Men

Mémoire d’une Odeur

Marca
Gucci
Alberto Morillas
Perfumista
Alberto Morillas
3.81 de 5
7,409 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Gucci Mémoire d'une Odeur is a fragrance from the olfactory family for men and women. Launched in 2019, this scent was created by perfumer Alberto Morillas. The top notes are chamomile and bitter almond; the heart notes are musk, Indian jasmine, and jasmine; the base notes are sandalwood, cedar, and vanilla.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 8.4%
  • Primavera 39%
  • Verano 32%
  • Otoño 21%
  • Día 80%
  • Noche 20%

Notas clave

Comunidad

7,409 votos

  • Positivo 69%
  • Negativo 19%
  • Neutral 11%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 2 notas
Corazón 3 notas
Fondo 3 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

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Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

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Características

Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.

Longevidad

Escasa

Débil

Moderada

Duradera

Muy duradera

Estela

Suave

Moderada

Pesada

Enorme

Género

Femenino

Unisex femenino

Unisex

Unisex masculino

Masculino

Precio

Extremadamente costoso

Ligeramente costoso

Precio moderado

Buen precio

Excelente precio

Reseñas

Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.

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40 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • AlfonsoHuizar

    It’s a very misunderstood fragrance. I decided to give it a chance with a 1.5 ml decant to test it properly, as there were many bad comments, and to my surprise, I ended up falling in love and buying the full bottle. We’re talking about a perfume that invents a new olfactory family (aromatic mineral) and is universal (for any age and gender), which is why it seems strange. It’s hard to explain the unique scent: it opens with herbal and creamy notes, then dries down to a woody floral that maintains that characteristic DNA. It has medium projection, but long-lasting, approx. 9 hours on me. I recommend it entirely; try it on your skin as many times as needed to discover the treasure it is.

  • Manuelita16

    I received it today in an exchange, scared by the reviews. When I atomized it on my hand and smelled the opening, I fell in love. I love the opening! That smell of chamomile, or rather daisies, the small edible ones from the meadow I’ve tasted in salads, is the same flavor I perceive along with the chamomile. I don’t notice the almonds, maybe just a tiny, slight bitter touch. After a while, I start to feel the flowers, and in the dry-down, it’s slightly talc-like with fresh flowers and something herbal; the chamomile is there but almost imperceptible. I see it as unconventional, sober, delicate, and elegant. I also see it well for men, but for me, it’s feminine. I know they’ll say it lacks the May Water vibe, but it reminds me of Chanel No. 19 talc-like, floral, green, sober… that discreet and elegant woman who says ‘here I am, and we’ll see if you let me smell.’ I wish to buy it as soon as I can afford the EDP, but it’s expensive, and with my budget, I lean towards others on my list because I tend towards oriental, vanilla, gourmand scents… What’s the downside? The longevity, it lasts me at most 4/5 hours, and the last one close to the skin. I wish it lasted longer and that delicious opening extended before revealing the rest. I know they’ll call me weird because people don’t like the opening, but I love it. It transports me to a meadow of daisies and chamomile with herbs and earth on a fresh spring day. Would I buy it again? For sure, it gives me well-being, relaxes me, peace, serenity, and makes me feel feminine.

  • For me, it was the least favorite perfume of recent years… I smell burnt alcohol or a spilled disco drink. I wouldn’t buy it, and if someone gave it to me, I wouldn’t use it, not even for the bathroom. It seems herbal notes just aren’t for me.

  • 🥰 Oohhh, what a more unisex fragrance! Weird, ambiguous… it has good and bad reviews, but what personality. It doesn’t amaze me, but I love it. On my skin, it lasts a long time, lots of almond, and that chamomile that takes center stage and follows me all afternoon…

  • Lilmonroe

    I tested it on my skin out of curiosity. It’s interesting when houses propose herbal, unisex, or non-gourmand scents. The box is attractive, very pretty, with stars and gold, the name, the color, and a twist with the chamomile. The result is a bottle reminiscent of the 80s or 90s; the scent is easy to love, the bitter almond is noticeable instantly, and I find it very pleasant. It’s not a pure herbal scent; in the end, there’s wood and jasmine. The intention is good and the proposal interesting, but the projection and trail fall short for a perfume; it feels like body mist. That’s the only downside.

