Maria Candida Gentile Gentile men's parfum bottle
© Maria Candida Gentile

Parfum · Aromatic

Gentile

Launched in 2012, Gentile is the house’s eponymous men’s fragrance. A green, dry aromatic: Italian basil on top, geranium and osmanthus at the heart, vetiver in the base. A journey out to the open sea, sober and elegant.
Year · 2012
House · Maria Candida Gentile
Family · Aromatic
Audience · Men

Quick answers

Year and family
2012 · Green aromatic
Olfactory signature
A dry, green aromatic: Italian basil on top, geranium and osmanthus at the heart, vetiver in the base.
Perfumer
Maria Candida Gentile, who signed the house’s eponymous men’s fragrance in 2012.
House
The house’s eponymous men’s fragrance. Maria Candida Gentile.

History

Gentile carries the name of the house and, through it, the perfumer’s own. It is the eponymous men’s fragrance of Maria Candida Gentile, launched in 2012, which she first composed for someone close to her, said to be her son, before making it part of the collection. The gesture says something about the house: a fragrance born of a personal intent, christened with the family name, like a signature set on a bottle.

The house describes it as a “journey out to the open sea,” dedicated to a cosmopolitan, nomadic elegance. Its backbone is an Italian basil, more precisely Ligurian, the aromatic herb par excellence, fresh and faintly peppery, which gives the fragrance its green signature from the first breath. True to her method, the Grasse-trained perfumer works in naturalness, through slow maceration, in a vegan, cruelty-free formula free of phthalates and synthetic colorants.

The heart tempers the aromatic freshness. Geranium brings a rosy, slightly metallic facet, while osmanthus, the flower with hints of apricot and leather, slips in a softer, fruity note the house links to “South Sea flowers.” It is a discreet, restrained floral heart that keeps the aromatic from turning into a plain fresh water and gives it a more dressed hold.

The base is signed by a single noble material: vetiver, a woody, dry, smoky root that gives the fragrance its sobriety and character. The house files Gentile as aromatic and green, at high intensity, a men’s fragrance, while noting that it is also worn by women seeking a mental escape. It is a classically cast masculine, almost Mediterranean, that owes its distinction to concision rather than to opulence.

Olfactory pyramid

Gentile reads in three movements, from the green freshness of basil to the woody dryness of vetiver.

Top
Italian basilgreen aromatic
Heart
Geraniumrosy floral
Osmanthusapricot and leather
Base
Vetiverdry woody root

The through-line is a sober elegance: a green aromatic that moves, from basil to vetiver, toward the dry and woody without ever growing heavy.

Olfactory profile

Gentile opens on a clean green freshness. Italian basil gives an aromatic, herbal, faintly peppery start, instantly recognizable, that sets the fragrance’s Mediterranean character. This is the register of a dressed freshness rather than a cologne.

The heart softens the theme. Geranium extends the freshness with a rosy facet, while osmanthus brings a fruity, leathery sweetness that rounds the aromatic. It is a restrained, elegant heart that serves as a hinge between the brightness of the top and the dryness of the base.

The base makes the fragrance’s sobriety. Vetiver, alone in the base, imposes its woody, dry, faintly smoky root, which signs the staying power and high intensity the house claims, along with its masculine filing. The brightness of the top and the softness of the heart, however, make it easy to wear either way, as the house itself suggests.

Key characteristics

Family
Green aromatic
Concentration
Parfum
Signature note
Italian basil and vetiver
Audience
Masculine, high intensity

When and where to wear

Gentile is a daytime, warm-season fragrance, though its dry vetiver base lets it hold further into the year. Basil and geranium suit spring and summer; the vetiver base gives it a sober presence in the shoulder seasons and works for the office as well as for outings.

Usage markers

Temperatures
At its best from 14 to 28 °C.
Time of day
Daytime, active.
Settings
Everyday, office, travel.
Dosage
2 to 3 sprays, moderate sillage.

Seasonal fit

SeasonFitCritical notes
Spring★★★★Its prime season.
Summer★★★★The green basil comes alive.
Autumn★★★☆The vetiver takes over.
Winter★★★☆Dry yet fresh in the cold.

Context fit

SettingFitUsage recommendation
Everyday★★★★Its reference use.
Office★★★★Sober and clean.
Travel★★★★Its very imagination.
Evening★★★☆In mild weather.
Sport★★★☆Fresh and aromatic.

Similar perfumes

The green aromatic built on vetiver has its classics; a few clarify Gentile’s sobriety.

PerfumeHouse · yearWhy it is close
VétiverGuerlain · 1959The benchmark aromatic vetiver, fresh and woody; the same green, dry backbone, in a more classic, tobacco register.
Vetiver ExtraordinaireFrédéric Malle · 2002A modern vetiver, ample and woody; a kinship of material, more powerful than Gentile’s concision.
Dans tes BrasFrédéric Malle · 2008For its osmanthus and soft facet; useful to place the fruity-leathery grain of Gentile’s heart.

Common questions

Who created Gentile?01
Maria Candida Gentile, the perfumer and founder of the eponymous house, trained in Grasse.
Why does this fragrance carry the house name?02
Gentile is the eponymous men’s fragrance, first composed by the perfumer for someone close to her before joining the collection.
When was Gentile released?03
In 2012.
What are the notes in Gentile?04
Italian basil on top; geranium and osmanthus at the heart; vetiver in the base.
What family does it belong to?05
A green aromatic, per the house.
Is Gentile a men’s fragrance?06
Yes, the house gives it as masculine, at high intensity, while noting that it is also worn by women.
Is the basil in Gentile Italian?07
Yes, a Ligurian basil, the aromatic herb that signs the fragrance’s top.
When should you wear Gentile?08
In spring and summer, during the day; the vetiver base gives it staying power into the shoulder seasons and makes it office-friendly.

See also

Sources

Written from official Maria Candida Gentile documents, checked against specialist databases · Author: Sabrina Carlier · Osmetheca · July 6, 2026