Hermessence Epice Marine Hermès for women and men

Hermessence Epice Marine Hermès for women and men

main accords
aromatic
fresh spicy
marine
warm spicy
woody
citrus
earthy
salty
mossy
whiskey

Perfume rating 3.84 out of 5 with 513 votes

Hermessence Epice Marine by Hermès is a Aromatic Spicy fragrance for women and men. Hermessence Epice Marine was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Jean-Claude Ellena.

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Pros

Pros

7
1
Great for coastal summer occasions
5
0
Captures the scent of the sea
4
1
Well-balanced and not too heavy nor light
3
0
Refined and uncluttered structure
3
1
Clean and fresh opening
2
2
Glorious and artistic fragrance
2
2
Highly nuanced and complex
1
2
Very masculine fragrance
Cons

Cons

6
2
Strong cumin notes may be off-putting to some
2
2
Not suitable for people who dislike cumin
1
2
Disappointing for some
1
2
Not very different from Bigarade Éditions de Parfums
1
4
May smell like body odor due to cumin dominance
0
2
Not very pleasurable for some skin types
0
3
Similar to other fragrances by the same creator

Note: The pros and cons listed on this page have been generated using the artificial intelligence system, which analyzes product reviews submitted by our members. While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, we cannot guarantee the complete accuracy or reliability of the AI-generated pros and cons. Please read the full reviews and consider your own needs and preferences before making a purchasing decision.

Fragram Photos

Fragrance Notes


Sea Notes
Cumin
Cardamom
Bergamot
Vetiver
Oakmoss
Whiskey
Hazelnut
Sesame
Cinnamon

Fragrantica® Trends is a relative value that shows the interest of Fragrantica members in this fragrance over time.

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All Reviews By Date

komail

This is a really wonderful take on a marine salty fragrance. The cumin adds complexity and texture that is really alluring. It comes off very authentic and adds a seaweed like feel. I am not a big fan on marine fragrances but this one is growing on me.

49424

Whereas J-C Ellena's creations are niche quality most of the time I have to say that this is a "miss". Cumin can be a tricky ingredient and here I find it too prominent. I can understand why some may perceive a body odour, which to my nose is unattractive, and on top of that the price point certainly does not justify splashing out on a bottle.

D@ne

Does anyone remember Declaration Bois Bleu? Same idea here, but done on an Hermes budget.

The Cartier is long gone, so it's nice to have it revamped and made more luxurious.

Enrium

The Hermessence line, a collection of Hermès-themed olfactory watercolours by Jean-Claude Ellena, are consistently good, but they tend to be likes rather than loves for me. Epice Marine is what it says on the tin - a spicy marine scent. I don't typically choose marine scents, as I find that they can veer close to window cleaner territory, but EM is one of the best I've tried. The aromatic spices marry beautifully with the salty marine accord, making for an unusual, artistic scent that manages to be wearable without it descending into an unfortunate dinner-like scent. Due to M. Ellena's talent and signature light touch, EM is a marvel.

EM has a surprising light, boozy opening, paving the way nicely to the spicy accord. Led by cardamom, it is peppery and warm with a slight nutty undertone, bringing it to gourmand territory. Cinnamon follows, rounding it out with its warm sweet-spiciness. The salty undertone keeps it breezy and fresh, giving the warm spice a lift. There is a light lemongrass edge, adding herbal freshness.

As it dries down, a light chypre base comes to the fore, with soft mossiness emerging thanks to the oakmoss note. Alongside the marine accord, it gives EM a seaweed effect, perfectly on-theme. Soft woody notes round it out to perfection, and it fades to a salty, musky skin scent. Sillage and longevity are moderate.

A perfectly unisex warm weather scent, EM is a masterful marriage of spicebomb and marine, making for a creative, cohesive, high-quality scent that makes perfect sense. Excellent. 4.5/5.

Kake718

I crave this scent. It's very a comforting, marine herbal cologne.
Osmathe Yunnan and Epice Marine are always in my collection.

microcastle

lemongrass!

ShelbyKB

This is one that you most definitely need to test on your skin to get the full picture! Smell it directly from the cap, or spray it into the air - SALINE SOLUTION! Do it right and spray it onto your clean, moisturized skin, and you'll smell of a sexy, well groomed man :)

The heat of slightly sticky skin is where the magic happens!

Initial spray: You're immediately hit with a fresh, aromatic spiciness with quite a bit to disect! Cinnamon, a blend of light, uplifting spices (hey cumin!) , a wave of something fresh, and whiskey with a sprig of mint thrown in! The boozy note is refreshing, not woody, smoky, or sweet.

I do not detect any seaweed, saltiness, or anything with an ambergris/fishy odor, which is a huge plus for me! No bergamot or citrus, either (bummer)!

This is a classic, slightly more refined masculine "I just shaved and I know I smell really f*n good" aftershave scent! Leans very much to the masculine side. While refreshing and uplifting, I don't think it's a scent I'd reach for as a woman (obviously, wear whatever you want)!!

It does get slightly more warm and cocooning as it starts to dry down. That little sprig of mint subsides, and the moss starts to reveal itself.

I knew I had smelled this before....... Gillette mens shaving cream (the one with the frosted green cap and blue bottle)! I'm not trying to reduce this fragrance down to something less than.....I LOVE the smell of that clear blue gel and I'm glad I've found a way to get it to stick around longer, post shave!