  • alvarodominguez

    The truth is, I’m not much for green fragrances, nor have I been drawn to Gucci ones, but I like this one and it has a very unique DNA. It’s an aromatic herbal with a creamy, talc-like base, super unisex. Especially in the opening, it reminds me of chamomile tea. The projection isn’t very high and stays close to the skin, but it has decent longevity.

  • This perfume grabbed me with incredible intensity from the very first moment. In the store, it seemed super weird, smelling like peanut butter and sounding masculine and strange. But I couldn’t stop thinking about it. By the fifth try, when my sister smelled it, a lovely chamomile note emerged, and I decided to buy it. At first, it smells like bitter almond, which explains why many don’t like it, but on the skin, it transforms into a soft, cozy chamomile. You can smell the jasmine, the civet, and the vanilla; that combination reminds me of a meadow with dew, almost petrichor. It’s a very luminous perfume, ideal for daytime with a light dress or nighttime for a peaceful sleep. I use it frequently, and every time I spray it, I feel happy. How beautiful. The bottle is magnificent and stands out in my collection for its color and shape; I love just looking at it. However, like all Gucci perfumes, it doesn’t last long: three hours on the skin, maybe four on clothes. I’ve mixed Memoire with Souffle Apaisant de Rose by L’Occitane, which seems like a feminine version due to the rose note, and combining them makes it last a bit longer. In short, it’s a very peculiar herbal perfume worth it if you give it a chance.

  • For me, it’s very weak. It seems like an infusion of mixed things without identity, lacking character. I won’t review it again: two years later, I don’t know if it changed or my tastes, but now I like it quite a bit. I can already smell the chamomile flowers and a soft bitterness that wraps everything in cleanliness and tidiness. I don’t dislike it. I’m giving it a second chance. Maybe it’s the heat of these days, and the perfume feels good in these temperatures.

  • I absolutely love this scent; it’s very special. I understand why many people don’t like it because it has so much character; the blend of jasmine and chamomile is perfect. I’m obsessed.

  • It works great in warm weather, full-on summer (in my hometown, we literally evaporate these days, haha, that’s how I feel). The cedar note is soft, the chamomile constant and pleasant, giving me serenity. I wore it in winter and it turned out different—shorter lasting, almost no trail. I used it in spring and autumn whenever I felt like it, and to my surprise, it shines in summer. With the current heat, I’ve worn it for 7 hours with a soft, enveloping cloud. It’s a distinct perfume; I don’t know if it’s love or hate like others, I bought it without knowing it and I love it; it’s worth giving it a chance.

  • Laylasallylucy

    Uff, what a perfume! I applied it in the morning and haven’t stopped smelling my arm over and over. On my skin, it opened up an exquisite chamomile note; I think it’s the first time I’ve used a perfume with this note and I didn’t realize how much I liked it. Something creamy and slightly boozy, it transports me to a chamomile field in the late afternoon. Definitely for spring and summer, during the day. It’s herbal but not the typical green; there’s something that wrapped me in its delicacy. How good that not everyone likes it, haha, that means it’s for someone unique, with an ambiguous personality. I rate it unisex but somewhat feminine; my husband even applied it to his wrist, but I didn’t sense that chamomile scent emanating from him that I do. I don’t know what else to say, I simply love it.

  • I consider this for personal enjoyment, not for others to praise. If you like it, it’s perfect; it helps you relive blocked memories, just as its name suggests. It’s an enveloping herbal aroma; I’ll definitely be buying it again.

