compelled to act. Even the Irish government had intervened and even advocated for the costs of a possible renovation of the gravestone of the famous son of Ireland. On the other hand, one could not simply ban kissing in the city of love, even if it was for a grave. It was decreed that Oscar Wilde's grave would first be cleaned and then surrounded by a high plexiglass wall, so that no one could place their kissing lips directly on the gravestone anymore. And so it happened exactly on November 30, 2011, the 111th anniversary of Wilde's death.

Not only Wilde's followers but also the Parisians found this act of cleaning the gravestone to be quite un-French, as it was completely unromantic: "This is no way for Paris to treat its dead," was even read in a newspaper. But the administration remained firm. Since then, of course, the glass wall is kissed in replacement, but - because it is indeed unromantic - significantly less often.

But this still does not answer the question of why Wilde's grave received such veneration over the years. Because this has never happened even in Parisian cemeteries: Jim Morrison's grave had to be cordoned off, Serge Gainsbourg's grave still resembles a pilgrimage site, but kisses for a writer from Ireland who, moreover, died in Paris more or less by chance? Why kisses specifically for him, the sharp-tongued Wilde, who once formulated about people: "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."

But perhaps the answer lies precisely in this quote; perhaps many people love him in the end exactly because they have sensed that behind the biting cynicism, keen intellect, and snobbish demeanor, there was above all an extremely compassionate person who, like everyone else, could simply see a few stars and describe them for us. One of those restlessly sensitive and - given his life path - also suffering souls of divine grace, for whom Hölderlin's saying seems to fit perfectly:

"For they, who lend us the heavenly fire, The gods, also grant us sacred suffering, therefore let this remain: A son of the earth I seem; made to love, made to suffer."
12 Comments
9Scent
Susan

138 Reviews
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Susan
Susan
Top Review 24  
Elf Skin...
I can by no means leave this fragrance to the gentlemen.....this juicy-silky green has embraced me from the very first spray.....it climbs higher and higher on me with each passing minute.....surrounding me like an invisible dress made of rich dark green leaves and ferns.....herbaceous....but never scratchy......becoming gently creamy, soft, and cuddly (fig)......almost ethereal....mystical....and finds its calm in a chypre bed of oak moss.....if there were sylphs and elves, I believe this is how they would smell.....both the male and the female.....
5 Comments
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Statements

27 short views on the fragrance
1
I want this to be my smell it’s so green and fresh
0 Comments
48
40
There sits Oscar
Under the pergola
Shining grapes
And green tea-scented trees
Writing sweet figs
On English grass
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40 Comments
21
41
Aged Oscar enjoys toothless tea under the gentle fig sun, the soft moss blanket wrapped tightly around him. Is this still wild? +
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41 Comments
21
20
Green figs, crisp grapes with a hint of sweetness.
The tea is bitter.
It smells strange but good.
Everything is delicate and quiet.
Radiates calm.
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20 Comments
12
11
Creamy grape green. Despite the delicate fruity sweetness, I think more of the seeds than the flesh: bitter, sour, almost metallic. I like it.
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11 Comments
13
8
Very distinctive, pastel-colored greenish-balsamic-sweet scent with a hint of bitter citrus and a touch of anise spice. Unique.
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8 Comments
12
5
Moss-fringed past. Rain-damp crumbling sculptures hidden in dark fruity shadow green. Garden soul in a century-long slumber.
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5 Comments
10
4
Oscar Wilde always has a good quote. Here it is as a fragrance: grape on a green moss-vetiver bed. New and original.
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4 Comments
10
1
Retro-modern fougère with the juicy meatiness of grape & fig. Plus, spicy clove on sharp green soap moss. Somehow loud.
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1 Comment
9
6
Soapy, mossy garden clove, grassy, delicate fig, mineral green, indulgent fizz: For urban dandies with a sense of tradition.
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6 Comments
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Images

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