If you have the money to spare, go for it! If not, lather your body head to toe in blue gel and make yourself a shower drink!

Longevity: Will report back! In my experience, it was pretty average - weak.
Sillage: Moderate if oversprayed, 2 sprays gives you a skin scent.

alphairone

Has Jean-Claude Ellena ever visited Cape Cod? I imagine not, but Épice Marine gives me that "dunes of the cape" sensation, sans piña coladas. This has the ozone of the shores first and foremost, reminiscent of jaunts to Chatham or P-Town in the summertime. Of course, peel that layer away and we do have the cumin and cardamom that we all know and love from Cartier's Declaration, but it's more refined and mingling with the other moving parts here.

A savory, toasted sesame seed quality, almost reminding me a bit of freshly baked bread (I believe this might've been intentional from what I read regarding the concept), contrasting with this mineral-like quality in the heart, a bit salty and cool. It's sort of like lime and vetiver combined together creating this effect. It was certainly a courageous move on Ellena to endeavor such combinations that would in less disciplined hands (see Beaufort London with Lingum Vitae, review coming soon) resulting in something jarring, even nauseating. Here, it is so round, smooth, and makes sense to my nose.

Of course some may think that this is too similar to Declaration or even more so to Roudnitska's masterpiece Eau d'Hermes, but I would hazard to say that maybe these are cursory conclusions, as Épice Marine pushes the template into new and compelling territory with the edition of maritime and vaguely gourmand elements. I wouldn't blame one for not going full bottle (as with all from the Hermessence line) unless they find an eye-catching discount as I had with my own. Be that as it may, I am sure lucky to have a good quantity of this delicious juice with which to lavish myself.

ronin.jose

It's not what I expected, but interesting nonetheless. I'm usually sensitive to cumin, but I don't get it here in any way. Instead, I'm hit with something very bright, citric, and herbal. I can't properly tell what it is but it reminds me of lemongrass, and something gingery, giving it a herbaceous bite. It could be cilantro? I'm not really sure. I sprayed it on my skin to spend time with it so I can see how it will behave as time progresses. I'm expecting the cumin would appear later on but it pretty much stays like it for the rest of its life span.

On the drydown though, there is something aquatic trying to peak through that sheet of herbaceous citric note as that accord settles down. I'm talking about calone aquatic, but this no way a L'Eau d'Issey. What I like about the drydown is that as the herbaceous citric note settles down, it merges smoothly with that subtle aquatic note that oddly, has a tiny vanillic-ambery tone in it. Still, it is no way a straight up vanillic, powdery amber. On this stage, those aforementioned subtle suggestion of accords that binds with the toned-down herbaceous citric note, merely gives the fragrance a really nice aquamarine fantasy life of mermaids and corals and sea blue tones in an expensive, hotel amenities. Ok, maybe this is too refined smelling for a toiletry product, but this is a scent that I want to bathe in while in a vacation, hahahaha.

BeardedIris

Cumin and cold sea salt with cardamon, a twist of bergamot and not much more. A refined, gentle moss-and-vetiver combination joins in the dry down

A review could probably write itself: Hermès quality, Jean-Claude Ellena, coastal summer scent, clean, uncluttered structure. But could anyone fall in love with this one? It's such an archetype, the airy spice cologne. So neutral and inoffensive (unless you're a cumin-phobe). Every time I smell it I think yeah, that's pleasant, and go back to what I was doing. Having said that, I like it more and more as it dries and the vetiver and salt come together (a faint echo of Goutal's much-missed Les Colognes: Vetiver). This could be a reliable, daytime, office-friendly workhorse perhaps? It has very good longevity. I'll give it another go in warmer weather, maybe it deserves a day at the seaside.

brokesta911

Hermes Epice Marine (2013) - spiced sea - At first, it was a love and hate relationship with this #jeanclaudeellena creation. That Cumin note that can resemble sweaty skin was too much for me. But the more I used it, I realized it had more to share. It starts off citrus-spicy with distinct notes of Cardamom and Cumin, but that transitions to a spicy salty sea accord. It gets further refinement in the drydown with grassy Vetiver and I also get a Sesame or nutty backbone that rounds the heart. In a way, this perfume gives best homage to his mentor #edmondroudnitska as I smell facets of Epice Marine across Rochas Femme, Hermes Eau’d Hermes and Dior’s Diorella.

tessture

I can definitely detect the sea water aspects here, but the cumin is way too strong and takes over the whole thing. It’s not quite sweat, but it smells like food. Ginger, coriander, strong strong cumin with a backing of seawater, so like eating chinese cumin at the seaside. Not something I’d ever wear.

Nooshin (Atghia)

Another Mr. Ellena masterpiece artwork in hermesesence line. This fragrance is the result of corresponded a perfumer & a chef. When Ellena met Olivier Roellinger (French chef) an idea was born: the new Hermessence fragrance depend on flavor powerful effect.
.
As Mr. Ellena several other experiences about spicy fragrances such as Un Jardin Apres la Mousson & Cartier Declaration, Epice Marine used huge spices blend too: Cumin, Cardamom, black pepper, sesame beside woods specially vetiver for creating an aromatic spicy vibe. But here we can also find some citrusy, sparking & fresh clean vibe. Salty lime & toasted cumin is wrapped around seaside woods. I like this unique & savory Marine scent.

