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Christopher Lee Vanilla Tea review – bright, loud vanilla with almost no tea in sight. If you’re hunting for a strong, affordable vanilla, this one might be your move. Welcome back to The InScentive Collection, I’m your host Brandon, and today we’re diving into another release from Christopher Lee, aka “the Christopher Lee fragrance man himself.” The name on the bottle is Vanilla Tea, but on my skin this wears way more like a bright vanilla citrus fragrance than anything I’d call a traditional tea scent. 00:00 – Intro & who is Christopher Lee “fragrance man” 00:35 – First look at Vanilla Tea bottle and decant 01:05 – First spray: not the tea fragrance I expected 01:40 – Full note breakdown: ginger, bergamot, vanilla, more 02:30 – Inspired by Nishane Ane – quick thoughts on that 03:10 – What I actually smell: bright vanilla citrus, little tea 04:00 – Missing Turkish rose, low ginger, boosted sweetness 04:45 – Is this really Vanilla Tea or just a vanilla scent? 05:30 – Performance and value: $79 and “eternal” longevity 06:20 – Who should try this and who should skip it 07:00 – Final thoughts & comment questions about Christopher Lee We get it “into the spirit” with a very generous decant and a proud atomizer, and from the first spray I’m surprised. I was expecting something earthy, green, maybe even a little dirty and tea-forward. Instead, the first thing that hits me is vanilla – loud and clear, right from the top, even though it’s officially listed down in the base. Note breakdown (from the script) Top notes: ginger, bergamot, pink pepper, green notes Heart notes: cardamom, blackcurrant, Turkish rose Base notes: vanilla, benzoin, sandalwood, cedar, patchouli, ambergris, musk Concept: inspired by Nishane Ane On my skin, Vanilla Tea comes across as a bright, sweet vanilla with citrus lift. I definitely pick up the bergamot and a strong, prominent vanilla early. The blackcurrant seems to be helping amplify that sweetness, and there’s a general “green notes” vibe in the background, but I’m not really getting much ginger or Turkish rose, and this doesn’t read as a fougère or a true tea scent. Here’s the key: I don’t usually love vanilla as a main note – I often find it too sweet – but I still think this is a nice vanilla. It smells like Christopher really leans into vanilla as a signature: very strong, very forward, and potentially mass appealing if you’re into that style. Where this one really shines is value and performance. At around $79, you’re getting a lot of juice and, in your words, these are “eternal” fragrances. I fully expect Vanilla Tea to sit on my elbow until I go to bed. Performance-per-dollar is high, especially compared to some far more expensive scents that don’t last. Would I personally recommend it? If you’re chasing a realistic tea fragrance: probably not. If you want a big, bright vanilla with great longevity for the price: this is worth a look. Let me know in the comments: Are you a fan of Christopher Lee’s reviews and his fragrances? How does Vanilla Tea wear on your skin – more vanilla, more tea, or something else? If you enjoy honest breakdowns like this, hit like, subscribe, and join The Accord — one clean email a month, zero fluff. Shot on: Fujifilm GFX (Medium Format), DJI Osmo Mobile 3, DJI.