Perfectly innocuous, light EdT strength, citrus, leaning towards feminine, but still possibly unisex for a person who doesn't mind the presence of white flowers. Not Zesty. But, given the Jasmine, at ...
Oh, again antoher diasppointment by Creed. I thought - like many others I guess - it were a zesty/sharp/citrusy fragrance - but oh, it was not. On the contrary, it reminded me very much of Eau Turqoui...
Creed’s Zeste Mandarine Pamplemousse seemed like a floral for about the first 3 minutes on my skin but then quickly evolved to become a near scent twin to Annick Goutal’s Nuits d’Hadrien. They both ha...
Despite its name I smell almost no traditional citrus in this fragrance. Creed describes this fragrance as: "Fresh, light and citrusy with grapefruit, bergamot, lemon tree bark and Sicilian tangerine....
Excellent opening notes and the white flower base is alluring. This was Olivier Creeds first scent as a master perfumer. I would give this a thumbs up if it werent for its below average longevity...
This was Olivier CREED's first fragrance as master perfumer, when he assumed that role in 1975, taking over from his father. It's perfect for sweltering hot weather -- very citrus, very refreshing, v...
This is one of the few citruses that doesn't turn musty and dank on me. To me, it smells pretty sour in its decant, but when I spray it on, it's bright and efferescent, yet, at the same time, tender. ...
Zeste, Mandarin, Pamplemousse...as long as they're listing ingredients, why not add the fourth - bilge water? OK, maybe the fourth unfortunate ingredient is Maller's skin chemistry, but that would al...
I like this scent very much. I think it is great for a man or a woman. I am generally not a fan of citrus/fresh scents, and I appreciate that this scent is well blended and complicated enough for th...
This dried down to a great citrus scent that on me did not scream CITRUS!!!. Subtle, clean and neat. Nice for the office.