Djedi

To me the ''niche version'' of Déclaration. Spicy opening of cumin and a heavy dose of bergamot or lime. The scent is fresh, but I wouldn't classify it as an aquatic. More suitable for men I'd say. If you don't like or despise cumin, I'd look for something else as the cumin in this is quite noticealbe in my opinion. Once everything has settled down, there are some woods coming through but the cumin and lime are still the dominant notes. If you enjoy Déclaration, it's almost safe to say you'll enjoy this. I don't smell any boozy qualities in this, and only in the very far drydown you could perhaps pick up on some slight nutty sweetness.

Performance is okay, doesn't hold more than 4-5 hours with fairly decent projection during the first 30-45 minutes, and then becoming a skin scent from there on. Somewhere in the middle of the Hermessence collection in terms of overall rating.

6,5/10

retronig

All I can smell is cumin in this fragrance. I'm so glad I only purchased a decant of this. Shame I heard very good things about this scent.

clintjr82

Bad. Smells like something a pirate would smell like at sea, smelly body odor with whiskey on him. I would not even buy this for my 74 year uncle and he likes strong masculine fragrances.

ramin1215

Martin Eden (Luca Marinelli ) by Pietro Marcello 2019
Martin Eden by Jack London 1909
+++++++++++++++++++++
Sunset by Felix Vallotton
++++++++

Freddie Mercury

This literally smells like B.O!

ajagrze

This is Ellena revisiting Declaration yet again. It's hard to blame the guy, though. The original structure was brilliant. What is more, every reinterpretation had the necessary twist that made it anything but redundant. Épice Marine is no exception. If Voyage d'Hermes was the most abstract variation on the theme, then this one is the most down to Earth, carnal one. Basically, it's the smell of a sexy, sweaty pirate. What's more to be desired?

Waterman11

Simple honest opinion..this is the worst fragrance I have ever smelled.

fihe

I had a chance to try this out during atarilynx's blind sniff event. To me, it smells like Bigelow Lemon Lift tea, which is basically a spiced lemon black tea. Smells lovely, but I wish it didn't become a skin scent so quickly.

miracleborgtech

The fragrance of yachts, marinas, and boardwalks! Striking marine fragrance done in that ineffable Hermes continental style. Opens with cumin and citrus . . . shockingly gorgeous. I say shocking b/c cumin is not a favorite perfume note for me, and yet it smells exquisite here. It's actually the foundation for the whole accord, and this is the first time I've loved, even craved, cumin. It gives the scent a foreign flair that smells like a spicy expensive soap. The overall mix of notes has a distinct European flavor, each complimenting the clean-spicy-cumin-soapy aroma. . The bergamot is crisp, and combined with excellent quality sea notes, makes you feel like you are being windswept by an exotic sea-breeze.

Finely tuned and elegant, it's what you might expect of seafaring sophistication done by Jean-Claude Ellena. I can imagine him at a high-tech perfume organ, evaluating each molecule of scent to achieve the right balance. I doubt anyone else could make cumin so alluring and glamorous. He even instilled a slight translucence, like the wind and air . . . while keeping the sillage and longevity pleasing. This isn't the perfume of pirates, but rather an admiral of the boardroom!

Claire Dessert

Very enticing! Fresh, sparkling, invigorating scent with bergamot, spicy notes and a generous splash of sea water. It has a remarkable mineral touch, from a dry vetiver and calone. Now calone is an ingredient that usually makes me cringe, but trust Ellena to stay away from any 1990's horror. He just keeps the mineral side of calone, while masking any of its cucumber/melon aspects with a clever sprinkling of exotic spices.

It is fantastic to put on, for it truly is a seaside holiday in a bottle....its initial blast is so uplifting it gives me goosebumps. However, within minutes, its rolling opening fades into the tiniest of whispers. Now I'm not obsessed with sillage or staying power, but this fragrance has the performance of a soft eau de cologne. And for that it is way overpriced. For my wallet, at least...

Heifrank

Aria Grace said epice Marine was compared by many to virgin island water? What? Its nothing like viw at all, not even A bit close. Viw is a coconut citrus, very gently and tropical. Epice marine is strong spices like cumin and cardemom, which is not present in viw. Have read trough most reviews here because I found this comparison interesting, but could not find any statements about epice marine and viw. Epice Marine is very close to Declaration by Cartier.

Ok, so here’s what it smells like. You need lemon juice and a sweaty shirt, preferrably from an old sailor man. Then you strain the juice through the armpits. The result is epice marine. Not for everyone.

peppermoon

Epice Marine opens with a punch of cumin, fresh squeezed lime and a realistic sea salt scent. The ocean scent is high quality and doesn't smell brackish or fishy, just clear and salty-fresh. I'm loving the lime juice (and it does smell like lime to me, not bergamot), but to be honest I'm not a big fan of cumin notes, which smell like human armpit sweat to me. Luckily the cumin note becomes tamer over time. Gradually I notice a slight "laundry clean musk" accord, which turns into a vintage soap smell (mixed white floral and oakmoss?). I detect no booziness at all, though I do smell the woody notes in the background at times - a sort of dirty cedar and a little bug spray (what's up, vetiver?).

