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Zefiro (Batch 2015)

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Zefiro (Batch 2015)

Incense, spice, and something golden: that is the atmosphere Xerjoff XJ 1861 Zefiro Eau de Parfum (2015) builds the moment it hits skin. Part of the storied 1861 collection, Zefiro is named after the west wind of antiquity and reads like a love letter to Rome. It smells of cathedral interiors and market stalls where resins and spices mingle in the warm air. Aromatica carries the Xerjoff Zefiro decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can try this properly before settling on a bottle.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Elemi resin, White wine, Artemisia, Bergamot

Heart: Cardamom, Cinnamon, Carnation, Iris

Base: Incense, Woodsy notes, Amber, Honey

The Scent

Bergamot opens the fragrance, but it is not the citrus you are expecting. Elemi resin rides alongside it immediately, giving the bright citrus a resinous, slightly peppery edge before it has a chance to feel like a cologne. The white wine note adds a faint green-herbal lift and a dryness that keeps the opening from feeling heavy. Artemisia sharpens everything slightly, giving the first few minutes a crisp, almost smoky character that sets Zefiro apart from sweeter incense fragrances in the same category. There is a brightness to this opening that reads more Mediterranean than Middle Eastern, and that distinction matters for understanding where the fragrance is heading.

As the top notes settle, the elemi resin begins to fade from sharp and peppery toward something drier and more architectural, creating a bridge between the citrus brightness above and the warmer aromatic core below. The artemisia does not disappear entirely at this stage; it lingers long enough to keep the transition from feeling abrupt. That slight herbal smokiness connects the opening directly to the spiced heart, making the evolution feel intentional rather than sequential. The interplay between elemi and artemisia during this middle passage is what gives Zefiro its distinctive Mediterranean gravity, pulling the fragrance away from the familiar incense-and-resin template and toward something with genuine geographic character.

The transition into the heart is smooth and confident. Cardamom and cinnamon arrive together, warm and aromatic without becoming sugary. This is spice handled with restraint, the kind that reads as warmth rather than sweetness. Carnation introduces a soft clove-like facet that deepens the spice and adds a subtle floral tension. Iris grounds the heart with a cool powdery quality, creating an interesting contrast against the warmer spices. The combination reads as sophisticated and slightly austere. The iris can pull the fragrance in a more classical, almost old-world European direction during this phase, which is part of what makes it feel so considered. The cardamom keeps enough brightness alive at this stage to prevent the heart from collapsing into pure darkness, maintaining a dialogue between the luminous opening and the resinous base still to come.

The dry-down is where Zefiro earns its reputation. Incense settles in deep, translucent and smoky without turning acrid. Honey appears at the base but it is not the rich, thick honey of gourmand fragrances. Here it is lighter, almost waxy, threading through the amber and woodsy notes to give the entire base a warm luminosity. It can read as sunlight filtering through amber stained glass, and that image holds. The woodsy notes do not dominate or push the fragrance toward a generic oudh territory. They act as scaffolding, giving the incense and amber something to lean against. The overall effect is warm, glimmering, and resinous with excellent depth. The character leans masculine without being exclusive to men, and the unisex designation from Xerjoff is genuine.

When to Wear

Zefiro is a cool-weather fragrance built for autumn evenings, winter dinners, and nights that call for something with presence. It works well in formal settings and upscale social occasions where you want to wear something with genuine character and heritage.

Who Is It For

Someone who prefers resinous, aromatic depth over fresh citrus or clean musks will find Zefiro a natural fit. Wearers drawn to incense-forward niche fragrances and who already appreciate houses like Amouage or vintage-style orientals will find Zefiro immediately comfortable.

If you enjoy Naxos, Zefiro sits in the same 1861 collection but trades tobacco and honey-sweetness for spice and incense depth. 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 $395.50

Original: $1,130.00

-65%
Zefiro (Batch 2015)

$1,130.00

$395.50

Product Information

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Description

Incense, spice, and something golden: that is the atmosphere Xerjoff XJ 1861 Zefiro Eau de Parfum (2015) builds the moment it hits skin. Part of the storied 1861 collection, Zefiro is named after the west wind of antiquity and reads like a love letter to Rome. It smells of cathedral interiors and market stalls where resins and spices mingle in the warm air. Aromatica carries the Xerjoff Zefiro decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can try this properly before settling on a bottle.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Elemi resin, White wine, Artemisia, Bergamot

Heart: Cardamom, Cinnamon, Carnation, Iris

Base: Incense, Woodsy notes, Amber, Honey

The Scent

Bergamot opens the fragrance, but it is not the citrus you are expecting. Elemi resin rides alongside it immediately, giving the bright citrus a resinous, slightly peppery edge before it has a chance to feel like a cologne. The white wine note adds a faint green-herbal lift and a dryness that keeps the opening from feeling heavy. Artemisia sharpens everything slightly, giving the first few minutes a crisp, almost smoky character that sets Zefiro apart from sweeter incense fragrances in the same category. There is a brightness to this opening that reads more Mediterranean than Middle Eastern, and that distinction matters for understanding where the fragrance is heading.

As the top notes settle, the elemi resin begins to fade from sharp and peppery toward something drier and more architectural, creating a bridge between the citrus brightness above and the warmer aromatic core below. The artemisia does not disappear entirely at this stage; it lingers long enough to keep the transition from feeling abrupt. That slight herbal smokiness connects the opening directly to the spiced heart, making the evolution feel intentional rather than sequential. The interplay between elemi and artemisia during this middle passage is what gives Zefiro its distinctive Mediterranean gravity, pulling the fragrance away from the familiar incense-and-resin template and toward something with genuine geographic character.

The transition into the heart is smooth and confident. Cardamom and cinnamon arrive together, warm and aromatic without becoming sugary. This is spice handled with restraint, the kind that reads as warmth rather than sweetness. Carnation introduces a soft clove-like facet that deepens the spice and adds a subtle floral tension. Iris grounds the heart with a cool powdery quality, creating an interesting contrast against the warmer spices. The combination reads as sophisticated and slightly austere. The iris can pull the fragrance in a more classical, almost old-world European direction during this phase, which is part of what makes it feel so considered. The cardamom keeps enough brightness alive at this stage to prevent the heart from collapsing into pure darkness, maintaining a dialogue between the luminous opening and the resinous base still to come.

The dry-down is where Zefiro earns its reputation. Incense settles in deep, translucent and smoky without turning acrid. Honey appears at the base but it is not the rich, thick honey of gourmand fragrances. Here it is lighter, almost waxy, threading through the amber and woodsy notes to give the entire base a warm luminosity. It can read as sunlight filtering through amber stained glass, and that image holds. The woodsy notes do not dominate or push the fragrance toward a generic oudh territory. They act as scaffolding, giving the incense and amber something to lean against. The overall effect is warm, glimmering, and resinous with excellent depth. The character leans masculine without being exclusive to men, and the unisex designation from Xerjoff is genuine.

When to Wear

Zefiro is a cool-weather fragrance built for autumn evenings, winter dinners, and nights that call for something with presence. It works well in formal settings and upscale social occasions where you want to wear something with genuine character and heritage.

Who Is It For

Someone who prefers resinous, aromatic depth over fresh citrus or clean musks will find Zefiro a natural fit. Wearers drawn to incense-forward niche fragrances and who already appreciate houses like Amouage or vintage-style orientals will find Zefiro immediately comfortable.

If you enjoy Naxos, Zefiro sits in the same 1861 collection but trades tobacco and honey-sweetness for spice and incense depth. Browse the full Xerjoff collection at Aromatica.

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

Zefiro (Batch 2015) | Aromatica