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Sisley Eau de 2

Marca
Sisley
3.94 de 5
1,029 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Sisley Eau de 2 by Sisley is a floral chypre fragrance for women. Launched in 2009, this composition features top notes of bergamot, basil, and cardamom; a heart of Persian cyclamen, iris, jasmine, and rose; and a base of Virginia cedar, vetiver, patchouli, and sandalwood.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 7.1%
  • Primavera 37%
  • Verano 41%
  • Otoño 15%
  • Día 87%
  • Noche 13%

Notas clave

Comunidad

1,029 votos

  • Positivo 81%
  • Negativo 15%
  • Neutral 3.6%

Pirámide olfativa

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

Salida 3 notas
Corazón 4 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

Compara tiendas verificadas para Sisley Eau de 2 y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.

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eBay

eBay

Más opciones

Más opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.

Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.

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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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14 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • azuriiita

    I don’t know what kind of bergamot this fragrance has… or if it’s a blend with cyclamen, but in the opening I smell tangerine (the little one), fragrant and juicy, like when you’re peeling it and the juice spills out. After a while, it smells more like bergamot, fresh and not too citrusy, well complemented by the basil (somewhat sweet) and the woods. It’s fresh and elegant. I see it as good for mornings and when it’s hot, also for outing plans or heading to a spa.

  • Sparkling and transparent, Sisley Eau de 2 is a dress of white flowers with green touches. The opening is fresh and green, with a sap-like taste, combined with tender spices of cardamom and bergamot, with delicate sensuality and a cheeky touch of basil. The heart is floral, transparent, and liquid: water lily, Egyptian jasmine, cyclamen, and rose. The base combines water with the mystery of the chypre, associating solar notes with the sensuality of patchouli and vetiver, the elegance of precious woods and cedar, and sandalwood. Luminous, volatile, and cheerful, it reinvents the modern green note by adding delicate, serene, and natural sensuality.

  • This beautiful perfume is running low, and I’m sad because it’s so expensive and I don’t know when I’ll be able to buy another bottle. It’s a green chypre with a lot of personality, fresh and energizing; you can tell from a mile away it’s not just another summer scent; anyone can immediately sense its quality. However, it has one flaw: it lasts a breath. I would make it my signature, summer after summer, if not for the price and longevity, as it’s more like cologne than perfume. Of the four in the collection, including the Eau Tropical, this is by far the best. Basil stands out, but the composition is so harmonious it’s hard to isolate notes. I hope we can meet again; it’s difficult to find a chypre this contemporary.

  • I’m running out of this gem and it’s killing my wallet, what a shame. It’s a green chypre with a lot of personality—fresh and energizing. You can tell from a mile away it’s not just another summer scent; the quality is obvious. But it has one flaw: it lasts the breath of a sigh. I’d make it my signature, summer after summer, if it weren’t for the price and the fact that it’s more cologne than perfume. Out of the four in the collection, including the Eau Tropical, this is hands down the best. The basil stands out, but the blend is so harmonious it’s hard to separate the ingredients. Hopefully, we’ll meet again soon; it’s tough to find a chypre this contemporary.

  • Casablanca77

    Sisley Eau de 2 is what I repeat every summer without fail. Its opening of bergamot and cardamom is unique, so refreshing and singular. Its sublime scent is the only thing that drives me crazy, but I’ve already gotten used to reapplying. The cedar, which I already love, is very beautiful and real. If I had to define it in one word for it and its sisters, it would be: summer purity. It’s the most effervescent chypre I own, like a garden corner in the shade near the pool.

  • Casablanca77

    Sisley Eau de 2 is something I repeat every summer. Its opening of bergamot and cardamom is unique, so refreshing and singular. The sublime scent is the only thing that drives me crazy, but I’ve gotten used to reapplying it. The cedar I already love is beautiful and real. If I had to define it in one word, both for it and its siblings: summer purity. It’s the most effervescent chypre I own. A little corner of a garden in the shade near a pool.

  • marisol santilla

    What a deliciously fresh and natural fragrance at first! I’d pay whatever it costs if it lasted more than 2-3 hours. I’m usually lenient; I have perfumes that last 8 hours or even until the next day on my hair, but this one didn’t last the time it took me to apply it to decide. I was about to pay and thought, ‘what does it matter, I’ll wear several,’ but it didn’t pass 40 minutes and I only perceived a clean, distant, and lost note. It could be an excellent EDT if not for that minimal longevity. What a pity!