Overall, Epice Marine smells like sunning yourself next to a man on a towel on the beach. You're both a little sweaty from the sun but the ocean's spray and the margaritas have kept you refreshed. Then you go to the hotel to shower and wash off all the sand with some hotel soap, and collapse for a mid day nap. I like certain notes (the lime and ocean breeze are fantastic!) but I don't see myself wearing it. It would smell better on my guy. Well crafted though. Better longevity and sillage than most Hermessence scents.

rjf

Lime opening, aquatic, Mexican food. OK.

45yoGWM

Hey sailor.

I find this fragrance immensely comforting. It reminds me of being near the sea, on a cold day with the fog rolling in, heavy grey sweater on. It's beautiful and my favorite "aquatic" fragrance by far... I've tried many, and nothing else is vaguely in the same league. I wear it all the time, and it's neck and neck with Poivre Samarcadre for my favorite JCE scent. Easily one of my top 5 favorite fragrances.

Oddly, I have not tried Declaration, which many reviewers are comparing this to, so that's next on my list to sample. I respect that many people do not like the delicacy of Ellena's work (considering each fragrance costs a zillion dollars), but I love the subtleties of his approach... Also, I never thought of body odor until I read the other reviews... and just to be clear, that evocation in Epice Marine is super-subtle... but I can appreciate that for some folks it's a deal-breaker. (For me, it's a plus.)

tayyabforyouth

Starts off with marine and bergamot notes as well as a large dose of cumin. Very interesting fragrance and unique. Resembles a pirate ship with spices inside it. However, the aquatic scents don't last long and it immediately becomes intense cumin for the rest of its duration. Sillage and longevity are both weak. Good for uniqueness but way too pricey for a cumin fragrance. If you want that, go for Cartier Declaration or al-Rehab's Khaliji.

2/5

andrewatic

Épice Marine is beyond any doubt work of a genius, to begin with. Its similarity to Declaration, mentioned by some reviewers, is vague and superficial only. In side by side testing, Épice Marine shows way more finesse, depth and much higher grade of complexity over Declaration. So much so, that perceiving these two as the same or similar, might suggest anosmia, partial one at least. In fact, it’s like comparing old Fiat Bambino with a brand new Bentley – they both have something in common, like four wheels and the ability to drive. But that’s where the similarity ends, and the rest is two different worlds!

I personally am not, nor ever have been a fan of aquatic compositions. In fact I sincerely and uniformly hate them. However, Épice Marine is a wonderful and welcome exception that I happened to discover by accident.

The first whiff of this multi-faceted gem had brought back some wonderful memories. It instantly transported me back to one of my most favorite places on the coast of South Africa. Place flooded with lazy afternoon sunlight, filled with salty smell of the ocean mixed with the relaxing atmosphere of the nearby tiny seaside restaurant. What a perfect, perfect illusion! And that’s precisely what a good fragrance is supposed to do! Evoke feelings, emotions and revive memories. To me, it doesn’t get any better than this, so…I walked out with 200 ml bottle in my hands, and I’m so glad I did!

intersport

On each trip to Paris over the last years I stopped at Epices Roellinger - a location that already on an olfactory only level sits right next to, or even surpasses the plethora of close by perfumery destinations. So when this collaboration was announced a few years ago, I was most excited to get hold of it. Sadly it is not convincing - many of the Hermessences can take some time to be fully appreciated, but with this one - to join the chorus here - it's just way too close to Declaration, to even to detect the Calone requires a good mix of wishful thinking and endless concentration. This is a massively missed opportunity. The reference maritime, spicy fragrance remains the original Goutal Vétiver in the EdT concentration and or the more synthetic gem, Kenzo pour Homme.

beavisbonce

There's many comparisons to cartier declaration which are well founded. Who was it created green Irish tweed and cool water at the same time? It's the same scenario here. It might be creed and now it's Hermes. No, don't fall for it. They took Jean Claude ellena's declaration and exploited it in the name of Hermes and no way should this command the retail price.

cocolover56

Tried this with no intention of enjoying it - but, surprise, I do!

Not one for marine scents, but Ive a 4mL sample and I'm totally knocked over. totally spicy and salty, massive cumin and cardamom. How strange.

Not worth $300, but still lovely.

jpnose32

Received a sample and really enjoying it. Definitely Cumin is the initial note that strikes you and then the sea salt. Not a blind buy but an interesting choice for a man.

RB75

This is amazing. I smell the cumin, lime, cardamom and vetiver in the background.
But most of all, I smell the salty water.
And it is beautiful. Its a piece of art.
To me this perfume is somehow a bit cold and sharp but I still love it.
Its like a walk on the beach during winter season.
On my skin it lasts forever. I apply it on top of my arms at 7am and can still smell it by 10 pm.

I only have a sample of it.
If someone has a bottle they are tired off and want to sell pls drop me a message.

StellaDiverFlynn

Upon spraying Epice Marine, I perceive an almost laundry-like clean white musk with a faint touch of fresh transparent citrus. But it soon gets overrun by salty sea breeze bringing along fragrant cardamom and cumin. The spices here exhibit a rather cold feeling, which complements the marine theme perfectly; their woody undertone makes a seamless transition with the vetiver in the background which acts like the anchor of a boat; the spiciness cuts off the possible "fishy" connotation of the algae-like saltiness, and transforms it into something much more savoury like caviar. Moreover, the cumin here is neither sharp nor sweaty to my nose; instead, it has a subtle unsweetened woody nuttiness rounding off the scent elegantly.

