Salvatore Ferragamo
Salvatore Ferragamo
214 votes
A unique visual signature based on accords, character, and seasonality
The Campari-blackcurrant combination hits with almost savoury zest, a bitter-sweet punch that feels Mediterranean and bracing. Rosemary's herbal snap prevents this from becoming simply fruity, creating an unusual aperitivo-like freshness that's immediately compelling.
Rhubarb's distinctive tartness emerges alongside vanilla's creamy whisper, anchored by jasmine's soft, almost translucent floral haze. The Mat Absolute adds a subtle powdery-animalic dimension that deepens the composition's sensuality, transforming it into something sophisticated and skin-like.
The base settles into a creamy vanilla-sandalwood embrace, with Ambrox providing a subtle, almost metallic warmth beneath the sweetness. What remains is gentle and wispy—less a final statement than a lingering memory, intimate rather than imposing.
Amo Ferragamo announces itself with the brash confidence of an aperitivo—that bitter-sweet jolt of Campari cutting through blackcurrant's jammy depth, whilst rosemary's herbal spine prevents the opening from tipping into pure dessert territory. What emerges is a fragrance caught in deliberate tension: the fruity sweetness wants to seduce, but Marie Salamagne has fitted it with a restraining hand, allowing green-herbal notes to keep things honest.
The heart reveals the real sophistication. Rhubarb arrives with its characteristic tartness, wrestling gently with creamy Tahitian vanilla, whilst Jasmine Sambac and Mat Absolute layer in a soft, almost skin-like floral quality that reads as powdered skin rather than a garden in bloom. This is where the composition's genius emerges—the rhubarb-vanilla conversation creates something neither fully gourmand nor purely floral, but rather a creamy, slightly sour sweetness that feels almost edible in its complexity.
Add fragrances to your collection and unlock your personalised scent DNA, note map, and shareable identity card.
3.6/5 (194)