
Neroli Sauvage
Few houses carry the weight of a 1760 founding date without occasionally coasting on it, but some of the most interesting work in the Creed catalogue sits quietly in the back. Creed Neroli Sauvage, an Eau de Parfum released in 1994 and composed by Olivier Creed, belongs to the brand's unisex heritage line. Aromatic and citrus-forward with a clean, slightly salty drydown, it reads nothing like a conventional neroli soliflore. Aromatica carries the Creed Neroli Sauvage decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Grapefruit
Heart: Verbena, Neroli
Base: Ambergris
The Scent
Bergamot and grapefruit arrive together with real immediacy, making the first impression bright and citrus-dominant. The bergamot carries that characteristic slightly floral edge, while the grapefruit pushes things in a sharper, more bitter direction. It smells like the inside of a sun-warmed kitchen where someone has zested two types of citrus at once. Within the first five to ten minutes, a green, slightly watery verbena note surfaces underneath the citrus. It softens the bite and introduces a salty, almost marine quality that shifts the composition toward something more classical and less sweet. This marine-green turn is one of Neroli Sauvage's more distinctive moves, giving it a character that reads closer to an aromatic fougere than a straight citrus cologne. The verbena does not quietly recede; it continues threading through the heart, lending a dry, almost mineral quality that keeps the composition from feeling one-dimensional. Then comes the neroli, and this is where the fragrance can read two different ways. It can register as the core of the scent: a light, white-floral, slightly honeyed bloom that gives the heart depth without adding any real weight. On other skin, the neroli feels faint, almost ghostly, and the name seems aspirational rather than descriptive. Both readings are honest. The neroli here is genuinely restrained, more of a suggestion than a statement. It never dominates. What it does do is anchor the verbena and prevent the composition from feeling too dry or purely linear. Together, verbena and neroli build a quiet mid-section that holds the citrus top and the base in balance, the two notes complementing rather than competing. As the fragrance moves into its drydown, the citrus fades back predictably, and the verbena lingers in the background as a dry, green memory. The transition is gradual, the composition narrowing toward its base without any abrupt shift in character. The ambergris base is smooth and quietly salty, not sweet or heavy in the way synthetic ambers tend to be. The whole composition settles into a clean, slightly herbal finish that sits close to the skin. It is what an older generation of perfumery called a chypre-adjacent citrus, spare and well-made, without the weight that word usually implies.
When to Wear
Neroli Sauvage is built for warm weather and outdoor settings, from late spring through summer, whether that means office hours during a humid June or an evening walk when the air is still warm. It suits occasions where you want something fresh and composed without a heavy trail, like a business lunch, a weekend brunch, or a daytime setting where restraint is read as confidence.
Who Is It For
Someone who reaches for clean, citrus-led fragrances without sweetness and prefers the older, more classical style of perfumery over the crowd-friendly freshness of modern aquatics will find this particularly rewarding. It suits the person who has smelled dozens of things and is looking for a Creed that does not announce itself.
If you enjoy Royal Water Millesime, which shares the same Creed DNA of pared-down citrus freshness, Neroli Sauvage is worth placing alongside it. Browse the complete Creed collection at Aromatica for more from this house.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $1,215.00
-65%$1,215.00
$425.25Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Few houses carry the weight of a 1760 founding date without occasionally coasting on it, but some of the most interesting work in the Creed catalogue sits quietly in the back. Creed Neroli Sauvage, an Eau de Parfum released in 1994 and composed by Olivier Creed, belongs to the brand's unisex heritage line. Aromatic and citrus-forward with a clean, slightly salty drydown, it reads nothing like a conventional neroli soliflore. Aromatica carries the Creed Neroli Sauvage decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Grapefruit
Heart: Verbena, Neroli
Base: Ambergris
The Scent
Bergamot and grapefruit arrive together with real immediacy, making the first impression bright and citrus-dominant. The bergamot carries that characteristic slightly floral edge, while the grapefruit pushes things in a sharper, more bitter direction. It smells like the inside of a sun-warmed kitchen where someone has zested two types of citrus at once. Within the first five to ten minutes, a green, slightly watery verbena note surfaces underneath the citrus. It softens the bite and introduces a salty, almost marine quality that shifts the composition toward something more classical and less sweet. This marine-green turn is one of Neroli Sauvage's more distinctive moves, giving it a character that reads closer to an aromatic fougere than a straight citrus cologne. The verbena does not quietly recede; it continues threading through the heart, lending a dry, almost mineral quality that keeps the composition from feeling one-dimensional. Then comes the neroli, and this is where the fragrance can read two different ways. It can register as the core of the scent: a light, white-floral, slightly honeyed bloom that gives the heart depth without adding any real weight. On other skin, the neroli feels faint, almost ghostly, and the name seems aspirational rather than descriptive. Both readings are honest. The neroli here is genuinely restrained, more of a suggestion than a statement. It never dominates. What it does do is anchor the verbena and prevent the composition from feeling too dry or purely linear. Together, verbena and neroli build a quiet mid-section that holds the citrus top and the base in balance, the two notes complementing rather than competing. As the fragrance moves into its drydown, the citrus fades back predictably, and the verbena lingers in the background as a dry, green memory. The transition is gradual, the composition narrowing toward its base without any abrupt shift in character. The ambergris base is smooth and quietly salty, not sweet or heavy in the way synthetic ambers tend to be. The whole composition settles into a clean, slightly herbal finish that sits close to the skin. It is what an older generation of perfumery called a chypre-adjacent citrus, spare and well-made, without the weight that word usually implies.
When to Wear
Neroli Sauvage is built for warm weather and outdoor settings, from late spring through summer, whether that means office hours during a humid June or an evening walk when the air is still warm. It suits occasions where you want something fresh and composed without a heavy trail, like a business lunch, a weekend brunch, or a daytime setting where restraint is read as confidence.
Who Is It For
Someone who reaches for clean, citrus-led fragrances without sweetness and prefers the older, more classical style of perfumery over the crowd-friendly freshness of modern aquatics will find this particularly rewarding. It suits the person who has smelled dozens of things and is looking for a Creed that does not announce itself.
If you enjoy Royal Water Millesime, which shares the same Creed DNA of pared-down citrus freshness, Neroli Sauvage is worth placing alongside it. Browse the complete Creed collection at Aromatica for more from this house.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











