Men
L’Immensité
Acordes principales
Descripción
L'Immensité by Louis Vuitton is a spicy oriental fragrance for men. Launched in 2018, this composition was created by perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud. The olfactory pyramid unfolds with top notes of grapefruit, bergamot, and ginger; a heart of rosemary, sage, aquatic notes, and geranium; and a base of ambroxan, amber, and labdanum.
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Notas clave
Comunidad
3,956 votos
- Positivo 84%
- Neutral 9.0%
- Negativo 7.0%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
Comunidad
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Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
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Género
Femenino
Unisex femenino
Unisex
Unisex masculino
Masculino
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40 reseñas
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I went to LV today and tested this fragrance. Very shortly after drying down, I smelled an unpleasant odor for the entire time, like egg custard. I don’t know which note gives me that sensation, but I couldn’t use this perfume even if they gave it to me for free.
Quite a striking perfume. The notes explode in the opening and then stay true for hours; in that regard, it objectively delivers. You can smell the aquatic notes and grapefruit that eventually wrap around the rest until the very end. Although it has hype, I don’t see it as a blind buy; it’s more of an investment. There are cheaper and similar alternatives. If it has quality, it has it. If you’re looking for an affordable alternative, I recommend Dua’s Vastness of Citrus at just a fraction of the LV price. I see it as versatile and adaptable to any season. Although it’s perfect for special occasions and standing out. I haven’t used it in my daily life yet, only in samples; I usually apply it on clothes and relax when I get home. It has a touch of natural oils that I find captivating.
A five-star perfume. At some point, you notice an egg custard smell, but only at the very beginning. Recommended for those who can afford the treat, as the price is somewhat high.
Explosive and energizing in the opening, drying down to a marine scent in the style of Polo, ideal for summer.
With its pros and cons, I think it’s my favorite perfume. The age range is 25 and up; it smells like quality. I repeat, it’s my favorite perfume. Cheers.
Powerful opening; all the notes are noticeable, especially ginger and grapefruit. I hate comparing luxury to mass market, but it resembles D&G Light Blue Italian Love a lot, except with LV you can tell the quality of the ingredients. It lasts and projects quite well.
I’ve tried about 30-35 perfumes (decants and bottles) when I decided to dive into this hobby, and something about L’immensité makes it unique and my favorite. I bought the Immortal dupe months ago, but didn’t try the LV version until recently. It opens with a robust grapefruit and excellent quality ginger. I don’t smell much bergamot, assuming it blends with the grapefruit to give that citrus boost. Then aquatic notes emerge, making it versatile, with a lighter rosemary compared to the dupe and a geranium. The clean sensation comes from the ambroxan, which gives it good longevity. I use it for everything: university, friends, dates. Age-wise, due to the spiciness, it’s for people over 20. Longevity: 6-7 hours on my skin, just right, with above-average sillage and projection. I like it more than Imagination (which is also a great perfume). For now, my favorite. Tip: if you like it but don’t want to use the real thing too much, buy the Immortal dupe for those occasions so you don’t ‘waste’ L’immensité.
Smells like a generic department store perfume. I see it for the typical 40-50 year old man in a suit, but looking older, zero youthful vibe.
10/10 Perfume. At first glance, it doesn’t seem out of this world, but upon closer analysis, you find incredible things: elegant, fresh, gentle yet memorable, mature, and versatile. Incredible quality and highly recommended. Some might object due to the price, but for me, it’s absolutely worth it.
I get the group that’s blown away, because they don’t remember the original Tommy. L’Immensité is a Tommy with a touch of Tygar grapefruit. You won’t easily tell them apart in the dry-down. The LV collection is refined with quality ingredients, but if they were from an Arabic clone brand and cost a tenth of the price, nobody would be surprised. It’s overpriced. They’re all good, but none justify the cost.
