Yves-Saint-Laurent

Yvresse (Champagne)

for women

Looking for Yvresse (Champagne) notes, review, or longevity? This page covers all three in one quick read.

Jump to notes, performance, or quick answers.

Yvresse (Champagne)

Fragrance notes

How this scent is often described (from community votes on accords—useful when a full pyramid isn’t in our data yet).

Fruity 100%
Powdery 78%
Sweet 71%
Warm Spicy 65%
Amber 59%
Woody 57%
Earthy 54%
Floral 53%
Fresh 52%
Aromatic 51%

Performance

Empty fields use this listing’s top accords (Fruity, Powdery, and Sweet) plus the overview text—add your own numbers anytime after testing on skin.

Longevity

With Fruity, Powdery, Sweet, and Warm Spicy 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 Fruity, Powdery, Sweet, and Warm Spicy 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

Yvresse (Champagne)byYves Saint Laurentis a Chypre Fruity fragrance for women.Yvresse (Champagne)was launched in 1993. The nose behind this fragrance is Sophia Grojsman. Top notes are Peach, Nectarine, Apricot, Caraway, Anise and Mint; middle notes are Cinnamon, Litchi, Rose, Rose Oil, Carnation, Violet, Iris, Jasmine and Lily-of-the-Valley; base notes are Oakmoss, Amber, Benzoin, Patchouli, Vanilla, Styrax, Cedar, Musk, Coconut and Vetiver.Yvresse is a sparkly and dizzying fragrance. It was first named Champagne and was created in 1993. It is a fragrance suitable for all occasions and moods and absolutely meets the words of Napoleon: "I drink Champagne when I win, to celebrate... and I drink Champagne when I lose, for solace." This sharp floral-fruity fragrance is still not a classic chypre which demands time to open on the skin. Yvresse's composition sounds short enough, just like the full impact of Champagne: as soon as the brilliant top notes disappear, the scent wraps you with its warmth. The main notes are nectarine, anise, menthol, Otto rose, blue rose, litchi, oak moss, patchouli, vetiver. Yves Saint Laurent changed the name from Champagne to Yvresse because of lawsuits filed by French producers of the sparkling wine that originally bore the name.

Quick answers

Short takes based on this page’s notes and accords—your taste still wins.

Is Yvresse (Champagne) 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
Mixed profile—often bright up top with a warmer base—works year-round depending on sprays and temperature.
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.