
Heritage
Few fragrance houses carry the kind of institutional memory that Guerlain does, and Heritage Eau de Toilette, released in 1992 and composed by Jean-Paul Guerlain, is one of their most quietly assured masculine statements. It does not chase trends. It occupies a space that feels borrowed from a well-stocked library or a tailored wool coat left on a chair, green and spiced and entirely composed. Aromatica carries the Guerlain Heritage decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, giving you an easy way into a fragrance that many consider one of the great masculine benchmarks of the modern era.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Aldehydes, Juniper Berries, Clary Sage, Bergamot, Lemon, Violet, Green Notes, Petitgrain
Heart: Patchouli, Coriander, Geranium, Pepper, Rose, Carnation, Balsam Fir, Pink Pepper, Orris Root, Jasmine, Cyclamen, Lily-of-the-Valley
Base: Sandalwood, Amber, Oakmoss, Cedar, Musk
The Scent
A slightly aldehydic lift opens the first few seconds with a faintly soapy, luminous quality before lavender and bergamot take over and set the tone. Clary sage and juniper push through quickly, adding a resinous, almost gin-like sharpness that keeps the opening from feeling soft or powdery. Petitgrain adds a thin, dry citrus-wood accord underneath, and the green notes give the whole opening a fresh, almost cold-air quality. The aldehydes fade gently as the opening progresses, leaving lavender and bergamot to carry the brightness forward before the heart begins to assert itself. Within ten minutes the fragrance begins to settle, and this is where Heritage earns its reputation. The heart is complex in a way that rewards attention: patchouli arrives early, but it is not the dark, heavy patchouli of a 1970s fragrance. Here it is dry and slightly earthy, threaded through with coriander and geranium that keep it angular rather than round. Rose and carnation sit in the background of the heart without ever dominating; they contribute a classical floral gravity that prevents the spice from going too sharp. Orris root adds chalk and violet-like softness, while balsam fir contributes a subtle resinous green that is easy to miss on first wear but becomes part of the fragrance's backbone. The coriander in particular works quietly to connect the spice of the opening to the warmer, earthier heart, acting as a bridge that keeps the transition feeling seamless rather than abrupt. The jasmine and cyclamen in the heart are largely structural, reinforcing the floral framework without announcing themselves as distinct notes; most wearers will sense them as part of a coherent classical heart rather than as individual ingredients. Lily-of-the-valley adds a quiet, green-floral freshness that bridges the opening's cold-air quality into the warmer spiced middle. The drydown is the part that divides opinions and creates obsessive loyalty in equal measure. Sandalwood and cedar anchor the base firmly in woody territory, and oakmoss gives the fragrance a genuinely mossy, old-world depth that most modern masculines do not have. The amber is present but not sweet; it warms the drydown without pulling the fragrance toward gourmand or oriental territory. What you are left with on dry skin after an hour is something that reads as dry, woody, and resolutely classical: green at the edges, patchouli and sandalwood at the core, with enough spice to keep it interesting. The EDT reads drier and more structured than the EDP version, which is rounder and more amber-forward; those who prefer their classic masculines with an angular, forest-floor quality consistently reach for the EDT.
When to Wear
Heritage is at its best in cooler months, from autumn through winter, when its resinous, mossy depth can breathe properly in cold air. It suits formal and smart-casual settings equally: a considered choice for office environments where restraint counts, or an evening out that calls for something with actual character rather than crowd appeal.
Who Is It For
Built for someone who already knows what oakmoss smells like and misses it, or for a younger wearer who has grown tired of aquatics and fresh woods and wants to understand what masculine perfumery looked like before it simplified itself. Lovers of classical fougeres and chypres who want depth, structure, and a genuine sense of heritage in the bottle will find this immediately satisfying.