  • Blended unisex chamomile with musk. That’s it, nothing more to add. Pleasant: 5/10. Interesting: 3/10. Versatile: 8/10. Original: 6/10.

  • Carcanuelo

    A perfume written in verse. An aroma so special it evokes a room from the early 20th century, sunlight streaming through curtains, and a chamomile bouquet on the table. Nothing else compares. To that soft, sweet chamomile are added notes of almond—nothing bitter, subtle yet ever-present. Moderate projection and longevity; ideal for spring and summer, also autumn and winter indoors. Don’t buy it blind or over-spray; while delicate, too much saturates. A mature, aged, evocative scent: romantic. A poem by Don Alberto Morillas.

  • On my skin and nose: HORRIBLE. It smells like insecticide mixed with old talc. I never perceived the chamomile. The longevity was eternal; I had to wash all my clothes and even my backpack. I showered, exfoliated, and put on a scented cream, and at 7 hours I could still smell it.

  • I bought it blindly during quarantine based on YouTube reviews, and my curiosity couldn’t wait. Contrary to what I heard, I smell metal, fresh but metallic. I don’t hate it, but it gives me headaches and nausea, and the scent lasts for hours. I have to wash my clothes or take a shower to get rid of it. I want to like it, but I hate it. I don’t smell the chamomile or the herbal notes. Every nose is a different world, haha.

  • The opening is very bitter; I don’t like it. As it dries, a herbal and alcoholic tone appears. It becomes more classic than modern; it’s not a perfume I would buy again.

  • A beautiful and unique scent, yet not difficult, but rather harmonious. The herbal opening smells like fresh grass, making the chamomile make sense, floating above a creamy sandalwood where the flower drifts. It’s not Mimosa or Cumin, but they share that naturalness. The sandalwood reminds me of Versace’s Crystal Noir EDT, buttery and great. It has a mineral note that depends on the skin; on me, it’s subtle and fleeting. The bottle is crazy, elegant in that nostalgic green.

  • Selenophilia

    Today I tried a sample of this perfume, and at first it smells very bitter, like medicinal herb. After a while, something sweetened with vanilla and a bit of sandalwood is also perceived, but the bitterness persists. Apparently, it doesn’t sit well on my skin.

  • I wanted it for a long time, without having tried it. It was somewhere in my brain, but, for some reason, I never remembered its existence when I passed a perfumery. I suspect that, deep down, I wanted to buy it blind. It was a total hit. First impressions: absolute softness. With a simple sniff, I had to make an effort to feel it. Calling it intimate is an understatement, but it makes up for it with impressive persistence: I showered, soaped, and exfoliated yesterday, and it was still present. It clings to the skin. I feel it’s ideal for heat, because it gives that sensation of freshness, of comfort one feels when arriving at a ventilated place or sheltered from the heat: the shade of trees, the hallways of old houses that have a particular current that isolates them from the outside. Also, its mineral side took me to one of my favorite scents, that of construction sites, which have something damp and refreshing. It makes you want to bathe in it. As for the scent itself, nothing that hasn’t appeared in all reviews: chamomile, herbaceous aromas, green notes, and that mineral touch that I love. I compared it to: Peau d’ailleurs, Eau de gentiane Blanche, and, more distant, Paula’s Ibiza.

  • Is it cologne? Nowhere near, it’s an EDP. We started off on the wrong foot because if you don’t like it, it disappears in exactly two hours. I bought it on the spot because it smells divine. It has a citrusy touch reminiscent of Guerlain’s Teazzura, though Gucci’s is richer, even if it doesn’t last as long. It’s herbal, floral, citrus, and sweet: I love it, but only for using after a shower before bed.

  • I had already tried it and loved it. Took me months to buy it. I don’t know what it generates in me that makes me love it. I feel it like sweet herbs, it’s very personal, very sexy. I haven’t used it much but I wish it lasted longer on skin. More so that it projects and floods. The bottle is beautiful.

