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Renaissance

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Renaissance

Xerjoff built its 1861 collection as a tribute to Italian unification, and Renaissance is the entry that wears history the lightest. Released in 2011 as an eau de parfum, it takes the house's usual density and strips it back into something citrus-bright and unexpectedly wearable. Aromatica carries the Xerjoff Renaissance decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with it before deciding how it fits your rotation. What makes it worth that time is the tension between a sharp Italian citrus opening and a soft, powdery rose heart that most fresh fragrances never attempt.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Bergamot, lemon, mandarin, mint

Heart: Bulgarian rose, mint, lily of the valley

Base: Patchouli, cedarwood, amber

The Scent

Amalfi lemon is the first thing the nose registers, sharp and slightly oily in that way real citrus peel is oily, not the thin synthetic kind. Bergamot and mandarin widen the citrus accord within seconds, and mint runs underneath it, cold and green rather than toothpaste sweet. That mint is the surprise here. It does not fade with the top notes the way mint usually does in citrus colognes. It threads straight into the heart and reappears once the Bulgarian rose opens up, so the rose never turns soapy or old-fashioned. Lily of the valley adds a dewy, slightly aquatic lift to the floral stage, keeping the rose from getting heavy. Around the one-hour mark the citrus has thinned considerably and the floral-mint pairing takes over as the dominant impression, which catches people who expected a straightforward fresh scent off guard. The dry-down is where Renaissance earns its name, patchouli and cedarwood building a quiet, earthy floor while amber warms the whole composition without pushing it into gourmand territory. Skin chemistry plays a real role in how long the floral stage holds before the woods take over, and on some wearers the rose stays audible well into the base, on others it recedes fast and the cedar dominates. Either way, the closing hours smell clean, woody, and faintly powdery, a long way from where the fragrance started. Cedarwood in particular changes character across those closing hours, sharp and pencil-shaving dry at first, then softening as the amber folds in and rounds off its edges. Patchouli stays in the background the entire time, never turning earthy or damp the way it can in heavier orientals, which keeps the whole base feeling closer to the citrus opening than the ingredient list would suggest. That thread, from bright lemon peel to a warm cedar and amber finish, is what makes the composition feel deliberate rather than like two unrelated fragrances stitched together.

When to Wear

This is a daytime fragrance for warm weather, suited to garden lunches, art gallery visits, or a wedding reception held outdoors in late spring. The citrus-mint opening also makes it a strong choice for a summer office day when you want something composed rather than loud, and it pairs naturally with the lighter pieces in Aromatica's summer collection.

Who Is It For

Someone who likes their florals dry and their citrus real, and who gets bored by fragrances that peak in the first ten minutes and go flat after that.

If you enjoy Naxos, another 1861 release built around a similarly bright, layered structure, it is worth comparing side by side. Browse the full Xerjoff collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $896.00
Renaissance
$896.00

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Description

Xerjoff built its 1861 collection as a tribute to Italian unification, and Renaissance is the entry that wears history the lightest. Released in 2011 as an eau de parfum, it takes the house's usual density and strips it back into something citrus-bright and unexpectedly wearable. Aromatica carries the Xerjoff Renaissance decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with it before deciding how it fits your rotation. What makes it worth that time is the tension between a sharp Italian citrus opening and a soft, powdery rose heart that most fresh fragrances never attempt.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Bergamot, lemon, mandarin, mint

Heart: Bulgarian rose, mint, lily of the valley

Base: Patchouli, cedarwood, amber

The Scent

Amalfi lemon is the first thing the nose registers, sharp and slightly oily in that way real citrus peel is oily, not the thin synthetic kind. Bergamot and mandarin widen the citrus accord within seconds, and mint runs underneath it, cold and green rather than toothpaste sweet. That mint is the surprise here. It does not fade with the top notes the way mint usually does in citrus colognes. It threads straight into the heart and reappears once the Bulgarian rose opens up, so the rose never turns soapy or old-fashioned. Lily of the valley adds a dewy, slightly aquatic lift to the floral stage, keeping the rose from getting heavy. Around the one-hour mark the citrus has thinned considerably and the floral-mint pairing takes over as the dominant impression, which catches people who expected a straightforward fresh scent off guard. The dry-down is where Renaissance earns its name, patchouli and cedarwood building a quiet, earthy floor while amber warms the whole composition without pushing it into gourmand territory. Skin chemistry plays a real role in how long the floral stage holds before the woods take over, and on some wearers the rose stays audible well into the base, on others it recedes fast and the cedar dominates. Either way, the closing hours smell clean, woody, and faintly powdery, a long way from where the fragrance started. Cedarwood in particular changes character across those closing hours, sharp and pencil-shaving dry at first, then softening as the amber folds in and rounds off its edges. Patchouli stays in the background the entire time, never turning earthy or damp the way it can in heavier orientals, which keeps the whole base feeling closer to the citrus opening than the ingredient list would suggest. That thread, from bright lemon peel to a warm cedar and amber finish, is what makes the composition feel deliberate rather than like two unrelated fragrances stitched together.

When to Wear

This is a daytime fragrance for warm weather, suited to garden lunches, art gallery visits, or a wedding reception held outdoors in late spring. The citrus-mint opening also makes it a strong choice for a summer office day when you want something composed rather than loud, and it pairs naturally with the lighter pieces in Aromatica's summer collection.

Who Is It For

Someone who likes their florals dry and their citrus real, and who gets bored by fragrances that peak in the first ten minutes and go flat after that.

If you enjoy Naxos, another 1861 release built around a similarly bright, layered structure, it is worth comparing side by side. Browse the full Xerjoff collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Renaissance | Aromatica