
New York Mercer Street
Mercer Street in SoHo sits at the intersection of creative grit and polished cool, and Karl Lagerfeld's Karl New York Mercer Street Eau de Toilette, released in 2020 as part of the City Collection, captures exactly that friction. It opens sharp and green, lands somewhere smooth and woody, and carries the kind of quiet confidence that belongs to someone who knows what they want. Aromatica carries the Karl New York Mercer Street decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lime, Basil, White Pepper
Heart: Rhubarb, Water Jasmine, Geranium
Base: Vetiver, White Woods, Musk
The Scent
Lime hits first, brighter and more tart than bergamot, with an almost fizzing edge that makes the first few seconds feel genuinely alive. Basil arrives right behind it, and this is where the scent declares its personality: green and slightly anise-like, sharpening the citrus rather than softening it, with nothing culinary or cloying about it. White pepper adds a dry, almost dusty bite underneath, keeping things from reading as simple cologne territory and giving the opening a quiet authority it earns quickly. Within the first ten minutes the lime starts to recede, and rhubarb steps in to bridge the gap between that tart opening and the floral mid-stage. Rhubarb here is more vegetal and slightly sweet-sour than candy-pink, which keeps the composition grounded and stops the heart from tipping into anything predictably soft. Water jasmine and geranium fill out the heart without ever going floral in any traditional sense. Water jasmine stays cool and slightly aquatic, geranium adds a rosy-green hum, and together they hold the scent in an aromatic, semi-fresh register that reads as considered rather than generic. The interplay between the rhubarb and the geranium is worth pausing on: the sweet-sour edge of the rhubarb keeps the geranium from going soapy, while the geranium lends a leafy structure that stops the rhubarb from reading as fruity. It is a neat balancing act that holds the middle of the scent together with more precision than the price point might suggest. As the heart begins to thin out, vetiver starts to assert itself from below. The dry-down is where opinions can split. Vetiver pulls things in a quietly earthy, almost smoky direction, and if you are not already a vetiver person, this can read as austere or even cold. Some will find the shift from the greener top stages jarring; others will find the base exactly where the fragrance earns its character. Combined with white woods and a clean, understated musk, the base settles into something smooth and slightly cool. It wears close to the skin by the final stages, with more warmth than the opening suggested, and the musk provides enough softness to keep the vetiver from reading as stark. The full arc moves from tart and sparkling to green and herbal to quietly woody and grounded, without any abrupt jumps between stages.
When to Wear
Spring mornings and early autumn evenings suit this best, particularly for office settings, creative studio environments, and weekend brunches at outdoor cafes. In summer, the structure holds well in indoor settings like co-working spaces and client meetings where something polished but not heavy is appropriate. It reads composed without being stuffy.
Who Is It For
Someone who gravitates toward clean, structured aromatics rather than sweet or heavy orientals, and who prefers their fragrance to do its job without demanding attention from across the room.
If you enjoy Bois de Yuzu from the same house, this one sits in a cooler, greener register and is worth comparing back to back. Browse the full Karl Lagerfeld collection at Aromatica, or explore the Aromatic Herbs and Fougere range for similar DNA across other houses.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $390.00
-65%$390.00
$136.50Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Mercer Street in SoHo sits at the intersection of creative grit and polished cool, and Karl Lagerfeld's Karl New York Mercer Street Eau de Toilette, released in 2020 as part of the City Collection, captures exactly that friction. It opens sharp and green, lands somewhere smooth and woody, and carries the kind of quiet confidence that belongs to someone who knows what they want. Aromatica carries the Karl New York Mercer Street decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lime, Basil, White Pepper
Heart: Rhubarb, Water Jasmine, Geranium
Base: Vetiver, White Woods, Musk
The Scent
Lime hits first, brighter and more tart than bergamot, with an almost fizzing edge that makes the first few seconds feel genuinely alive. Basil arrives right behind it, and this is where the scent declares its personality: green and slightly anise-like, sharpening the citrus rather than softening it, with nothing culinary or cloying about it. White pepper adds a dry, almost dusty bite underneath, keeping things from reading as simple cologne territory and giving the opening a quiet authority it earns quickly. Within the first ten minutes the lime starts to recede, and rhubarb steps in to bridge the gap between that tart opening and the floral mid-stage. Rhubarb here is more vegetal and slightly sweet-sour than candy-pink, which keeps the composition grounded and stops the heart from tipping into anything predictably soft. Water jasmine and geranium fill out the heart without ever going floral in any traditional sense. Water jasmine stays cool and slightly aquatic, geranium adds a rosy-green hum, and together they hold the scent in an aromatic, semi-fresh register that reads as considered rather than generic. The interplay between the rhubarb and the geranium is worth pausing on: the sweet-sour edge of the rhubarb keeps the geranium from going soapy, while the geranium lends a leafy structure that stops the rhubarb from reading as fruity. It is a neat balancing act that holds the middle of the scent together with more precision than the price point might suggest. As the heart begins to thin out, vetiver starts to assert itself from below. The dry-down is where opinions can split. Vetiver pulls things in a quietly earthy, almost smoky direction, and if you are not already a vetiver person, this can read as austere or even cold. Some will find the shift from the greener top stages jarring; others will find the base exactly where the fragrance earns its character. Combined with white woods and a clean, understated musk, the base settles into something smooth and slightly cool. It wears close to the skin by the final stages, with more warmth than the opening suggested, and the musk provides enough softness to keep the vetiver from reading as stark. The full arc moves from tart and sparkling to green and herbal to quietly woody and grounded, without any abrupt jumps between stages.
When to Wear
Spring mornings and early autumn evenings suit this best, particularly for office settings, creative studio environments, and weekend brunches at outdoor cafes. In summer, the structure holds well in indoor settings like co-working spaces and client meetings where something polished but not heavy is appropriate. It reads composed without being stuffy.
Who Is It For
Someone who gravitates toward clean, structured aromatics rather than sweet or heavy orientals, and who prefers their fragrance to do its job without demanding attention from across the room.
If you enjoy Bois de Yuzu from the same house, this one sits in a cooler, greener register and is worth comparing back to back. Browse the full Karl Lagerfeld collection at Aromatica, or explore the Aromatic Herbs and Fougere range for similar DNA across other houses.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