  • Aromadicciones

    Wow! I always look for special and different fragrances, and this is one of them. Very green at the start. With notes of bitter chamomile, mixed with jasmine and cedar. Earthy, bitter, herbal. I can’t tell you it smells like AURA DE MUGLER, but that’s how it opens… very green. Woody, bitter from the musk. The jasmine doesn’t stand out much because the herbal chamomile wins, reminding you of a very green apple. Yes, it smells a bit medicinal…but I like distinct scents. I still haven’t managed to feel the vanilla.

  • A mystery you’ll never solve but won’t stop returning to. Mysterious yet luminous, the difficult that becomes easy. Subtle, elegant, and delicious. A walk through Rome in summer. Don’t judge it at first glance or by its opening, give it time, mix with it, and it will adapt to you, and you will fall in love with it.

  • The idea of a perfume is that it’s personal, your signature to society… that whoever perceives a scent associates it with you….and in the last two decades, I’ve witnessed a genocide of fragrances, turning us into clones… everyone smells like Million and Paco Rabanne’s sticky chic aromas, everyone smells like La Vita è Bella, and every brand releases a poorly made clone of what Lancôme already launched…..and where does the goal of using a fragrance go??? Gucci renews my faith in perfumery with this perfume from a great like Alberto Morillas…..a fresh, relaxing fragrance, with a clearly floral-musked middle phase that awakens the senses and a sweet-bitter base, where almonds are perceived with vanilla and sandalwood in its purest nectar, nothing synthetic!!, you can feel the quality of the ingredients. In short, a perfume that is a delight and only generates compliments that can be worn even in your moments of solitude, when you rest on a couch, barefoot, and want to ‘dress’ with a veil of elegance and freshness.

  • If nostalgia were a single scent, it would resemble this. I apply it, close my eyes, and travel to past times, distant places, or maybe just to my childhood and the smell of my mom’s fragrances, or perhaps it’s a scent I only dreamed of?

  • Bibilalique

    Reminds me a lot of chamomile tea, as if it also carries anise. More than vintage, I feel it’s bohemian; I imagine it on someone in velvet with a colorful scarf in autumn. It has a short trail and lasts about 5 hours, so it’s not a bomb. Anyway, it’s pretty but not for me; it was interesting to try.

  • I don’t know, it smells like a shot of whiskey or something really strong, and yet I like it. It has a ‘nose’ that…

  • Liked it, though I’m not sure if it’s for daily wear or special occasions. Reminds me of Cabochard, which I absolutely love, but I don’t wear it much because it doesn’t feel modern. With these two, I’m feeling brave enough to try something unique and see the reactions. I’m deciding to wear what I crave and let others decide if they want it.

  • At first, I thought I didn’t like it, maybe because of the bitter almond. But it’s just the opening; let it settle, and on me, it smells like talc, barely sweet and herbal. A particular scent. Now I love it and want to wear it all the time; I feel it works in any season, day or night. I don’t get the ‘old lady perfume’ vibe, although it’s true it’s not common (like the profiles of Good Girl or Olympea). This perfume is for those who like something different or want a scent for themselves. Just to clarify, I’m a fan of green florals, so that’s probably why I like it.

  • Ignacio Bravo

    It gave me a facepalm. It projects very strongly and greenly, and after three hours, a sweet chamomile note becomes noticeable. Don’t buy this blindly unless you’re in love at first sniff, which was my case. It has a lot of personality. Two years later, I just finished the 40ml bottle. The perfume world has changed so much that I don’t want to spend $200 on 100ml anymore. I enjoyed it, but I don’t think it’s smart to repurchase.

  • I thought I’d like it based on the notes, but the bitter almond and my skin just don’t get along. From the start, it overpowers everything and makes the perfume unpleasant. What a pity; I would have loved for the other notes to come through.