In my opinion, it’s a dense, fresh citrus that doesn’t cross into dark territory; it almost nods to a fougère, modulated to be sharp and masculine without betraying its citrus vibe. It sits between Imagination and Nouveau Monde in aromatic depth. I disagree with the hype about the Arabian inspiration: on my dry skin, it turns woody and somber, less bright than the Vuitton I tested side-by-side. L’immensité reveals flat or non-existent nuances found in Alhambra’s Arabian version, only matching it in the opening. I understand the difference in ingredients or skin chemistry. It’s not a bad perfume as an inspiration, but it’s not a faithful copy. I prefer Imagination over L’immensité, though I wouldn’t spend what they ask for either. It’s like Parfums de Marly: premium designer at a luxury price, with aroma quality you can smell. Watch out for YouTubers claiming Viking Cairo is the copy; that one is more aquatic, marine, loaded with ambroxan, and metallic, only similar in a few aspects. Don’t get confused to avoid disappointment with blind buys. I recommend getting a decant. Cheers.
Very, very citrusy. Smells like synthetic sweet citrus and sometimes insect repellent. The scent is so strong it gives me a headache. In the dry-down, you can faintly detect labdanum and amber, but bergamot dominates.
For me, the best LV. Yes, Imagination is good, but this is MUCH better. It achieves the same: fresh, citrusy, effervescent, youthful, and summery, a bit naughty with atomic performance. But it’s way more balanced than its blue brother. A 10 out of 10.
Got a decant. I feel like I’m in a meadow after a rainy day with the sun and clouds. Fresh with a soft spicy kick. Exquisite.
Unisex leaning masculine, with a slight makeup scent from the ambroxan, but the acidic notes of grapefruit and bergamot make it feel masculine. Very good, delicious, and hits the mark; women love it.
Niche hype from a non-niche brand (calling LV niche, a handbag company, is absurd). Smells good and lasts well; it’s fresh and attractive, appealing to everyone, with apothecary-style bottles… but is it original? No. The scent is over the top and doesn’t warrant 300 euros. You don’t need to be an expert to know I’ve smelled this before. It has quality, but it’s scary to imagine similar fragrances for less. Capitalist luxury, man, that’s why dupes exist. Shame on people for hyping up wonders on social media for a citrus grapefruit-ambroxan blend. If you know Tygar or Turathi Blue, layer it with something marine and you’ll see the tragedy. You can tell it’s quality, but it’s more baroque and expensive than a Lladró figurine.
I bought a 30ml clone for $8 and it’s identical and lasts longer. It’s very concentrated; nobody notices the difference. It’s a Polish brand that makes 90% or exact copies. They last me 6 to 8 hours.
Grapefruit, aquatic notes, ambroxan, and a masculine touch without being fougère. The ambroxan stands out, reminding me of Prada Luna Rossa Carbon but more subtle. If you like Prada or Dior Sauvage but find them too loud, this LV is more elegant and mature, a blend with Bleu de Chanel. Clean, fresh, versatile—ideal for dates or spring/summer/fall. Not for winter. Average longevity and projection. Not worth the hype or the price; there are cheaper similar options. If you have the money, enjoy it, but there are better choices.
Not super original, but the ingredients are high quality. It’s citrusy yet mature. Not for a quick trip to the grocery store, but perfect for a summer date, an all-day outing, or even the office. Lasts all day on skin with moderate sillage and lingers on clothes for hours.
Broooo, huge disappointment. I had high expectations and it delivered nothing. If you’re interested, test it on your skin before buying to avoid regrets, for real.
Bad. It’s another perfume where you risk starting to smell like rotten eggs.
Minimalist luxury. It opens with a bitter citrus bergamot and green herbal notes that give it a clean, crisp vibe. Bright, fresh, and masculine opening, very much in the line of “blue” perfumes. It evolves with an aquatic note that adds transparency, while the geranium and rosemary persist with their herbal character. A familiar result but reinterpreted with LV’s elegance: a greenish-blue sea, sophisticated and well-constructed. In the end, it’s a veil of sea salt with clean notes, like fresh skin after a sea bath. Not youthful or explosive, but more mature and refined, ideal for hot days and elegant, discreet settings. It conveys sobriety and minimalist luxury: it doesn’t aim to surprise, but to offer a Vuitton version of the classic citrus-aquatic DNA. My rating: 7.5/10. Rich and well-executed, though not very original. Its value lies in the quality and style of the house, more than in innovation.