From then on, Epice Marine remains largely unchanged as a salty spicy fragrance with a clean white musk looming underneath, although there are times when this clean white musk resurfaces, the combination of the squeaky cleanness and the salty spiciness makes me uneasy.

The sillage of Epice Marine is mostly close to skin, and the longevity is around 8 hours.

Initially, I was not impressed by Epice Marine, perceiving it as a run-of-the-mill aquatic men's cologne. However, after reading the PR story about its creation published on Vanity Fair, where Ellena talked about how he chose roasted cumin to get rid of the sweaty aspect while preserving a nuttiness, etc, all the pieces clicked and I started to see the intrinsic charm of Epice Marine.

Even though marine fragrances are not my favourite type of fragrances, I find the interplay of salty, spicy and nutty facets in Epice Marine quite interesting, even though the white musk is sometimes too sharp to my liking. As a marine fragrance with a spicy, savoury touch, Epice Marine would be an interesting option, but do test before purchase if you happen to have low tolerance to laundry-style white musk.

chridela

This is one of my favourite scents by JC Ellena. I love his transparent style and I find myself reaching for one (or more) of his creations whenever I go on holiday to a tropical destination. I have spent the last week in Maui rotating various Hermes fragrances - Epice Marine, Jardin sur le Toit, Poivre sammarcande) . I love them all but my favourite is EM. Off the top I get cumin and cardomom, then in the middle, a citrussy seaweed vibe and in the base a vetiverish mossy note. Performance is satisfactory (could be better) and I have received compliments on it. At first whiff, one would think this is more suited for a guy to wear, but I think it is truly unisex. It certainly is not a girly floral-fruity-sweet fragrance and perhaps in a former life, I would not dream of wearing this. However, as my taste in fragrance evolves, I find myself reaching for these more unique offerings. I know of no comparable fragrance, save for maybe Heeley's Sel Marine. This is a one-of-a-kind beauty that reminds me why I so dearly appreciate the art of perfumery.

mohsen95

5/10

Raidthesaladbar

I love the idea of a "salty" perfume. I've been testing quite a few marine fragrances lately, like Miller Harris' Fleur de Sel (too herbal) and Heeley's Sel Marin (impressively realistic, but who wants to smell like tangy seaweed?).

Epice Marine finally brought my search to an end. Ellena's signature transparent style seems predestined for this recreation of an ocean breeze. The opening pairs salt with citric freshness. Over time, hints of cumin and cardamom appear, but they never step into the foreground or distract from the basic theme of airy saltiness. It's fresh and invigorating, but the spices also give it warmth and character. I can't wait to wear this when spring comes.

On a semi-related note: You can buy 60ml of the Hermessence fragrances as a set of 4 small vials, of any fragrance combination you choose - at almost the same per-ml-price as the big bottles. This idea SERIOUSLY needs to catch on. Take note, other perfume houses.

Calvini

I was surprised that it reminds me of Tom Ford London a little (must be the cumin), but much fresher and wearable! I also smell a good chunk of cardamon, which reminded me of Ellena's other creations. Just like some mentioned, I was initially repulsed by the idea of a marine/aquatic scent (not because of the sweetness, but the bitterness that comes after), but I was utterly impressed by this fragrance! One of the most masculine fragrance in the collection; I like it more than Vetiver Tonka!

kingofengland

I have samples of fragrances offered in the 1980's by the company formerly known as Synarome, to illustrate use of their speciality Algenone. These samples are quite close to epice marine, but lacking some of its sophistication. Algenone is a watery or marine note with some resemblance to Helional.

The Brittany restaurant idea is attractive and I think this fragrance is spot on. Fresh bread and sea air. The nautical part of Epice Marine is in a similar direction to Heeley's Sel Marin, but without the mintiness of that fragrance.

The topnotes are especially uplifting, the merest hint of cumin, refined delicate and subtle in the best tradition of French perfumery. And then in the heart a fougere aspect with an echo perhaps of Breeze, the toilet soap from the 1950's. Someone also mentioned orangeflower, which seems correct.

Finally the drydown seems to develop an intriguing tonality somewhat akin to carrot seed or linseed oil. A very interesting perfume

midsummer

This fragrance is very very masculine. The fragrance opens fresh and clean, but dries down to a spicy, oak-and-cinnamon mix. It's not my cup of tea for myself - but it would be really great for someone more masculine than me!

sleep2dream

Because of the aquatic notes I was sure I wouldn't like this, but Jean-Claude Ellena managed to surprise me again! Rose Ikebana is one of the only rose perfumes I love, Vanille Galante made me love lily when I was more into oriental or spicy perfumes, Un Jardin Après la Mousson showed I could adore melon in a fragrance... But I didn't believe I would like a spicy aquatic perfume, even from Ellena. I was so wrong.

This is my favourite Hermessence! I couldn't decide before between Vanille Galante, Rose Ikebana and Ambre Narguilé, but Epice Marine is so strange and addictive that it immediately became my favourite.
When I first tested it I thought "oooh cardamom, Kenzo Jungle l'Eléphant !", but with a salty note, and a masculine feel. I wore it during summer, in Japan, and while it's a very spicy and peculiar perfume, it never feels strong, it manages instead to feel fresh and it's not projecting very much, which I really appreciate.
I love curry and while you can immediatly smell the cumin and cardamom, this perfume does not feel foody to me, in fact it feels quite abstract with the aquatic notes. The evolution on skin from the top notes to the dry down is amazing, this is probably my favourite perfume on a humid summer!

evilspin

Well it definitely smells better on dry down. so give it time. It also smells better to other people when you pass by them and the scent is in air instead of you smelling it on yourself. So don't knock it down with your first initial smell.

