Blue Jeans Versace Eau de Toilette

Blue Jeans Versace Eau de Toilette

Jeans, a product born in Genoa

Jeans, a product born in Genoa

To better understand this fragrance, let’s first look at the origins of denim. Of course, jeans didn’t always have the shape and look we know them today. Initially, in the 16th century, it was a cotton canvas mixed with linen or wool to create a sort of futaine, a coarse cloth worn by the poor. It was at this time that the predecessor of modern jeans began to be exported to England, from the port of Genoa. The name of the city was then pronounced “jeane” by the English, which gave birth to jeans, widely popularized then by Levi Strauss, in 1853.

Jeans come on a Versace bottle

Endowed with a blue color, the bottle of Versace unmistakably echoes the jeans itself. Moreover, it immediately seduces with its little vintage side, on the border of eras. Its shape, meanwhile, is inspired by old soda bottles, returnable and produced in glass. The name of this perfume, Blue Jeans, is proudly displayed in yellow writing with a very western style. The Blue Jeans perfume by Versace surprises us as much with its bottle as with its cylindrical box. The latter is also covered with blue jeans and reveals in its center a sheriff’s star bearing the design of a cowboy playing the guitar. Guess what the young man in question is wearing? Jeans of course!

The fresh and aromatic scent of Blue Jeans

Belonging to the family of aromatic perfumes, Blue Jeans is ideal in any season and is intended for all the free and relaxed men of our time. Light without lacking in temperament, it begins with an extreme liveliness resulting from citrus fruits. Its top notes also consist of bergamot and lime. His heart, meanwhile, displays a more assertive masculinity, resulting from patchouli and vetiver. A more elegant and floral touch of freesia nevertheless nuances the whole. In its base, Blue Jeans finally plays in the register of sensuality and seduction. It is wrapped in a more milky sandalwood. Its masculinity results from a duo of cedar and oakmoss. Vanilla makes everything more sulphurous and invites people to come together.

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