Hard to believe an LV wouldn’t smell good… now, a lot is required to justify those prices. This would be the least buyable of the ones I tested. Very citrusy at first, sharp, thanks to the ginger. Here, there’s already something spicy and aquatic. In the dry down, it stops being so sharp, and the spicy, aquatic, and slightly sweet amber notes take weight. This lasts until the dry down. I really get the ambroxan, which I like. It smells good, easy to wear, long-lasting, and projects. It’s versatile… but in my opinion, it doesn’t justify the price. I like it, but I wouldn’t buy it.
A very well-executed citrus scent, rich and realistic, suitable for any occasion, even formal events. But it doesn’t work in temperate or cold climates. It’s pricey; I think it would be perfect at $200, but since it’s LV, in the end, you just fill out the form and it comes to those $200.
Wow, I love it. I really get the ginger and bergamota. Like Symphony, which is my favorite summer LV, it’s very elegant. I see it for hot days with a suit and white shirt. I also have Bvlgari’s Tygar, and in my opinion, they’re 80-90% similar. For me, Tygar is less serious, and you can smell the musk more.
A familiar aroma with a warm touch that takes away from the overall freshness. There are better options within the house despite all the hype on social media.
Look, you have to give LV perfumes their due with this masterpiece. What a beast! It reminds me a lot of Karl Lagerfeld’s Bois de Vetiver.
I don’t wear L’Immensité; a friend of mine does—a drug dealer with a driver, a lawyer, and a conscience for rent. I smelled it on his wrist with the same envy one feels smelling someone else’s freedom. Given the price of the bottle, I could finance a brief revolution or a long hangover. The perfume opens like a shot in a spa: grapefruit, ginger, surgical cleanliness. It smells like freshly ironed success, like a person who doesn’t sweat because they outsource perspiration. It’s fresh, expensive, and dangerously correct: the scent of someone who has never stained their hands, yet has someone else to stain them for them. Then comes the ambroxan, punctual as an accountant and with the same charisma. Everything is measured to the millimeter: luxury without blood, elegance with a hard hat. It makes you feel powerful, but the power of signing documents, not the power that changes history. L’Immensité is a sea without salt, an ocean of design. Vuitton launched it to remind us that luxury is no longer conquered; it’s managed. It’s not a perfume; it’s an extract of solvency. And yet, it sucks: it works. You put it on, and life seems more stable, problems seem further away. If my crypto business stops being a fable of losers, I’ll wear this daily. Until then, I’ll continue smelling it on my friend, who smells like success… and a pending trial.
I can’t quite explain it, but it gives me a sense of calm, sea breeze, and lots of freshness. I like it more than Imagination. It has low projection and lasts about 4 hours, which is typical for a fresh scent. The issue is the price, but since I’d wear it once a season, it’s worth it. Only for hot days and daytime wear.
I have a decant, and the first time I smelled it, it sounded like Tommy. If you’re looking for a dupe for L’Immensité, just layer Tommy with a touch of Light Blue Italian Love.
The best of Louis Vuitton. I don’t know why, but I feel like night is its moment; I think it’s not the same perfume during the day. Call me crazy, but that’s how I perceive it. Wear it to dinners or the theater. 5 stars; I haven’t found a perfume I like more than this, but it’s for the nights.
Excellent fragrance, one of my favorites because it’s different from what you find on the street; it stands out with its aroma and has very good projection. They handle the ginger in a very rich way that makes me want to keep smelling it. Highly recommended.
Bought it for the hype, but nope. Smells super invasive and actually makes me dizzy. I don’t get the citrus notes they claim; it’s more synthetic and woody. Definitely not for everyone, and I wouldn’t buy it again for the life of me.
10 out of 10.