If you enjoy Habit Rouge, Heritage sits in the same classical Guerlain masculine tradition and is worth wearing back to back to understand how the house approaches structure differently across decades. Browse the full Guerlain collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $681.00
-65%$681.00
$238.35Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Few fragrance houses carry the kind of institutional memory that Guerlain does, and Heritage Eau de Toilette, released in 1992 and composed by Jean-Paul Guerlain, is one of their most quietly assured masculine statements. It does not chase trends. It occupies a space that feels borrowed from a well-stocked library or a tailored wool coat left on a chair, green and spiced and entirely composed. Aromatica carries the Guerlain Heritage decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, giving you an easy way into a fragrance that many consider one of the great masculine benchmarks of the modern era.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Aldehydes, Juniper Berries, Clary Sage, Bergamot, Lemon, Violet, Green Notes, Petitgrain
Heart: Patchouli, Coriander, Geranium, Pepper, Rose, Carnation, Balsam Fir, Pink Pepper, Orris Root, Jasmine, Cyclamen, Lily-of-the-Valley
Base: Sandalwood, Amber, Oakmoss, Cedar, Musk
The Scent
A slightly aldehydic lift opens the first few seconds with a faintly soapy, luminous quality before lavender and bergamot take over and set the tone. Clary sage and juniper push through quickly, adding a resinous, almost gin-like sharpness that keeps the opening from feeling soft or powdery. Petitgrain adds a thin, dry citrus-wood accord underneath, and the green notes give the whole opening a fresh, almost cold-air quality. The aldehydes fade gently as the opening progresses, leaving lavender and bergamot to carry the brightness forward before the heart begins to assert itself. Within ten minutes the fragrance begins to settle, and this is where Heritage earns its reputation. The heart is complex in a way that rewards attention: patchouli arrives early, but it is not the dark, heavy patchouli of a 1970s fragrance. Here it is dry and slightly earthy, threaded through with coriander and geranium that keep it angular rather than round. Rose and carnation sit in the background of the heart without ever dominating; they contribute a classical floral gravity that prevents the spice from going too sharp. Orris root adds chalk and violet-like softness, while balsam fir contributes a subtle resinous green that is easy to miss on first wear but becomes part of the fragrance's backbone. The coriander in particular works quietly to connect the spice of the opening to the warmer, earthier heart, acting as a bridge that keeps the transition feeling seamless rather than abrupt. The jasmine and cyclamen in the heart are largely structural, reinforcing the floral framework without announcing themselves as distinct notes; most wearers will sense them as part of a coherent classical heart rather than as individual ingredients. Lily-of-the-valley adds a quiet, green-floral freshness that bridges the opening's cold-air quality into the warmer spiced middle. The drydown is the part that divides opinions and creates obsessive loyalty in equal measure. Sandalwood and cedar anchor the base firmly in woody territory, and oakmoss gives the fragrance a genuinely mossy, old-world depth that most modern masculines do not have. The amber is present but not sweet; it warms the drydown without pulling the fragrance toward gourmand or oriental territory. What you are left with on dry skin after an hour is something that reads as dry, woody, and resolutely classical: green at the edges, patchouli and sandalwood at the core, with enough spice to keep it interesting. The EDT reads drier and more structured than the EDP version, which is rounder and more amber-forward; those who prefer their classic masculines with an angular, forest-floor quality consistently reach for the EDT.
When to Wear
Heritage is at its best in cooler months, from autumn through winter, when its resinous, mossy depth can breathe properly in cold air. It suits formal and smart-casual settings equally: a considered choice for office environments where restraint counts, or an evening out that calls for something with actual character rather than crowd appeal.
Who Is It For
Built for someone who already knows what oakmoss smells like and misses it, or for a younger wearer who has grown tired of aquatics and fresh woods and wants to understand what masculine perfumery looked like before it simplified itself. Lovers of classical fougeres and chypres who want depth, structure, and a genuine sense of heritage in the bottle will find this immediately satisfying.
If you enjoy Habit Rouge, Heritage sits in the same classical Guerlain masculine tradition and is worth wearing back to back to understand how the house approaches structure differently across decades. Browse the full Guerlain collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