  • I’ll admit I hesitated a lot before picking up this rarity, but I’m glad to have it at home. The opening is unusual, but the drydown, with that floral and herbal touch, convinced me. I don’t detect any specific note, just a perfect blend that takes me back to happy memories from the past.

  • It’s very different from the others. On my skin, the almond note really stands out. Although I don’t wear it daily, when I do, I like it. I think it’s more for personal enjoyment; it doesn’t draw anyone’s attention. It’s good, but not essential for me, so I wouldn’t buy it again.

  • I’ve been thinking about how to comment on this great perfume and don’t know how to describe it. It’s fresh but warm, green but romantic, soapy but floral. All those contradictions come together when I wear it. It feels timeless because it belongs to all eras: my grandma would have worn it in the 90s, and my nephew in 10 years. It brings nostalgia. It’s retro, modern, strange, elegant, and casual. Great master Morillas.

  • Like user Dai0357, it smells weird to me too, sometimes like gasoline, but it hooked me. It’s different from everything I’ve tried. The first time I wore it, I sprayed about 15 times and didn’t notice it, tossing it in the drawer frustrated. A month later, I used it again, and although it’s not a beast in longevity, it improves significantly. It smells exactly like that green that represents the color.

  • This Preciado is a luxury in my collection, nothing for those who can’t handle the unusual; herbaceous scents don’t usually get compliments (some say it smells like grass with medicine, but it’s something else). Starting with the bottle, it’s elegant and reminds me of my aunt’s accessories, that one with good taste for wallpaper but who is uncomfortable with her collection of harlequins that, in the end, are art. In the opening notes, there’s a flash of chamomile, not just any, but the kind that brings to mind an April morning drinking tea with your favorite person, the one whose presence speeds you up and then gives you inner peace. Like its nutmeg, it fades after two hours. The heart is musk and jasmine, taking you to a garden with white flowers and hanging green vines where you read old books of good poetry. The base of sandalwood and cedar evokes an old cookie tin (no cookies, full of threads from my aunt cross-stitching) and the soaps my grandma would hide in clothes to give them an elegant, rustic, and powdery scent. In short, it’s cozy.

  • Mr. Baskerville

    Disconcerting. I spent a depressing hour and a half with coffee and a sterile political argument between a radical friend with Botox, Ozempic, and an iPhone, and others who wanted to return to feudalism. A girl, the daughter of those charlatans, looked at me bored, asking for help. When I left, at the perfumery to shake off the bad vibe, I spotted her with Mémoire d’une Odeur. It starts soft and floral with a subtle bitterness, neither good nor bad. I didn’t imagine chamomile, but I did detect a metallic, musky, and medicinal touch. The development is linear, though the jasmine gives it an ethereal and pleasant air. It’s green, but more subjective than natural. It seems like a perfume for clothes, including loungewear, in spring—very rare. The projection is contained and the longevity could be better. I don’t quite like it, but paradoxically, I want to wear it often. I understand it’s a sensory experience, not just for scenting, and I respect that. I don’t recommend buying blindly, but do test it under the right conditions.

  • Maybe the least conventional perfume in my collection. The opening is bitter, herbal, and aromatic, with a vintage medicinal touch that I absolutely LOVE. I can’t pinpoint specific notes, but on my skin, it smells like a tonic or a muscle rub. It reminds me of wild plum or rosemary and oregano infusions, transporting me straight back to my childhood: playing at my grandparents’ house and getting cured with tonics. That’s why I like it so much 🌿💚 I don’t smell any flowers. The opening is sharp; I think that herbal-medical character is what others call metallic. It lasts 12 hours, but by hour 3, it’s skin scent. It’s 100% unisex and for personal enjoyment. Verdict: it’s a TRULY DISTINCTIVE perfume, not made to please everyone, so don’t buy blindly, but it’s an aroma that takes you to a beautiful sensation of fresh grass. It’s a sensory experience in itself. For me, it’s the most precious jewel because it’s an instant trip to the most beautiful time with my grandparents 💕