From Pyrgos
3/12/26
Jaguar for Men (Pardis SA/Sodimars)
3/3/26
Archives 69 (Etat Libre d'Orange)
2/25/26
Brut Cologne (Sodalis)
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| The Best Drugstore Brut in Years |
I saw a bottle on eBay that I thought was High Ridge Brands’ Brut cologne and bought it. When it arrived, there was no mention of HRB anywhere on the label. Instead, it says it’s distributed by Sodalis USA in Westport, Connecticut. A quick search shows that High Ridge Brands was acquired by Sodalis in October 2024, and Sodalis took over manufacturing and distribution for several brands, including Brut. Like the HRB version, this one is made in Mexico for the North American market.
It smells great. It’s a slightly stronger take on the HRB Splash-On. That version leaned heavily into lavender, with a fresh, powdery feel. This cologne brings out more of the amber, but unlike the Idelle Labs releases, it doesn’t push too far into sweet, vanilla-heavy territory. There’s not much separating this from what was sold in the 1980s and ’90s. It’s fresh, ambery, lightly sweet, and a little musky. I like it a lot. It’s better than HRB’s reformulated Splash-On and probably the best plastic-bottle Brut I’ve smelled in years.
What’s interesting is that recent manufacturers seem to be steering the formula back toward an earlier profile rather than continuing down the cheaper path Idelle Labs took. My guess is that Sodalis has people closer to my age involved in these decisions, and they’re paying attention to what enthusiasts are saying online. Maybe they’ve seen discussions on forums like Badger & Blade, Basenotes, Fragrantica, or even this blog, and realized that people want Brut to have some swagger again. Whatever the reason, they made the right call, because this Brut actually smells quite good.
2/22/26
Brut Spray Cologne (Helen of Troy, Canadian/Northern Territories Formula)
2/18/26
A Man's Truth About Smelling "Classy"
2/15/26
Atlas [00:00 GMT] (Tumi)
2/14/26
ck One Essence Parfum Intense (Calvin Klein)
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| Asian Green Tea, ala Calvin Klein |
This fragrance has flown under the radar since its release last year, and I’m not sure why. It’s excellent. I found a 6.7 oz bottle for $30, which is an absolute steal. My guess is its sharp, synthetic opening turned some people off, but if you give it a few minutes and let it get to the point, it really rewards you. According to Calvin Klein’s press release, Essence is the original ck One “intensified,” made with organic natural materials sourced from Italy and the Far East. Think of it as a millésime version of the original. The box mentions “upcycled” alcohol infused with natural essences of bergamot and blood orange from a family-owned farm in Calabria, which sounds a bit over the top in a good way.
The opening is harsh, but it fades fast, and Essence settles into a much more dynamic blend. Hedione and amberwood play off each other, layered with rich green tea and bright, naturalistic citrus. The overall effect is modern, clean, and truly unisex. Imagine ck One with more depth and muscle.What sets Essence apart is its richness and complexity. The original is strong and diffusive, but it can feel somewhat monotone, very white-musk and white-floral in that distinctly 90s way. Essence leans greener, with a cool, almost silvery mineral edge running through the tea and citrus. I’d say it’s about 90 percent the original and 10 percent something fresher and more tea-forward. It feels like the same idea, just executed with higher-quality materials and a more nuanced blend. Alberto Morillas returned to compose this version, and whatever he was paid, it was worth it.
I don’t usually get sentimental about fragrances. I’ve smelled hundreds, and very few truly move me. But Essence does. Maybe it’s the idea of a perfumer revisiting his own creation three decades later and refining it into something more polished and luxurious. Or maybe it’s simply that ck One Essence smells beautiful and expensive. Either way, I want more of it. Of all the ck One flankers released over the years, this is the only one I think is truly worth owning, and if they dc'd the original and kept Essence, I'd be fine with that.
2/7/26
Roses Musk (Montale)
2/1/26
Safari for Men (Ralph Lauren)
Released as Ralph Lauren’s answer to YSL Jazz, Safari for Men has always occupied the scruffier end of the nineties fougère spectrum. It was the louder, brasher cousin, more Giorgio Beverly Hills Red for Men than Left Bank intellectual in feel; Safari was Lauren's own Polo Crest formula, readjusted (i.e., sweetened, cheapened) for broader global appeal. In today's version, the oakmoss is gone, and you feel its absence because this is exactly the kind of scent that wants that dark green bite. Still, the aromatic structure remains remarkably intact. The Cosmair-era bones are all there, and Safari smells essentially as it did when it first hit department store counters in the early nineties.