  • I’ve tried it several times with the No. 2 from the trio of waters from ten years ago, and there’s no way. It gives me the creeps. It tries to reinterpret the green, woody waters of the seventies and early eighties; the intention is good, as few members join this family. It’s curious: many people feel the need to wear a light citrus, aromatic, or woody EDT cologne, a scent that brings peace, tranquility, and cleanliness. It’s that safe value in a crisis, against oriental, animal, vanilla, or resinous sweet perfumes that usually fall into oblivion for being associated with recklessness and promiscuity, only to resurface in good times. The worse things get, the more natural it is to seek light fragrances with hygiene memories: citrus, herbs, and shrubs. This No. 2 has an interesting green sweetness at first, but the finish makes my stomach turn. It’s that oily, gummy vetiver some perfumers use; it doesn’t smell like soap, it has the demeanor of gum chewed a thousand times, which after an hour smells like wet plastic. I run from that note like the devil takes me; it seems like oily bamboo mixed with lemon grass or lettuce, with hints of gummy mint and latex. Here, it swallows the entire composition; I can’t smell anything else but a very chlorophyllous, wet green vetiver with a plastic finish like certain masculine aromatic sports scents from the nineties. I don’t like it at all. The intention is appreciated, but that’s where it stops. I prefer No. 3, although when osmanthus stands out, it makes me less fond of it. PD: Terrible sillage, regular longevity. PD II: It reminds me a lot of Guerlain Homme’s L’Eau Boisée.

  • I’ve tried it several times with the #2 from the Waters trio ten years ago, and it doesn’t work. It makes my stomach turn. It tries to reinterpret the green, woody waters of the 70s and early 80s; the intention is good, as few join this family. It’s curious: anyone feels like wearing a light cologne or EDT, citrus or woody, that brings peace and cleanliness. That value is always safe in a crisis, unlike oriental or sweet perfumes that, in difficult times, are associated with excess and forget their place until prosperity returns. The worse the world gets, the more we seek the natural, hygienic, and clean: citrus, herbs, and woods. The #2 has an interesting green sweetness at the start, but the end revolts me. That oily, gummy vetiver some perfumers use; I don’t know if it’s a molecule or a bad blend (basil?). It smells like gum chewed a thousand times, not soap, but wet plastic. I flee from that note like the devil takes my soul. It seems like oily bamboo with lemon grass or lettuce, with hints of gummy mint and latex. It swallows the entire composition; I only smell that green, chlorophyllous, wet vetiver with a plastic finish, typical of 90s masculine aromatics. I hate it. The intention is appreciated, but that’s where it stops. I prefer the #3, although when osmanthus comes out, it tastes less good to me. PS: Poor sillage, regular longevity. PS II: It reminds me a lot of L’Eau Boisée by Guerlain Homme.

  • Still exploring Sisley’s EDTs. This one is the most unisex, leaning masculine: fresh, bubbly, and perfect for an older man, ideal for work or a stroll with friends or a partner. It smells of aromatic woods with a powdery touch, starting fresh before settling into a dry cedar and vetiver scent. It has a great memory effect and is easy to distinguish. A dry fragrance with evolution and a natural feel. For those seeking soft, natural, and luminous scents.

  • It continues the Sisley saga. This is the most unisex, with a masculine touch: fresh, bubbly, and great for mature men, ideal for work or a walk with friends. It smells of woods and aromatics with a powdery base, starting fresh and evolving into a dry cedar and vetiver. It has a good memory effect and is easy to distinguish. A dry, evolving, and natural perfume for those seeking soft, natural, and luminous scents.

  • Fresh yet with the elegance only Sisley knows how to deliver. It evokes a super-green, wet forest, just after the rain. I detect fresh cardamom, a hint of basil and bergamot, but there’s a sweetness I can’t pinpoint. It reminds me of Hermès gardens and also my Un Jour from the same house; they all share that cold, wet, almost metallic green. It’s my go-to fragrance when it’s thirty-plus degrees in Málaga; it cools me down a lot.

  • A fresh fragrance with the elegance Sisley knows how to create. When I think about what it evokes, I imagine a super-green, wet forest after the rain. I detect lots of fresh cardamom, a hint of basil and bergamot, but there’s something sweet I can’t pinpoint. It reminds me of Hermès gardens and my beloved Un Jour from the same house: a wet, cold green, almost metallic. It’s my go-to fragrance when temperatures in Málaga hit the high thirties; it cools me down a lot.

  • It’s the greenest of the Sisley trio, the one that best fits the brand and my favorite alongside the third. It’s a luxurious-smelling cologne, very similar to Eau de Campagne but with a fresher, darker, and chicer green vibe. I love the opening: aromatic, herbal, wet, and lively, though it dries down darker, rougher, and more masculine, dominated by vetiver. I find it great for summer, though the price is outrageous. It lasts about seven hours on skin and I notice its sillage, but no one else does. Although it has better fixation than many colognes and a more luxurious character, the performance doesn’t justify the cost. Plus, the base notes dominate too soon, stripping away nuances and freshness.