Fragrance notes
How this scent is often described (from community votes on accords—useful when a full pyramid isn’t in our data yet).
Performance
Empty fields use this listing’s top accords (Woody, Rose, and Patchouli) plus the overview text—add your own numbers anytime after testing on skin.
Longevity
With Woody, Rose, Patchouli, and Amber among the strongest accord tags here, deeper woods, resins, and ambers in this kind of mix often linger longer on skin—still varies by person, climate, and sprays.
Projection
With Woody, Rose, Patchouli, and Amber among the strongest accord tags here, dense bases like this often feel louder in the first hour—start with one spray in tight rooms or at a desk.
Overview
Amber, changing from “the sweetest to the most sexual”, is an intensive perfume with the notes of rose, musk and ambergris. A tiny box is very handy to carry aorund with you. Peony, which you can yourself vary from “incredibly fragile to intensive and strong”, is an EDT with the heart of peony and rose. The composition has an unusual final note containing patchouli, cedar and ambergris, which sound strong, strict and almost masculine. The perfume was cretaed by Jacques Cavallier in 2006.
Quick answers
Short takes based on this page’s notes and accords—your taste still wins.
- Is Stella in Two Amber office-safe?
- With a stronger profile, one light spray is often enough in quiet offices; save extra sprays for after work or open spaces.
- Best season
- Deeper woods and resins often feel natural in cooler months; they can feel heavy in extreme heat.
- Where to try it
- Department-store counters, brand boutiques, and trusted sample or decant sellers online—always test on your own skin before a full bottle.