Do I like it? Yes. Safari represents a kind of masculine perfume that was once everywhere and is now oddly confined to luxury niche bottles priced north of $250. By comparison, the materials here still feel generous and even a little luxurious, and the construction more than elegant enough to justify modern designer pricing. It is unapologetically forceful, a true room-filler, so discretion is advised. This is not a scent for nervous sprayers. Safari is unmistakably retro, a fresh fougère with shoulders, and anyone wearing it should understand that. If you’re under 30, don’t leave it on your dresser expecting instant recognition. That said, I once spotted a bottle lurking in the background of a very chic New York twenty-something’s bedroom on YouTube, which suggests the usual fashion cycle may be doing its thing. What was once passé has a way of becoming compelling again, and Safari still has the confidence and presence to function as a signature.
What really sets it apart is the way its resinous and balsamic elements are staged. The opening is distinctive and slightly strange, built around cinnamon leaf and eucalyptus, softened by restrained touches of lavender, coriander, and bergamot. The cinnamon leaf hangs on for a good fifteen to twenty minutes before giving way to carnation, tarragon, and wormwood. These aromatics guide the scent through a dry, cultivated garden of rosy florals before it settles into a gently sweet base of mossy patchouli, sandalwood, amber, and musk. It’s confident, handsome, and oddly moving in its refusal to be updated. Gorgeous, and absolutely worth owning.
1/24/26
Eladaria (Creed)
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| People Like to Bitch, but I think Kering's Creeds are Sexy! |
Last year, Creed introduced Eladaria, describing it as a “morning rose” built around dewy accords and cool textures. Having finally spent time with it, what immediately stands out is its striking similarity to Peony & Peppercorn. This is eyebrow-raising, particularly given that Carmina previously exhibited subtle parallels to Banana Republic’s Dark Cherry & Amber. In effect, Eladaria smells like a partial convergence of those two Banana Republic fragrances. Its rose accord appears to rely on the same structural framework used in Carmina, while its peony is rendered with the same bright, sudsy clarity found in Peony & Peppercorn. The difference is one of emphasis: in Eladaria, peony ultimately dominates, whereas rose jam with hints of lavender and orange zest leads in Carmina.
The handling of pepper distinguishes the two peony-forward compositions. In Peony & Peppercorn, Kuczinski’s formula barely acknowledges the peppercorn note, allowing peony to carry the fragrance from opening through drydown. Eladaria also privileges peony, but its pink peppercorns remain a consistent and defining textural element from the first spray through the base. Banana Republic’s fragrances are licensed by Maesa, and to my knowledge there is no formal relationship between Maesa and Creed. That said, one cannot help but wonder whether Vincent Kuczinski himself is the perfumer, or at least a main collaborator behind Eladaria.
If that were the case, it would explain a great deal. This particular Creed reads as a luxury refinement of Peony & Peppercorn, though it does not meaningfully extend the original concept. Instead, it remains faithful to the same pepper-and-floral architecture. I detect aldehydes and pink pepper at the top, followed by a faintly ambery sweetness—likely ethyl maltol used in a non-gourmand capacity—before an intensely soapy, citrus-free transition into a linear peony accord, anchored by the same firm rose structure present in Carmina, except here the rose is far lighter. Eladaria is a peony scent.
There is no question that Eladaria is beautiful, and it fully earns its name. Still, it is difficult to ignore the oddity of Creed seemingly mining the Banana Republic mod bank. Dark Cherry & Amber likely contained several viable formula iterations that went unused until Creed’s attention yielded Carmina (although I still think it's closer to Love in Black). Now Eladaria presents itself as an unmistakably close modification of Peony & Peppercorn. The addition of Ambroxan lends salinity and depth, reinforcing the familiar musk and cashmere wood base, but beyond that, the two compositions are uncomfortably close, frankly much closer than Carmina is to Dark Cherry & Amber.
Kuczinski has been VP and Senior Perfumer at MANE since 2011, and MANE perfumer Mathieu Nardin composed Delphinus (which I have yet to review), so there is proof that Creed has collaborated with Kuczinski's firm in recent years. I'll go out on a limb here and say that given this connection, it's likely that Kuczinski was in touch with Creed during Eladaria's development, and perhaps a notebook formula of his 2019 creation was purchased and Creed-ified into the scent.
