Reviews of Eau d'Hadrien Eau de Toilette by Annick Goutal

The opening is pretty straightforward, with lemon, mandarin, grapefruit, and green verbena notes boosted by a bit of galbanum. Aldehydes also boost projection but burn off fast, as the jasmine and ylang-ylang filter in. Some creamy woody tones of santal and cedar move in, with just a pinch of undisclosed lavender and sage for roundness in the aromatic department. Still very chypre however, the oakmoss and labdanum settle this down into a clean long-legged subtle wear, while the lemon and grapefruit in particular shine on. Performance is very cologne-like for the first few hours, booming bright and fresh, but then becomes a whisper for about 6 to 7 hours. This could be a signature if you just wanted a subtle clean skin-scent, but the typical perfumista or "cologne guy" might be disappointed.
The hard-to-beat simple goodness of Eau d'Hardien set a standard to be followed into the 80's with fragrances like Heure Exquis (1984), Sables (1985), and Gardénia Passion (1989). Several flankers followed, including an eau de Parfum in 1988 that only shuffles the cards a bit to get more of a creamier and muskier finish, burying the lemon and grapefruit somewhat into the drydown. Since both versions of the fragrance are extremely alike outside of moving the equalizer faders to the left or right, I count one review with a few modifications as representative for both concentrations. However, Les Nuits d'Hadrien by Annick Goutal (2003) is a true flanker and entirely different. Francis Camail did good work alongside Annick Goutal herself, although some may argue subsequent reformulations of both EdT and EdP haven't been kind. I leave that up to you. Thumbs Up

JackTwist's review below gets it exactly right: citrus without too much sweetness. The dry grapefruit makes this scent something special. Great aldehydic pop and sparkle throughout the early and mid notes of this fragrance. There is a synthetic woody note in the base of the current formulation, but it is nice enough and seems to have some fixitive properties because the longevity here is very good for such a hesperidic fragrance. Moderate sillage blossoms considerably in high humidity.
Utterly unisex with good presentation & a very good atomizer. A great EdC!
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I note a lot of buts and hedging here. I don't care.


One of the greatest eau de colognes ever created and one with a unique twist on the usual combination of citrus notes (bergamot, lemon, lime) usually contained within an edc. This adds the pungent and very dry notes of grapefruit and mandarin to its lemon center, anchoring it with the tiniest, but very unobtrusive, bit of cypress, which lends it the dryness it needs. The ylang may round it out, but I do not detect that almost always identifiable ripe banana signature note.
It is heads above all the other edcs in the market and is my very favorite of all I have experienced. Dry, Dry, Dry Citrus and the perfect summer scent, equally suitable for office, home and evening wear.
A real top drawer winner, in my estimation. If you love summery scents, and edcs in particular, don't miss this one.

The older sample is the Eau d'Hadrien I love, a timeless classic cologne, perfectly matched lemon and bergamot, slightly sparkling and given grit with lavender, a touch soapy in the drydown.
The newer sample is clearly Creed-inspired. It's still lemon, but with a big shot of dihydromercenol on top and some vague melon and greens underneath, coming across like an extremely lemony Millesime Imperial.
The classic Eau d'Hadrien is iconic, a textbook example of a perfect classic citrus eau de cologne. If it's been replaced by this more modern aquatic lemon, it's a real loss for perfumery, though I must admit that the newer aquatic version is decent for what it is. Hopefully, I just got a mis-bottled sample, but I'll admit to being worried.

And yet, there is, of course, no universality to this perception - some still dismiss Eau d'Hadrien as Lemon Pledge, whereas I find it zings as if it had just issued from a squeezed rind.
This is a sprightly, refreshing, non-sweet citrus (lemon is the most prominent in the mix) with subtle tones of pepper and celery that make it even more bracing. There's an undertow of bitters common to citrus peels and the whole thing is simple, direct and elegant the kind of perfume one can safely wear on stressful days and feel lifted rather than burdened by it.



( plus Basil, Verbena, Mint, Caraway, Thyme)
Hadrian seems more caraway to begin with followed by a hot lemon drink scent, a toddy, and the furniture polish of Neopol. I don't like Hadrian until it is no more than a skin scent and it is here I marvel at it, a field of wildflowers leaves its own particular zest. Eau Sauvage, Eau de Rochas, Eau du Sud, Cristalle and the like carry their appeal up front, while Hadrian exits with it. I can't mention caraway without thinking of Luca Turin and his vibrational theory, so I commend anyone to watch the BBC Perfume series that covers his early attempts at recognition.

There are many other things I've tried that will take its place though--L'Etrog, Cedrat Enivrant, etc. As nice as it is, it is not particularly unique.

Once upon a time I was addicted to these little tins of candies. Sometimes I bought Cavendish & Harvey's. Other days it was La Vie Les Citrons. Piercing, screaming, little drops of sour lemon. This frag is the liquid version, incarnate.

Not a happy picture ...





Eau d'Hadrien opens with a very appealing (if not terribly original) blend of crisp citrus and green notes that's pure Mediterranean. As others have noted, it's also more than a little reminiscent of lemon scented furniture polish. To stretch the analogy, the furniture polish is soon applied, as a strong woody base emerges from beneath the citrus as the fragrance ages.
Over the course of the next half hour Eau d'Hadrien reveals a powdery note that rounds out the citrus and somewhat diminishes its resemblance to a household cleaner. Some light floral elements (is that a bit of rose I smell?) join in as well, and lend the fragrance welcome depth and some extra complexity. The citrus fades down pretty quickly, so that by the two hour mark I'm left with some woods and powdery musk, with just a hint of fruit and flowers shifting in and out of focus. All and all it's pleasant enough, but nothing I'd get too excited about. For woods and citrus I go for the richer and far more complex Iskander from Parfum d'Empire or the more exotic and long-lasting Bahiana by Maître Parfumeur et Gantier.

6/10





This is my "power" fragrance for important days at work, and yes, I would wear [a drop of] it to a job interview. I would not, however, wear it on a date - it's for business, shopping, or sightseeing to me!