Green Citrus Esentu

Unisex
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2025
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Green Citrus by Esentu is a Citrus Aromatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Green Citrus was launched in 2025. Top notes are Lemon Verbena and Bergamot; middle notes are Hedione and Fennel; base notes are Matcha Tea, Woody Notes and Musk.

Composition Profile

green 100%
citrus 85%
powdery 70%
fresh 60%
woody 50%
musky 40%
floral 35%
soft spicy 30%
fresh spicy 25%
aromatic 20%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Lemon Verbena Lemon Verbena
Bergamot Bergamot

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Hedione Hedione
Fennel Fennel

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Matcha Tea Matcha Tea
Woody Notes Woody Notes
Musk Musk
Unique Character

Green Citrus Esentu by Esentu offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Green Citrus Esentu embodies the distinctive style of Esentu while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Green Citrus Esentu

Essence

The one who favors Green Citrus Esentu is, above all, an Explorer-a seeker of sensation, novelty, and unbridled vitality. Their spirit is restless, their senses sharp, their mind always reaching toward the next horizon. Like the fragrance itself-bright, crisp, yet fleeting-they embody the tension between presence and transience. They are drawn to the immediacy of life, the thrill of the new, but must also contend with the shadow of rootlessness, the danger of never truly settling into depth.

Shadow

Yet beneath this radiant exterior lies a restlessness that borders on evasion. The Explorer’s greatest strength-their adaptability-can become their weakness: an inability to commit, to endure the mundane, to sit with discomfort. They mistake motion for growth, mistaking the accumulation of experiences for wisdom.

They may flit between passions, never mastering any. A month of photography gives way to a sudden obsession with ceramics, then abandoned for a spontaneous trip to Marrakech. Their enthusiasm is genuine, but their discipline is thin. They fear boredom more than failure, and so they avoid the slow, necessary work of mastery.

In love, they leave before they are left, always one step ahead of attachment. They rationalize this as freedom, but it is often fear-fear of being known too deeply, of being weighed down. Their partners may accuse them of coldness, but the truth is more complex: they feel too much, too quickly, and so they retreat into motion.

Conclusion

Their tastes are uncluttered but refined-they prefer the clean lines of modern design, the simplicity of a white linen shirt, the sharpness of a well-composed photograph. They disdain excess, favoring experiences over possessions. Their home is airy, filled with natural light, perhaps a single bold artwork on the wall-something that suggests movement, like a Kandinsky or a Hockney.

Their philosophy is one of sensual empiricism: they trust what they can touch, taste, see. Abstract dogma bores them; they prefer the tangible, the immediate. They are not nihilists, but they are skeptics of grand narratives-they would rather sip an espresso in a sunlit piazza than debate metaphysics in a dimly lit study.

In relationships, they are charming but elusive. They draw people in effortlessly, their laughter infectious, their curiosity magnetic. Yet they resist confinement-not out of cruelty, but out of a fear of stagnation. They love deeply, but conditionally: their affection thrives on novelty, on shared adventures. A partner who demands too much permanence will find them slipping away like the fading top notes of their favorite scent.

Their lifestyle is dynamic, improvisational. They might work in design, travel journalism, or something that allows movement-freelancing, consulting, entrepreneurship. Routine is their enemy; they structure their days loosely, following inspiration where it leads. They are the friend who texts last-minute: "There’s a new exhibition downtown-meet me in an hour?"