I would happily buy and wear Eladaria, but that is more a confession than a recommendation. More rational consumers might look at the price tag for this Creed, compare its scent to Peony & Peppercorn, buy the $20 fragrance instead, and live the based life. I say more power to them.
1/15/26
Revisiting Calvin Klein's Obsession for Men
I recently purchased a new 120 ml bottle of Obsession for Men for twenty dollars and felt compelled to revisit this still formidable oriental relic of the 1980s. Even now, four decades after its debut, Obsession for Men remains the flagship masculine fragrance of the Calvin Klein portfolio. What strikes me most upon smelling it again is not merely its persistence, but its undiminished beauty. After a fallow period in the 2000s and early 2010s, when the scent seemed attenuated and somewhat coarse, my nose finds the current formulation restored and once again worthy of its reputation. Small mercies, indeed.
I recently watched a video review by Eau d’Erica that I found unintentionally revealing. Born at the tail end of the 1990s, she has no lived relationship to the cultural moment from which Obsession for Men emerged. Her initial reaction is ambivalent. She notes, correctly, that the fragrance is more animalic than expected, but quickly pivots to describing it as smelling like an “old man,” invoking nursing homes and decline. The response is understandable, if ultimately misguided. Obsession for Men is not a neutral or contemporary composition. It demands a certain temporal literacy. At minimum, one needs to be in their late thirties or forties to grasp that this fragrance is not simply “from the 1980s,” but is suburban America in the 1980s, rendered liquid and sealed in glass.
From the moment its citrus-spice opening meets skin, Obsession announces itself as an emissary from another era. There are no smartphones or ride-sharing apps where it comes from. Nights glow with neon. Streets hum with conversation rather than notification tones. Cigarette smoke hangs in the air, omnipresent and unquestioned. Women wear dresses and heels; men wear sport coats and slick their hair back. Synthesizers sound futuristic rather than dated. Movies are events, not content. You do not attend them casually; you experience them. Everything feels alive, in part because attention has not yet been fractured by devices and the constant undertow of the internet.
And everywhere, the air smells faintly of Obsession for Men. From 1987 onward, when the fragrance reached critical mass among American men, it seemed to permeate daily life. You encountered it in cars, in homes, in classrooms, on sidewalks. It was an experience in itself, the Sauvage of its day, only denser, louder, and more unapologetic. The advertising campaigns of the late 1980s and early 1990s, particularly the now-iconic imagery featuring Kate Moss, sustained its prominence for years. Not since Drakkar Noir had a fragrance so cleanly and powerfully signified its era, an era that understood itself as irreducibly cool.
To call Obsession for Men nostalgic is accurate, but insufficient. I cannot pretend to evaluate it objectively. Yes, I think it smells wonderful, but when I inhale it, I am flooded with place and time. Dark kitchens. Earth-toned interiors. The lingering aesthetic of the 1970s. Big hair, broad shoulders, boxy cars with expansive windows. My parents visiting friends, their homes saturated with distinctive domestic odors, and threaded through all of it, Obsession for Men. The black-and-white, artfully severe commercials of the era aimed for timelessness even as they became inextricably bound to their moment.
Calvin Klein’s subsequent fragrances have largely been exercises in abstraction and synthetic minimalism. CK One, the 1990s counterpoint to Obsession, deserves equal respect. Most of what followed, however, feels like a meditation on elevated cheapness: competent, vaguely interesting, chemically fresh, and durable enough to persist on shelves without inspiring devotion. Obsession stands apart. The difference is immediate. The materials feel richer, more vibrant. The blending is more assured. Bob Slattery’s original conception, a reworking of the feminine fragrance infused with a heavy dose of lavender soapiness and animalic bite, may be lost to history, but the stewardship of subsequent reformulations has been surprisingly faithful. When I smell it closely, each constituent note asserts itself with clarity, and the whole feels alive. Wonderful stuff.
It is evident that Calvin Klein still takes pride in this fragrance, and the current version is excellent. One final point deserves mention: Obsession for Men ages exceptionally well. It can be worn freely, given its modest price (it was far more expensive back in the day), but if used sparingly and left to rest, the liquid darkens and the composition grows smoother and more resonant over time. Oxidation performs a quiet alchemy here. I am struck by how good the present formulation already is, and I plan to keep one bottle in regular rotation while allowing another to mature undisturbed. When I return to it years from now, it will function as a genuine time capsule: musky, resinous, and deeply familiar, the scent of a vanished world and of my own childhood suspended in amber.












