guides
how to find your signature scent
your signature scent is the fragrance you reach for without thinking. here is the fastest, cheapest way to find yours — by testing on skin, not on paper.
guides
your signature scent is the fragrance you reach for without thinking. here is the fastest, cheapest way to find yours — by testing on skin, not on paper.
a signature scent is the one fragrance people start to associate with you — the one you reach for on autopilot. finding it is less about luck and more about method: test broadly, narrow by how a scent wears on your skin, and commit only once a fragrance still feels right after a full day.
every fragrance belongs to a family — woody, floral, fresh, oriental (amber), gourmand, or fougère. instead of chasing individual bottles, work out which families you gravitate toward. most people who love one woody scent love several. narrowing to two families cuts your search from thousands of options to a focused shortlist.
paper strips show you the top notes and nothing else. your skin chemistry — temperature, ph, natural oils — changes how a fragrance develops. a scent that smells generic on a strip can turn extraordinary on your wrist, and vice versa. apply one fragrance per wrist, then live with it for a few hours before judging.
the first fifteen minutes are the loudest and the least representative. what matters is the dry-down — the heart and base notes that emerge after an hour and stay for the rest of the day. a signature scent is one whose dry-down you still enjoy at hour six.
full bottles are an expensive way to discover you do not like something. 2ml samples let you wear a fragrance across a full week — different weather, different moods — before you commit. this is exactly why decants exist: signature-scent hunting without signature-scent prices.