The smell is a cross between cumin and pepper with citrus spices, the salty ocean crashing on a rocky shore with seaweed being left on the rocks to dry, and a clean fresh out of the shower white soap smell. Its very nice and a def refreshing/spice/aquatic scent. Only for the daring and the mature nose that understands scents. A+

rosecity

I get the marine, cumin, and cardamom notes initially. The cardamom is gone after a few minutes, leaving the aquatic and cumin behind for hours. The dry-down is remarkably similar to Poivre Samarcande on me. The strong aquatic and cumin portions have an unfortunate association with men's cologne (aquatic) poorly masking body odor (cumin). I'm going to give it some time, as this was what I struggled with with Poivre Samarcande. In general, I love J.C.E.'s fragrances, so I'm willing to keep trying it for awhile.

celticelle

One of the most beautiful citrus scents I've ever tried, but it completely fell apart on me within an hour. I know the Hermessence line is supposed to be a type of long-lasting skin scent, but this had no longevity on me at all, as is a typical problem with citrus fragrances. I also tried the Brin de Reglisse, and there you got more of the feel of a longer-lasting skin scent.

If only this would last on me a bit longer, it would definitely be a full bottle purchase, despite the price.

UPDATE: I wore this on a very hot day, and my skin being warm made all the difference in bringing the fragrance out. Also applying it on moisturized skin that had not just been washed in the shower. I had to reapply, but it lasted for the duration of the day.

Liamsardea

More than meets the nose.

A solid offering from the Hermessence line by Jean-Claude Ellena.

Once again, I cannot speak from experience – I seem just a bit too young to recall any serious fads in fragrance and I can merely read up on previous events. In the mid 90’s it was all about the ‘aquatic’ and funnily enough now in 2014 we have the Oud obsession.

‘Aquatic’ sprouts much unneeded fear and trepidation in the hearts and noses of many fragrances fanatics and connoisseurs all around the world. I just missed the early to mid 1990’s rage for L’Eau D’issey, CK One and Acqua Di Gio – So I guess I consider myself blessed, or something like that. The colognes/EdTs laden with citruses, watery notes and calone with the distinct scent of melon and sweet fruit turned from something supposedly new age, vibrant and rejuvenating to a rather offensive waft of fragrance impetuously worn and sprayed on without consideration of others. There’s a sickly sweetness from the aromatic aquatics that sets it apart from citrusy colognes, making it invariably overbearing upon an overly generous application.

Whilst the inescapable goal of aquatics is to smell like… well to smell like sea and salt water (duh): being all blue, salty, green, mossy, driftwood-y, seaweed-y and all that jazz, it is also important to keep those notes down to a minimum. The goal for a fragrance to smell predominately like sun-touched skin from a Mediterranean sun, a towel-dried body with a fine layer of sea salt or just plainly the ocean can often be a little quixotic or just unrealistic. I feel that shouldn’t be focal point in this style of fragrance, but merely an idea to improve upon; and I’ll even say it myself – even nature is imperfect or more enigmatic than what you once may have thought.

Épice Marine is… I guess a specific sort of aquatic. It would be unfair to call Épice Marine an aquatic because I cannot detect any melon or tropical fruit vibe at all in the mix, so the framework for the typical aquatic is not fulfilled – nevertheless this merely contains a smidgen of calone, the default aquatic note.

It opens freshly, vibrant and awakening. It has two distinct features from the opening few moments: It delivers a beautiful briny punch of bergamot and orange freshly picked and squeezed with the warm gourmand hit of toasty cumin and cardamon. Only the slightest aspect of cumin’s sweaty character is revealed and the bittersweet pungency floats along in the opening already rejecting the aquatic model. If you smell sternly a beautiful honey-hazelnut whisky note comes through with all of the complexity still attached. The facets of wet wood, charred casks, sweet grass and peat all make an appearance ultimately making you swoon and shiver in rapturous pleasure.

Considering this, this is exactly what you can expect from a collaboration between the master impressionist Jean-Claude Ellena and the three Michelin starred spice king Olivier Roellinger. The inspiration for this fragrance is steered in a direction stemming from mutual respect for each other’s craft and the olfactic delights each entail. Born from an encounter in Cancale, Brittany, the admiration for what the location contains ultimately lead to this fragrance. The aroma of the sea, the meddling tones of blue and grey in the sky and on the shore with the nasal perception of spice (èpice); the cold sea almost contradicting the warm spice transported by the pirate trade with the intriguing smell of rope, rotting wood, sand and shingle fusing together to create a deep, storytelling fragrance of adventure, trade and time.

Anywho, I am certain there is a virtually innumerable amount of rare and exotic spices in the mix and rightly so. The sweet roundness of cardamon and the woody roasted character of hazelnut deviates from some of the grassiness of the vetiver in the blend. The smell of toasted sesame seeds adds a level of comfort whilst the merest amount of oakmoss provides depth and realism.

