First Impressions
The name isn't subtle, and neither is the fragrance. One spray of Miller et Bertaux's #3 Green, Green, Green and... Green delivers exactly what's promised on the label—an uncompromising, almost defiant celebration of greenness that floods the senses. This is aromatic at its purest, most unadulterated form, dominating completely at 100% intensity according to its accord profile. But this isn't the polite, manicured green of a formal garden. This is wild, sun-warmed herbs crushed underfoot, citrus zest meeting woody stems, a fresh spicy bite that awakens rather than soothes. From the first moment, you know this fragrance has no interest in playing it safe.
The Scent Profile
What makes this 2006 creation particularly intriguing is its deliberate opacity—Miller et Bertaux hasn't disclosed specific notes, leaving us to decode the experience through pure sensory exploration. The aromatic backbone that defines this fragrance carries with it a significant citrus component (56%), creating an opening that feels simultaneously verdant and bright. Imagine walking through a Mediterranean grove where lemon trees grow alongside wild rosemary and thyme, the air sharp with essential oils released by the morning sun.
As the fragrance develops, that woody element (50%) begins to assert itself, grounding the brightness without ever dulling it. This isn't heavy wood—think instead of green twigs, sap-filled branches, the living architecture of a forest rather than polished timber. The fresh spicy accord (47%) weaves through both phases, adding a peppery, almost electric quality that keeps the composition from ever settling into predictability.
The herbal notes (28%) provide texture and authenticity, while a subtle balsamic quality (27%) in the foundation adds just enough warmth to prevent the fragrance from feeling too linear or austere. The evolution isn't so much a journey from top to base as it is a gradual revelation—layers of green in different shades and textures, each phase illuminating another facet of the same essential truth.
Character & Occasion
This is summer in a bottle, achieving a perfect 100% rating for the season. It's the olfactory equivalent of seeking shade under a fig tree at noon, of drinking iced mint tea in a sun-drenched courtyard. Spring claims it too, with a strong 77% rating, which makes absolute sense—this is a fragrance that captures the urgent vitality of new growth, of nature in its most energetic phase.
The data tells a clear story about when to wear this: daytime accounts for 77% of its ideal wearing occasions, while nighttime barely registers at 5%. This isn't a fragrance for dim lighting and intimate dinners. It belongs to mornings and afternoons, to activity and movement, to open air rather than enclosed spaces. The fall rating of 15% suggests it can transition into cooler weather for the truly green-obsessed, though winter's 3% makes it clear that this isn't built for cold weather contemplation.
Marketed as feminine, though nothing in its aromatic-woody structure feels gendered in the traditional sense. This is for anyone who craves freshness that has backbone, greenness with character.
Community Verdict
With 363 votes landing at a solid 4 out of 5 rating, this is clearly a fragrance that connects with those who seek it out. That's a respectable sample size, and the rating suggests strong appreciation rather than universal adoration—which feels exactly right for such an uncompromising composition. This isn't trying to please everyone, and the community seems to respect that singular vision. The voters understand what they're getting: a fragrance that commits completely to its concept and executes it with confidence.
How It Compares
The company it keeps is telling. Un Jardin en Méditerranée and Un Jardin Sur Le Nil, both from Hermès, share that sun-soaked, outdoor quality, though they tend toward more overt floralcy. Terre d'Hermès brings the woody-citrus-aromatic combination but in a more traditionally masculine context. L'Air du Desert Marocain offers similar spicy, aromatic intensity, while Encre Noire represents the darker, more shadowed end of the woody-green spectrum.
What sets #3 Green apart is its relentless focus. Where others in this category might soften their aromatics with florals or sweeten their woods with amber, Miller et Bertaux holds the line. This is green without apology or compromise.
The Bottom Line
At 4 out of 5 stars with a substantial voting base, #3 Green, Green, Green and... Green has earned its place as a warm-weather essential for those who take their greenness seriously. This isn't a beginner fragrance—it's too committed, too uncompromising for someone just exploring aromatics. But for the person who has sampled countless "fresh" fragrances only to find them watered down or sweetened beyond recognition, this delivers authenticity.
The real question isn't whether this is well-made (it clearly is) but whether you're ready for something this singular. If your fragrance wardrobe already leans green and you're seeking the platonic ideal of the category, this deserves your attention. If you live for summer and spring, if daytime wear dominates your needs, if you've ever thought "I wish this was just... greener," then Miller et Bertaux has created exactly what you've been searching for. Sometimes a fragrance's greatest strength is knowing exactly what it is—and this one knows it's green.
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