I really like this perfume. It’s like diving into a pool on a sunny day, with the cool water and the sun at its peak, while sipping an orange soda. But to all that, add that the perfume never gives a piercing citrus sensation that bothers, but maintains a softness through balance, making it pleasant all the time. In certain aspects, it reminds me of the smell of entering a 5-star hotel spa. Think of a combination of Vibrato Sospiro/Tygar in the opening, and as it dries, it has very recognizable aromatic and aquatic facets of Acqua Di Gio Profumo. Despite similarities, none of those bridges the spicy citrus and aquatic vibe at the same time. This one has both, and it’s noticeable. It’s not super unique in terms of the memory it evokes, but it’s a hybrid you’d love to smell. As a signature scent, I don’t know of another option that’s more pleasant, high quality, and has good longevity without being stellar. It’s my favorite LV from the ones I’ve tried. 9.5/10.
L’Immensité has a very precise construction, designed to smell good from a distance. Its diffusive power is impressive, so it’s normal for it to overwhelm your sense of smell quickly if you bring it close to your nose; you might think it doesn’t last or project, and it can fatigue those nearby if you spray too much. Smelling it up close can be unpleasant, especially for those who don’t tolerate Calone, as its musks give off a vibe of ‘rotten egg or wet cloth.’ In the air, it reminds me of Tygar with more body and ginger that adds effervescence; it also has reminiscences of ADG Profumo, and the dry down could remind you of ingredients in Sauvage or Office For Men (Ambroxan, ISO E Super, etc.). I define it as a ‘Tygar with generic notes.’ It carries the crown of the entire DNA; it’s not to my taste, but I recognize the excellence. Very versatile, powerful, and refined.
My dad was given this perfume, and I’ve used it a couple of times, so I know it well. I’ll be brief: it’s fresh, masculine, and sparkling, with a slight woody touch. Prominent notes of grapefruit and ginger, carrying that Tygar DNA from Bvlgari. In my opinion, it’s a bit different from Vibrato or Ingenious Ginger because here it’s not such a sweet or dense blend, nor does it have the vanilla or orange base found in those; instead, it’s grapefruit and ginger somewhat diluted with very aquatic notes, a notable ambroxan, and hints of sage, rosemary, and labdanum. Very versatile, with touches of Acqua Di Gio and 8 hours of longevity on skin with good projection. Very rich and loved by people like me, though others don’t love it.
L’Immensité is probably the most recognized perfume from Louis Vuitton, alongside Imagination. Unlike that one, L’Immensité makes you feel like it’s a hot, sunny summer day where the heat is evaporating everything. You need a fragrance that doesn’t cause fatigue or bother anyone, and that’s exactly what it does. You’re the elegant guy bringing comfort and sensuality. The notes I noticed most were rosemary and ginger, very dominant. The concept is simple: be attractive on a sunny day without suffocating. If you like summer scents, believe me, it’s worth it. Beach, morning formal outings, or extreme heat days. The longevity is great; my mom commented on it immediately, saying it smelled ‘macho,’ very strong for a marine. On my skin, it lasts 8 hours and on clothes over 12. Final note: 9.8/10. Cons: the price is exorbitant.
It’s a handsome man’s perfume. I like it less than Imagination, but it’s muuuuch better. I see it as a fusion of Polo Blue EDP (the rosemary), Acqua Di Gio (the aquatic vibe), and Sospiro Vibrato or Turathi Blue (the grapefruit). It captures that vibe so you get the idea. It’s super masculine but not over the top, ideal for daily wear. The price is high, sure, but Immortal by Maison Alhambra doesn’t compare because it smells dirty. It’s worth it because it’s luxurious, not generic or mass-market. If you’re under 25 or wearing a hoodie, stay away; this is for a grown man.
I started with a Dossier decant to understand the DNA of L’Immensité and was blown away until I found the original. I paid about $125 for 50ml, which is a steal compared to the bottle. The opening is brutal: grapefruit and ginger define the entire fragrance and linger until the dry down with a marine touch. It shares a profile with Tygar, though this one feels more elegant to me. On my skin, it lasts 4-6 hours, which is short for the price, but I suspect it’s olfactory fatigue; sometimes I don’t notice it, and then I do. My wife doesn’t like it; she says it smells ‘bad’ due to the aquatic notes. Would I recommend it? Yes, it’s a fresh gem.