Original: $8.34
-65%$8.34
$2.92The Story
Released in 1984 and composed by Jacques Polge, Coco Eau de Parfum is the opulent spicy-floral that defined the Chanel women's line in the eighties and has stayed in continuous production for more than forty years. Coriander and peach lift the opening, cloves and rose anchor the heart, and a dense amber-labdanum-opoponax base gives it the plush, resinous sillage that the decade's power fragrances were known for. Aromatica carries the Coco Eau de Parfum decant in Bangladesh in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml sizes so you can explore one of the genuine 20th-century Chanel classics without committing to a 100ml bottle.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bulgarian Rose, Coriander, Peach, Jasmine, Mandarin Orange
Heart: Cloves, Rose, Mimosa, Orange Blossom, Clover
Base: Amber, Sandalwood, Opoponax, Tonka Bean, Civet, Vanilla, Labdanum
The Scent
The opening reads warm and slightly fruity, with peach rounding out the coriander and mandarin so the first few minutes feel sweet-spicy rather than sharp. Bulgarian rose settles in underneath the fruit almost immediately, which is what gives Coco its unmistakably floral-oriental signature from the first spray. The heart is where the fragrance earns its reputation: cloves build a warm, slightly dusty spice that most modern releases would not attempt, and rose and orange blossom weave through the clove like threads through a rich textile. Mimosa adds a honeyed softness that keeps the spice from turning medicinal, and clover brings a green-herbal counterbalance in the background. The base is the real engine of Coco, with amber, labdanum, and opoponax layering into a dense resinous warmth that sits on the skin for hours. Sandalwood and tonka round out the drydown with a creamy-sweet finish, and vanilla softens the whole composition without tipping it into dessert. Civet adds the faintly animalic underlayer that vintage reviewers prize and that some modern reformulations have softened. Reviewers on Fragrantica and Parfumo frequently frame Coco as the spicy sister to N°5's floral abstraction and to Cinnabar or Opium among period rivals. What keeps Coco relevant four decades in is the density of the base, which modern clone houses still chase and rarely replicate with the same smoothness.
When to Wear
Best for fall and winter evenings, formal events, date nights, and occasions where projection is part of the point. The spicy-amber profile is too dense for hot Bangladesh afternoons but ideal for air-conditioned evening settings. Browse the For Her collection at Aromatica for more women's picks in this category.
Who Is It For
Someone who wears Tom Ford Black Orchid, Yves Saint Laurent Opium, or Lancome Magie Noire and wants the original eighties amber-oriental template from the house that popularized the era. Someone curious about what modern spicy-floral orientals are still borrowing from decades after release.
If you enjoy this direction, Coromandel from Chanel's Les Exclusifs line sits in adjacent spicy-oriental territory with a more patchouli-heavy base, and the newly added Chanel N°5 Eau de Parfum offers the floral-aldehydic counterpoint that Coco was designed alongside. Browse the full Chanel collection at Aromatica for the rest of the house range.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Description
Released in 1984 and composed by Jacques Polge, Coco Eau de Parfum is the opulent spicy-floral that defined the Chanel women's line in the eighties and has stayed in continuous production for more than forty years. Coriander and peach lift the opening, cloves and rose anchor the heart, and a dense amber-labdanum-opoponax base gives it the plush, resinous sillage that the decade's power fragrances were known for. Aromatica carries the Coco Eau de Parfum decant in Bangladesh in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml sizes so you can explore one of the genuine 20th-century Chanel classics without committing to a 100ml bottle.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bulgarian Rose, Coriander, Peach, Jasmine, Mandarin Orange
Heart: Cloves, Rose, Mimosa, Orange Blossom, Clover
Base: Amber, Sandalwood, Opoponax, Tonka Bean, Civet, Vanilla, Labdanum
The Scent
The opening reads warm and slightly fruity, with peach rounding out the coriander and mandarin so the first few minutes feel sweet-spicy rather than sharp. Bulgarian rose settles in underneath the fruit almost immediately, which is what gives Coco its unmistakably floral-oriental signature from the first spray. The heart is where the fragrance earns its reputation: cloves build a warm, slightly dusty spice that most modern releases would not attempt, and rose and orange blossom weave through the clove like threads through a rich textile. Mimosa adds a honeyed softness that keeps the spice from turning medicinal, and clover brings a green-herbal counterbalance in the background. The base is the real engine of Coco, with amber, labdanum, and opoponax layering into a dense resinous warmth that sits on the skin for hours. Sandalwood and tonka round out the drydown with a creamy-sweet finish, and vanilla softens the whole composition without tipping it into dessert. Civet adds the faintly animalic underlayer that vintage reviewers prize and that some modern reformulations have softened. Reviewers on Fragrantica and Parfumo frequently frame Coco as the spicy sister to N°5's floral abstraction and to Cinnabar or Opium among period rivals. What keeps Coco relevant four decades in is the density of the base, which modern clone houses still chase and rarely replicate with the same smoothness.
When to Wear
Best for fall and winter evenings, formal events, date nights, and occasions where projection is part of the point. The spicy-amber profile is too dense for hot Bangladesh afternoons but ideal for air-conditioned evening settings. Browse the For Her collection at Aromatica for more women's picks in this category.
Who Is It For
Someone who wears Tom Ford Black Orchid, Yves Saint Laurent Opium, or Lancome Magie Noire and wants the original eighties amber-oriental template from the house that popularized the era. Someone curious about what modern spicy-floral orientals are still borrowing from decades after release.
If you enjoy this direction, Coromandel from Chanel's Les Exclusifs line sits in adjacent spicy-oriental territory with a more patchouli-heavy base, and the newly added Chanel N°5 Eau de Parfum offers the floral-aldehydic counterpoint that Coco was designed alongside. Browse the full Chanel collection at Aromatica for the rest of the house range.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.