So I guess, by the term ‘aquatic’ you wanted to provoke the smell of the sea, evoke the grit of sand and pebbled shorelines and the scent of sweet brine and wave smashed wooden ships then this is the best you can get.

I’m going to label Ellena ‘Master Teleporter’. Smell and you shall see why – this time we go to a cold and grey sea shore. 5/5

Mr. TomFordHermessence

Wow, Epice Marine by Hermessence is artwork in a bottle.

Imagine soft top notes of mediterranean spices with subtle drops of top shelf brown rum, and then the with hints of orange and spritz of lemon along with freshly grounded cinnamon in the center. Finally in the base is probably one of the most beautiful clean marine-oceanic blue notes ever composed followed by smoky wood.

Just a brilliant and breathe taking composition for not just a typical aquatic, but more like a marine. Seriously, just give it time to develop, and you'd be somewhat hard press to find anything that could match or compare.

I hope this isn't too long; I had an opportunity to stop by Hermes in Chicago, and decided to sample Epice Marine. I sprayed it on a card, and instantly didn't care for it. Apparently, after getting back in the car, I laid the test strip in the cupholder next to my cellphone. The next day while driving my nose detected something fresh and delicate, after looking in the cupholder sure enough it was test-strip, and hot damn I hypnotized.

Epice Marine is honorable of a good trial; Not for only 1-day but more like 3-to-4days.

nero77

It would not be fair to call Epice Marine an "aquatic" fragrance, since the word "aquatic" has usually meant calone, melon/watermelon notes mixed with a little salt and a hint of musk. This is not what is on offer here.

This fragrance was a collaboration between Jean-Claude Ellena, the perfumer, and chef Olivier Roellinger. Ellena has made a fragrance inspired by two things... a love of spices, and the coast of Brittany. He uses cumin, cardamom and cinnamon, along with whiskey and other notes, to evoke the smell of a rocky shore, complete with salt air and a hint of that seaweed aroma on the atlantic coast.

That said, here's what I get out of it. As soon as I sprayed this, I knew it was a gourmand for me. I don't mean gourmand as in chocolate or caramel etc. This reminded me of food, specifically, the spices used to put on fish dressings and salads. I cook fish, and I use fresh lime, dry cumin, garlic and a hint of pimento to spice up the fish. As soon as I sprayed this that is what I got. An incredibly fresh lemon drizzled over fresh fish with spices. It's incredibly evocative and refreshing.

The cumin note here is not a 'sweaty' one as people would expect, here Ellena has used toasted cumin in the top and mid, which gives it a kind of sesame-like flavour. It's fresh, spicy and nutty all at the same time! I really like this one, but as with all the Hermessence line, the top note fades quickly and you have to keep reapplying. Still a good one though. Recommended try.

jhitt793

As with his other offerings within the Hermessence line, Jean-Claude Ellena expresses his artistic gifts in capturing an olfactory memory in his most recent creation; Epice Marine. I must admit that the opening burst of cumin (though masterfully balanced with bergamot) was slightly off putting at first. Thankfully these top notes are left to scintillate away, leaving a breadth of artistic nuances behind to discover. Anyone who has visited the oceanside will appreciate the way in which Ellena has captured its marine notes in this fragrance. Cumin, cardamom, cinnamon and sesame intermingle here to create the salty, briny ocean air. It is here a said "algae note" can be detected, which lends a watery accord. Vetiver with its woody, vegetal qualities reminds me of the elegant grasses which dot the sand dunes and dance in the sea breeze. Lastly, there are subtle notes of whiskey and oak moss in the base which add a layer of smokiness and soften the salty/marine notes. It is wonderful to see what a great mind and artistic genius can create when he is given complete creative license. Recently nominated for 2014 Fifi in the best luxury fragrance category, and very well deserved of the recognition. (121)

deadidol

It held my interest for a few hours, and I enjoyed some of the raunchier aspects of algae and cumin, but it didn’t grab me in any meaningful way. It felt more retrogressive than forward thinking, and the fact that it seemed so buffed and polished, juxtaposed against a general lack of bombast, seemed like a deflation of sorts. With that said, I appreciated that it wasn't an imposition to wear, and I think it’s a scent that would compliment rather than dominate the wearer’s skin. The balance struck between nice and noxious was also noteworthy, but it just wasn’t enough to win me over.

Note-wise, it went on somewhat grungy with distinct dry spices (cumin / salt) over a mossy seaweed, but neither were pushed to threatening levels, and the scent maintained a somewhat old-school impression merged with Declaration's musty, sweaty notes. There appeared to be something resinous and slightly balsamic merging the more prominent notes, but I’m not entirely sure what it was. It ended quite mossy with a norlimbanol cardboard-ish thing at the very last stages. As with most of the Hermessence line, it was short-lived and tastefully diaphanous.

rickyrebarco

I like this scent more and more each time I wear it. I have given it a number of trials on my skin before writing this review. I agree that the first time you try it, Epice Marine seems like a rather simple salty sea scent, but I have found lovely depths to it on re-trials. It's a well done mix of salty sea scent and spices- the cumin note does not overpower and I think it is beautifully balanced with the whiskey note, the nuts and the big salty sea note. Makes me think of sitting at a bar near the ocean with a cup of hazelnut cappucino with whiskey added and a plate of some kind of spicy food. And maybe a couple of sweaty sailors walking by :-) This is lovely layered with Ambre Gris, which I know a lot of people do not like either, but I do.

