If you’ve ever wanted Giorgio Armani My Way without the designer price tag, My Journey is it — our garden-fresh oil-based impression, built to last.
Like walking past a flower stall on the first warm day of the year.

From First Dab to Dry-Down
Top: Bergamot sparkles with zesty Italian citrus. Orange Blossom softens with honeyed petals.
Heart: Tuberose intoxicates creamy-white. Plus Indian Jasmine.
Dry-down: White Musk lays down a clean-laundry softness. Vanilla melts sweet and custardy. With Virginia Cedar.
Why This One
This is a bouquet that holds its shape all day instead of collapsing into a flat, soapy note an hour in.
Because it’s an impression of Giorgio Armani My Way — not the designer bottle — you get the soft, radiant florals you love at a fraction of the price, with none of the alcohol burn.
Your Move
Bring it out when the temperature climbs; it shines in spring and summer heat. A natural fit for her, and honestly great on anyone who reaches for it. A signature that flatters almost everyone.
Inside the Warm Floral-Woody Family
Floral is the heart of perfumery, spanning a single dewy rose to a full white-flower bouquet. Modern florals lean clean and wearable rather than powdery or dated — and because oil carries flowers gently, the petals open slowly and never go soapy.
How To Get 8–12 Hours Out Of It
For all-day wear, moisturise first — oil clings to soft, hydrated skin far better than to dry skin, and you’ll notice the difference by evening.
How It Stacks Up Against the Original
Side by side, a designer spray hits louder for the first ten minutes — that’s the alcohol talking. Once it settles, an oil like this tracks remarkably close, and it’s still going strong hours after the spray has faded.
The Quick Facts
- Inspired by: Giorgio Armani My Way
- Scent family: Warm Floral-Woody
- Best for: women's, Spring, Summer
- Format: Alcohol-free perfume oil — 0.33 oz rollerball up to bulk sizes
My Journey is the kind of scent that earns "what are you wearing?" — find out why it’s worth a place in your rotation.