It feels like a North Sea winter scent and I love the ocean in the winter, the wonderful salty scent mixed with warmer scents of cooking, fires, woods, moss, etc.

Shtefitza

This is a very interesting scent! I gotta admit I am a little biased. I love Cancale, the beaches of Brittany (Bretagne, its oysters and I love Provence. The combination of those two natural settings, combined with spices intrigued me. The scent does transport me to nature, a layered experience with somewhat "dry" undertone. I love Elena's "Jardin sur le Toit" as well. They are diametrically opposite. Le Toit is mild, fruity, grassy, I can almost feel the freshness of the dew. With Epice Marine I feel awakening harshness of the sand, oysters and salt. Master Elena builds a story where the perfume wearer can transport her(him)self. Almost as if I was reading a book. Similarly I get transported to another landscape when I wear Jardin sur Nil or Mediteranee. Very interesting experiences, I would not wear Nil and Mediteranee though. They are too narrative in my mind. Le Toit and Epice are not that narrative. They are abstract enough so I still remain present im my day, in my workplace, my city. I am not distracted by them. Narrative enough to stirr my imagination. I love how these complicated perfumes stir my emotions, my intelligence... I hope my review is not too confusing... :)

Shtefitza

I read a review on Epice Marine months ago. I looked for it in Europe and California. Cannot wait no more... ordered it last night, blindly. Looking forward to testing it! :)

alfarom

Epice Marine is as interesting as a fireworks show at noon.

I'll probably find myself swimming against the stream here but, honestly, I don't think this is nowhere
close being a successful Ellena.

Yet another iteration (micro-variation) on the Declaration theme. In a nutshell, considering how many times Mr.Ellenà proposed alternate versions of his popular composition, this would have been more appropriately labelled as Declaration V.87.4. It feels just like Apple that keeps on releasing basically the same devices with just a new (re-designed) knob.

They squeazed this poor lemon till the very last drop. Give it a break. Eat a banana.

So, part Declaration, part Voyage with the typical transparent facet of most Hermessences. This time it's something slightly salty, sort of calone-y. That's it. Smells ok (no more than that) but the big problem is it's neither as brilliant as Declaration, nor as honest as Voyage. It's totally lukewarm water sold at uber-fancy prices.

You can build around Epice Marine as much conceptualism as you want but this is just Declaration V.87.4.

I honestly expected everything except what I got. Which in this case doesn't mean surprise.

FAIL

Rating: 4.5/10

Mr. Franco

I like a few Hermessences (love only one) and I really wanted to write a nice review about this one... But I can't! The reason is simple... Ellena's minimalism is making me nervous!!! I can't stand anymore.
The fragrance is not that bad! Buuuut... I can live without it! And for me that's not a good thing.
Starts very citrusy and then... cummin (a lot of), sea notes and whiskey. Projection and  longevity  is average to weak! 
To sum up: another nice fragrance but nothing earthshaking.

On the other hand, today I also got Bois d'Encens by Armani Prive and Tuberose Criminelle by Lutens and I'm in  heaven with both of them... And maybe this is one more reason that helps my brain to put EM in the  "cool but not impressive"  or "could be better -but don't ask me how-" category.

EDIT: OMG! I can't wear it anymore... I tried 4 times. Makes me ill! Not for me... Not in my wardrobe... Bye Felicia!

LupeX

Elena's nouveau addition to the Hermessence collection starts out as refreshing as a sprout of cold spring waters. Laden with notes that are redolent of Neroli & Orange blossoms, cool mint and bergamot. Once it settles, your olfactive palate is intrigued by a coy ambery base that give radiance and warmth to the composition - and very soon a seemingly of out of place semi-sweetness. As an epilogue Epice presents the observer with the spice notes that its nomenclature promised. The accords give a woody sparkly bite to the composition which could lead some to eXperience this fragrance as a 'cleaning products' type fragrance. To my olfactive palate it straddles that line with finesse. EM is all cool seas and a warm summer's sun. It's very comparable to the TOMFORD Private Blends superstar fragrance Neroli Portofino in its drydown stages @ about the 8hr mark when its ambery base makes its appearance. Along with Neroli Portofino this is one of the best aquatic frags you will ever eXperience.
Projection is room filling & Longevity is eXcellent.
Cheers & Smell Well!

michael.j

Monsieur Ellena did not really push himself on this one. It smells very much like another of his creations, Bigarade (Éditions de Parfums), but with boatloads of cumin. The top notes are predictably and satisfyingly fresh, but the cumin in the dry-down dominates everything after the first half hour, skating uncomfortably close to the body odor smell for which cumin has become so infamous in perfumery.

mjkpecwt

huge disappointment with this, dominant by cumin on gourmand side. Not very pleasure on my skin.

This was a recycle of mixing Sel de Vetiver and Declaration with a touch of Bigarade.

ezdravkova

In stores already.. I can't wait to test it (7 more days .. wooo-saaa LOL)

SculptureOfSoul

Honestly, the notes look like a complete mess. If this same notes list was on a new D&G, people would be saying it sounds disgusting and would be predicting a total fail.

That being said, I hope this does turn out to be a dark, "the fog is rolling in" kind of aquatic.

HATORI

The notes feel like awesome n fresh !

 
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